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—) a ee ag NEW YORK. MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19, 1846. Prien wwe Conte CENTRAL AND MACON AND WESTERN appear af of Mexico, or at San L. Pot |) Withii le wish ti . . di That C the southern extremity of the State, on the side of a hill. | of both armies were present, and Lieut. Col. Duncan by IMPORTANT PROM MEXIOO, | Sitesi, aMamerias penectcn inet iis | ha peonle wish to adopt, are proceading, That Congrene | the southern extramy of th, tte, on there fa hl: | of ts seen of Gaseral Teplor- Hl wat nuninred A Jalapa'paper, speaking of the at, and seemed to have roposition recently | in the conflict in | ‘med de! eof her indepenience, the good streets, communicating at right angles with the | wore a shocking bad palmetto r ‘ 5 i Cr |-d——} ” air of th G mada by our government to that of Mexico, h nation will place such safeguards around her liberties as P'laza, (public square,) in the centre of which isa large much more of the “ I-de-as-l sche oapnsinyehester MILITARY PREPARATIONS OP SANTA ANNA. | te rely of Congress wil bo tothe fll | may best sult herself. | revervolr, which supplies the town with water "| (ong ihe eeulare, ts he shtered the sudtencs chem- “Since 4 abinet of Washington | If should permit myself for a single moment, to tak From the following table of distances, it will be ob- among the regulars. As he ent red the madianse chee | rere neantinmesioteeiemenintiay one itt Minister, Shannon, that for twe: 4 | the reins of government the sincerity of my promises served that our army has marched 300 miles from Mata- bayer Ne camel air of sandon, aula aoe it had labored for the independence of Texas, } | would be rendered questionable, and no confidence could | moras : seemed to have been sui y a pee SE Roads. with the Western and Adlannie Hai Another Tremendous Battle Expected | not make peace with the United States until due repara. | be placed in them rated on by an electrifying machine. They wou Of the State ol Georgia, form a continuo rom Se- tion shall lave Been made by the latter for that Injury | I'am resolved that the at Duncan and whisper to one another, and then look vannah to Oothealogs, Georgie of 371 miles, vi coy cohaitte | their redemption [behold th | and whisper again At length, Den Jove Maria Negriti, 1a The Release of the Officers and Crew of the |” Tee writerastately | rela eae nan tall’ seapped'en te oe | my honor es a Mexic: sition The existing me vi and that the | course with which the nation bi s should be harrassed ty | and I have no desire to subvert it by taking its place. I | ko. | feel abundant pleasure in remaining where | am. and flat- | k Med aids, who spoke English jeneral Tay lo Duncan, begged to be inf | Welker?” No.” ; 101 ‘Atlanta 10 Oothesicga, Western & Atlante” 69 *But to enable Mexico ea{iuods writ be carried from Sayninal to Adlanta and Ooth Truxton. cessary that ghe should g: ‘ olla’ Viz: oes, Gn Waralie Geops. Tess To Oeh commerce of} United 8 , Coffee Liquor, B: ; Rope, lar » | Sugar ef biauer, Baxwing, Rope, lanta, calega. | ssing well, up to one ‘and pointing to Lieut. Colonel ed“ if that was not Captain jor Hays No.” “ Nor Mc- age, it is n>- yune, Oct. 8} i | Culloch ?” “No.” “Then ishe not at least a Texan 7” Che ‘obacee, &o. &e. dice addressed to Col. Par- | ter myself that the nation will applaud my choice. I | ven some details of news yor ides, Cott tipper tie | a Gad account of some of our soldiery It | shall joyfully acce ~ il continue | from Laguna direct, | No", The litle aid baving got this particular and this avd. vow Ware | in pro- | and by way of Havana. Had there been any room before | fess “ma lam he Dente toon and tetaaeaa tea and Castings. 2 ay 50 som | NEWS FROM THE SQUADRON. ‘he Ameficans, to the number of full five hundred, H every | for a doubt in regard to the political position of Yucatan, | general: and comrade-offic: to whom he in an under Wigs ich pater, berate or bones, Te fam the New Orleans Delte, October 10.) | have retired in the direction of Camargo or China, to re- in supporting its benefits, even at the cost of my | it would be entirely removed by the facts wegive today. | {or “communicated. this grotifying . intelligenoe-— } Gearing, Pig iron and Grind U. 8. ship-of-war John Adams, Com’dr McCluney, | join Taylor. | One would suppose that the passage of a decree by the ce. ’ Vi - ve . ta To account ffor the trepidation which the presence of You can entertain no idea of the disorder of these Will your Excellency have the goodness to tender to | Yucatan Congress in August, adopting the revolution in | the brave Duncan occasioned, it is necessary to state that troops, nor coneeive how much wickedness they have | the Supreme Government my sincere thanks for their | Mexico according to the “Plan of Gaudalajara,” would bi a a ry accomplishedywhile eternally preaching to us of the be- | kindness? 1 will ¢ Ampudia-bas received positive information from | RA OE pile | from the squadron off Point San Antonio Lizardo, which On Meastunkment Goon’ | place she left on the 25th ult., touched at the 8. W. Pass Boxes of Hots, Bonnets and Furniture, | on the 7th instant, bound to Pensac { _personally repeat them to-morrow— | have been quite foe 3 to identify Yucatan with Mexi- ‘that the first opportunity which may per cubic foot... ee Pik $0 6 She landed at the 8. W. Pass, Capt. Kennedy, (son of | nefits which we should derive from their rule! ‘These | for which purpose I propose to call atthe Palace. I shall | co, and that she would no longer be allowed by our gov ceria en, on te toke bas Boxes aud bales of Dry Goods, Saddlery Com. Kennedy, of the Navy,) and then proceeded on her | semi barbarians, as soon entered the defenceles and | there embrace my friends, and hastily pressing them to | ernment all the privileges of neutrality. ‘The citizens of ile, rewardie. the rules or the usages of war. Dun- Glass, Faint, Drege and Confection- route to Peysacola. Capt. Kennedy came up to this city | terrified townybegan to lop their horses through the | heart, them a tender farewell, and set out for the | the town of Campeachy did absolutely refuse to promul- can hon taken for one of . ' m, Gmiskery, per oun? 20. 100 Ibs. 35 | yesterday, and to him we are indebted for the {Mowing | streets, and ‘were drunk from the time they arrived | rcene of war, to lend my aid to serve my country, or to the decree of August 25, it was deemed so subver- . . Molasses‘ and Oil information from the fleet until they left, No house was respected—they boldly | perish among its ruins. ay their newspapers, of the plan of neutrality pro- [Frow the New Orleans Delta, Oct. 9.] ‘casks in proportion, $9 00 $12 00 ith of the squadron was generally good. entered any pleased them. They had three unfortu- I beg to repeat to your Excellency, assurances of my | claimed but a few months before. But Gov. Barbachano, The destructive fire to which the division under Gen. Ploughs, @arge) Cultivators, Cora Shel- Com’dr Carpender, his officers and men, were set at | nate beings with them,'tied by the neck,and driven along | continued and special esteem. under the advice and influence of Basadre, insisted that | Taylor was exposed, when advancing on the enemy’s Jers, and Straw Cutters, each... .. 1 50 | liberty on parole. *| in that manner, whom they said they were going to ANTONIO LOPEZ DE SANTA ANNA. the decree should be promul; and so faras was in | foris on the 2lst ult., at Monterey, may be gathered from Ploughs, (staal!) and Wheelbarrows 1 05 Com’dt Carpender and his clerk—Mr. Wilkinson, | shoot, because dui the night seven horses had been —. his power he has united his political fortunes with those | the fate of the gallant third regiment. Salt, per 1 Sack, % | Purser Cutter, and a portion of the crew of the brig | lost, and these: poor fellows were accused of having sto: THE ROUTE TO SANTA FE. of Santa Anna. , Soon aenthe: tine Whee, De cede ee Savannah to Atl: ‘Traxton, are on boerd the John Adams. ‘The remeindee | len them. Afr suffering many outrages a couple of {From the Washington Union, Oct. 16.] And yet our government respects the neutrality of | given, Major Lear, in command of the regiment at Children under 12 years of the Truxton’s cre’ e on board the store ship Relief, | countrymen feet then nearly dead, and cutthe cords} We publish the following interesting report of the | Yucatan. Americans are hated there by the people with | time, got killed. wanuah to, Mac are 0 to sail for Pensacola in afew days, with the exception of | which bound ‘They made good their escape.” wate from Fort Leavenworth to Santa Fe, from Lieut. | “most ferocity, and it requires the presence, from time | Capt. Morris then assumed the command ; he too Joods copsigued ia the Babscniber will be forwarded | say twelve. who were leftat Tusqwan, being sick” “El Republigane,” aprint which has eupported Santa | pwite.(rom. Hort, Kea Topographical engineer sted arith | to time, of a vessel of war to prevent outrages against | shared a like fate, apt. Bele beidape, reas metho feeds free of Commuanons. oth. | , 022 of the Truxton’s men died on board thie John | Anna’s cause agdelaims with unilinching earnestnes | Gen, Kearney’s command, addressed to the General. The | their rights; and yet the country is called by us neutral. | be got teverely wounded, end ee aad belwas killed, Foight may be paid st Savannah, Atlanta on Ooth- | Adams befere sailing. during the g part of his banishment,has now given | ma tables referred to, are too voluminous for a | Every traveller that we have seen from there declares | Barbour was the paso vd so ate pe eanmatt, ADENCIS TAG. Seine Ament CR: |” On the auth, the U.S. schooner Forward sailed for Tus. | him terrible offenee in publishing a letter which proba- | Yaily paper. that the feelings of the people are most hostile ; their | Capt. Field was next, and he was killed. close mam, a — NRE a pan, to take on board the sick (Truxton) prisoners. bly shadowed forth his true intentions, as it is extremely Santa Fe, August 24, 1846, | S0Vernment itself declares its entire sympathy with the | the engagement, Capt. Henry was in command of what FALL ARRANGEMENT. On the 224 ult, the frigate Raritan, Captain Gregory, | reasonable to refer some of its statements to sentiments —I have the honor to enclose herewith the map of | TeVolution in Mexico, and does every thing but take an | remained of the regiment, which were found to number, re and steamer Vixen, Com’dr Sands, arrived with Com | known to be entertained by him. The letter is signed Perry on board. It was rumored that he is to hoist his | With the name, or anonym of Juan N. Villasenor, and flag on board the steamship Mississippi. It was not | char ute ofthe’ Army of the West, and a recounoissance | Pen part in the war, and yet we persist in calling her | 00 being mustered, 71 men, including the officers and the neutral, Nor is this all. We have attempted to cut off | rank and file ! Santa Apna’s government with the intention to | heen: °f santa Fe and itsfenvirons ,for the purposes | No tics, commerce. by blockading her ‘porta, thus de |. Major N. P. Barbour, of the sth infantry, who was “ 5 .. known whether Com. Conner is to bi 4 from the | banish, to various 18 of the country the mggt meri- a i priving the people of Mexico of supplies of merch: killed by a musket bail in the attack on Monterey, is the PIONEER AND EXPRESS LINE, _ | commandof the squadron podmcitebilad ter yroge i eta, | Tei Lig Giles ar the ebro te able co-operation of | {id the government of the revenue which woul same officer, who, at the battle of Palo Alto, repulsed, VIA RAILRIAD AND CANAL, The suilor who assaulted his offcer and was con. | are named Jove Jgaquin de Herrera lato Prestiont) and | Safonce, based on this econaolegaes will be vabweitvcd | UPOH thelr Importation. We tucceed in preventing ac: | With & single company of the Sth regiment, he w tor FROM PHILADELPHIA TO PITTSBURG. | demned by a court martial to suffer death, was executed | P. Garcia Conde. It accuses Santa Anna of vindictive | tevcu” J cess to a few principal ports; but Mexico at once | regiment of Mexican Lancers, eight hundred strong, ‘The above Line is now in fall operation. Passengers leave | on the day appointed " motives in this regard, and denounces his rule as a Dicta | ‘dee site selected i opens other smaller ports to foreign commerce, and | Which he was breveted a Major. He was an officer of fine Philsdelohia every moruing at 7% o'clock, wtthe best and | Othe Jey appointed: ‘Pune wrclaldedhttve ntruatad’ | torelle, : ¢ site selected for the fort having been approved by | tC 'theve, small vevsels from Yucatan swarm with, sup- | &ccomplishments, and universally esteemed in the army. most comfortable degeription of cars for Harrsburgh, where |. 1, Was thought that Santa not be entrusted i Se rt of the newspaper, and | £00 hat Deen marked on the map, and this morning | Viies, and carry ona traffic most lucrative for themselves, | __ It is an error to suppose, thatat the time of the cepitn- they einbark on the Packet Beat government, unless he declared him. pong repo! p ferce is employed in the commencement of the road to | P f holds of th m1 Dude le cant tee crest agreeable routes that is to be found | self in favor of the w: rrespondent, to jinister of War, his friend Al- | the site. convenient for the people of Mexico, and productive of a | lation feng = 2M all the fede pe aK erly ch mthe country. The scenery on t ehanna and Juni- | Al te, who replios im auitably soothing terms ‘The data upon which the map of the route is based, is the | ?@venue for Mexico. were taken. ‘There was a strong med for ata rivers 1s unsurpassed for beauty and variety. {CF Office in Philadelohia, No. 274 Market gfamengers shonld be cx y their fair in Ne ork further ul tha is no one in that cit} autho/ized to sell tickets fort if and war against the aut last Apri There is one law, made by Paredes, of which I have given in his adhesion to expresses a desire to help the Mex ay inst the insolent conqueres of Nor have we yet reached the atrocity of this business. | Dorthwest side of the city still in possession of the Mexi- seen no account of the abrogation—I allude to tha the measurement of eleven hundred and eight angles of | Yucatan veasela are regularly furnishiog Mexico with | cans, in which there were six hundred of the enemy, Ds to vi nce | king publishers responsible for the seutiments of their | altitude of the heavenly bodies, and the elevation of fifty | tte munitions of war, and the supplies of powder which | With a large supply of ammunition. fo New Worll, who | editors and correspondents. That punishing persons who points above St. Louis, determined by one hundred and | Mexico is using in repelling our attacks upo' A lettor from Camargo, under date of Sept. 21, men- determination of the geographical positions sulting from the fellow who stole the Californian supplies, thor i hi t NGS, Agent have usurped the immense territory of Texas.” calumniate the government is, with equal certainty, in ‘obs i 7 i imported from this city in Yucatan vessel: tions the death of two of the ‘Chesapeake Riflemen,” Philadelphia, October, 1046." >” CUMMINGS, Agent. ‘An edict was issued. the 4th Sept, fro the govern: | full force, and I fane: asenor and the Senores, barometic observations for rehectoa. neo (8 | schooners regularly engaged in this nelario viz: Richard Hanlon, printer, of Annapolis, noob CHANGE OF HOURS. ment, appointing a commission, composed of five gentle. | the publishers of “EL ” will soon find them. It will be seen that some few of the observations, par- | !bey load here principally with powder, and Wiker, of Baltimore; and also the death of Johu Stevens, ~ LONG ISLAND Ronuon: men, to digest and ,eport a plan, the he selves employed on the ‘fortifications of the frontier.” | ticularly those for time, at Fort Leavenworth, have not | L®gua, where their cargoes are privately trai a member of Capt. Piper's company of volunteers from 2 KOAD. furnished to them, for rewarding and pr or those of Vera Cruz, to one or the other of which | heen computed. ‘These 1 would respectfully suggest | ‘© smaller vessels and sent into Tobasco or othe! thiscity. ‘The same letter says that about s men FALL ARRANGEMENT, serters from the American army. They are Ts recent decree, all criminals are to be trans- | might be made at the bureau of topographical engineers. | Port Which abound on the Moxican coast. This is no | of the Baltimore battalion, who were unable to Join in Ist. ‘To determine npon the number of acres of land | potted. ‘The same paper, of the 8th inst., contains a let- | They will change nothing, but only confirm other re- fiction—no exaggeration. We yesterday conversed with | the march to Monterey, were left at Camargo ; end sub- which the government shall grant, and the terms upon | ter from “a Captain of a foreign sloop of war lying at | sults. So also of the heights resulting from the baromet. | #2 intelligent American merchant, who is recently from | sequently many of them were discharged. which th be granted, to such persons as, not ed 6th August. Tic observations. I would suggest that the column of | Yucatan. He Lente is ‘that tess facts were within ss i and aiter MUNDAY, October iz, 1616, Traius will ran as | Deing natives of the United Sta hall abandon the | _ This Captain could of c beno other than Monsieur | altitudes should be carried out at the bureau, and that detest eee te one thut the matter was well SPRCIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE RERALD. ae follows: ranks of the North Americans and pass over to ours” | Dubruil, of the French ba Perouse, who mingles & | the comparison should be with Dr. Engleman’s determi. | U2derstood among the merchants of Yucatan, and the Can wean Manin, Mexico, Sept. 16, 1846. ‘ave Buooxsyn—at 7 o'clock A. M. (Boston trum) for | 2d To designate the uncultivated lands which the | very commendable love of séandal with about an equal | nation of the mean height of the barometer at St. Louis, | *CBOouers engaged in the trade known to all. All this lli- ; ‘at : ia? Ebarvt Sfrgenpore, daily, (except Sundays) stopping at | government sheuld appropriate to this object in the dif. | degree of ign d cau % os Wid: 905 inohes, thereeaeter 84 deg Puiveabelt: cit commerce is vastly lucrative, and the people of Yuca- | The City of Morin Taken—The Mezicans’ Hurried Re- “ “ ‘atoig A. M., daily, for Farmingdale and inter- | feTent States.” y of Btate, is celebrated for hese heighis give the fall of the Arkansas fcom | ‘#8 are only feaful that it will be broken up, and that | syeqe—The perfect Order and Quietness of our Soldiers pons Th gh 3d."To propose means by which the gevernment pi. Mr. Bancroft, who has | Bent’s Fort; the elevation of the pass of the Raton, | their ports will be closed by a rigorous blockade — sine asad waachia Cheeta (ante “ atizo'clock, M., for Greenport, daily, (Sun- | may best render assistazce to the individuals referred to, | Charge of the Navy, was no more than a Professor of | roughly computed by me at 7,000 fect above St. Louis; | Bey bave been in full expactation of such a meas te enseriing ond passing Omen Set te rosy won ert ny Boanan, in transporting their familie they have any, and in | History, no great proof of be control a Naval raid the elevation of many of the mountain passes between | 9* they made no concealmeut oi their hatred to the Uni Yesterday, the 15th of Sept, at 12 M., the first division jie] al} stati a » ‘Hicksville. i att EM. foe Farm icksville. | furnishing them with the ne at ary Implements of farm. |mament. As tothe Minister of Leave Gneenrons—ai 83; A: BM., daily accommodation train | #8 mament, As to the Minister of War, all agree that s | that aod Santa Fe, and the elevation of Santa Fe itself, wipe , and their warmest sympathy with the peo} (Mum) | which is 6,000 feet above St. Louis. From this elevation | of Me bo jin the unjust war whick thoy there ates Uae | of the army of cocupation, with “ Old Roughand Ready pools He proceeds, ‘Some may consider my language rather be P ted States with waging against them. Well may the posi- | & its head, came in sight of the city of Marin. General . ao cag Fatt the arrival of the boat from AFFAIRS IN MEXIC caustic, but | am persuaded that it only expresses the | from Ais noe: Ry tbh ees. feisiag Sau Be 388 tion of Yucatan be called anomalous! Mexican to the | Taylor commanded a halt for a few minutes, for the pur- Normich,) ‘Boston train daily, (except. Bun: [From the New Orleans Times, Oct. 10. single opinion of enlightened and sincere men, who love | feet above the Gulf of Mexico. world at large, Mexican in her heart and feelings, she | pose of discovering the movements of the enemy. We day: ng at Bt. George’s Manor and | Lieut Kennedy states that, at the time he lel good faith and their conntry, and who ate horrified at the | ‘The geological structure of the country passed over | *tands in the attitude of an independent nation towards RO Ta-'| Sate cr denreceitation ie sohin the Meroe -ie r the United States alone. And we sustain her in this atti- | Were then about one mile from the city—our advance govel has been critically examined, and specimens collected, d we protect her flag, which covers a commerce | guard one-half mile, aud also ot a belt. A messenger t injurious aod ruinous tor ourselves, aud which | was soon despatched to the main body of the division, Formiagdals, j mor existed of on ly attempt to be made hy th NES parm eS ies coun; ans ff mand + a fad on Tampico. There had been, for , Leave Jamatcaat 8 o'clock A 1 d_ 634 P. M., for Brooklyn, 01 quadron | plunged. and carefully labelled. it tude, time, a repor: | " «The news from the frontier gives but little satisfac. Keg awed Fir onan og vy oat i arnt See oad RPE? a . | thata hostile demonstration was to be made on Alvarado. | tion to the United States. One half of the atmy isfound | foute:, Jn addition to the specimens collected in this lies Mexico with facilities { inui M:. and | : i ’ : interesting branch of inquiry, up to Bont’s Fort every | supplies Mexico with facilities for continuing the war | W*s ‘oon des ac fa S he arrival of Boston | With regerdto Mexican internal affairs, very. little was ny to look out for the other half, end‘@en. Tay. | sceresting, branch of the'lite ink masterly manner re | against us To make « simple statement of the facts, | With the intelli brewed rey Alen ee A freight tram will leave Brooklyn for Greenport, mine | Sadie here cea rote tad Saree much trouble with the Louisiana volunteers | Lieutenant Abert, who uniostuastely fell nek Kefors | ue would think were enough to call down tpon Yuca: | the city and wa i y General Taylor then gave orders that the division march jengers’ car attached, on Mondays, Wednesda that he was compelled to discharge them all reaching that place, and wes left there. ‘To arrange | ‘a the instant vengeance of our government; but the | General Tay ~ ee ae boats ayn, a 9% Ac Returning. leave Gree Mexicans, notwithstanding all thelr aetachmest se Reis |g. ather® only, needs one single fortunate aetien to | these specimens, nese them, and make general dedve- | Ratement hus Deen made again and'oguin by the pres of | 18 avick uipe onthe city. In ten minutes we were in Pp. esday, Thursday and Saturdays, stopping at inter- A Tihs 7 ¥ thelt Presid Senta | guarsnty a brilliant treaty, and there are good reasons tions, is the work of tine, and requ: aid of light | this city ; travellers have from time to time repeated the fons hecdcan witzion waa We Ue seen SUNDAY TRAINS. edged himself to a vigorous prosecution of the war | {°7,0xvecting a favorable result.” from the learned societies and men of the country. fame facts; it is a matter frequently mentioned in our | eetiy all the inhabitants bad fled the place. As at 9 o'clock A.M. for Greenport. Re- | Wwithamerice, Ont Cenbjeot, Teer wer inti aiven here is more oft histletter, but I don’t care about | + * . * . . + | commercial circles, and laughed and jested over, and | Pearly all the inhal q ; i i passed through to the southern part, we could very in- turning, leave Gr euport at 23 P. M., for Brooklyn, stopping | ence of op seomingly, all ranks were burning gh foo Grom Baoniseiey ao Tote® as thecooth uit. halle of the map of the government takes no step at all in the business. distinctly discern a body of soldiers in the far distance, Fanr To—Bedford, 8 cents; East New York, 1 with a desire todrive the invaders from the soil—if they | heen received. A letter of the 26th says that the Ameri camp. Those from camp 25 t0 Santa Fe were mearured | _ But seriously, our relations with Yucatan are deserv. | ™@xiD&, 10 all sypearance, © very. hurried rel Course 1954; Trotting Course, 1834: ea. 85; Brushville, | Or cana had left Mier for that city, but their march was ing of the most grave consideration of the government. P d the strictest order and quiet- ; The health of thi i , with a viameter furnished by Major Clark, and may be | 196 through the city. Not a man leit the woe oF Cone) i eR (daring the sey | ora Cruz, Wan very salishiete yao ae arnt hips off | slow, and resembled a route more than a march. ‘They | folied on with absolute cerlsinty. The grass ond water | At Present, she is tho most convenient go-betweon which aroely wes rf ; " * ‘ + ly was there a loud word spoken. A dee; armingdele, £24; | clpline t state. pele moving fifteen leagues (38 miles or less.) | trom Leavenworth to ind she impudently ventures to assist | Tot bility ot pity y eadto par an these eels eae n, $1; Lake Row bury, 44; Hic! point on the Oregon trail | Ur enemy hi lace + ; f a — her to supplies from the ports ofur own country. agit: Thorns, 8 Sul si tevastncrg sat | fomect the Oficers and men aro alike anxious “We are now strong enough, and within eight days a oe caper ot the crossing ‘of the Kany —— rat soldiry ae they entered and pasaed through one of the Bt. Georxe Banee St Geivgrhend, # iis; Jamesport, ¢ intelligence which we havegiven in | inza, and from eight hund Lah ee eet cree ut | Arkanseq, of the many creeks Tepresented, we found | INCIDENTS, &c., CONNECTEDAWITH THE STORMING OF | can is an objecgor pity. 1 686: Greenport Accommodation “rain, $1 78; Greenport | the preceding paragrapha, we have learned from another | fanit’near, ‘Then tere ‘are three Urigaderon the read | fuming, Water in but Fish Pool, Council Grove, Cotton B BE BA Rad ols EC PAS * Boston train, $225. some. incidents of considerable interest to the | here from Sen Luis Potosi, the first of which ought to tle Arkansas, and Cow creeks. The remai _.._. [From the Buff 5] It is now reduced to a certainty, that Santa Anna is on raf ees are in readiness on the arrival of Train which have lately transpired in the interior of | reach Saitillo to-morrow. So when all our branches are | caying seta oe oe 10 Pooks bigety charmed with gukilled, at the capture of Monterey, Mexico, on the his way from the city of Mexioe to Monterey, at the heed Stations, to ‘passengers at very f ; . : ; pa 2 . G. Williams, United States Topo- | of a considerable force. .D. pep mre h ee united, we shall number a force of seven thousand men! | tolerable, but foram erm: use debetetiee, ‘it it 5 ppears, has suddenly become the | s; . te + eq grephical Engineer! ra ecbagrnce Crates will be in rendinens at the foot of Whitehall | otiet head uid hope of the wat party ia Mexico, whics, | sper ee eR ciee tum eete ne paee 10 fd the soauieits ae Lwithin | GAZ AB antimate and long attached friend of the late Naval Intelligence. be ore the hour of s-arting from the Brooklyn side indeed, to say the truth, embraces nearly the whole of | (ssn Isabel), Matamoros and the other towns, which do | gicht miles 5 7 rkensas until within | Capt. W. G. Williams, we would claim this sad privilege, [From the New Orleans Delta, Oct. 6] Siatexman” leaves Greenport for Sag Har | the population. He is now, or was at latest dates in the | not exceed Afty-five hundred all told, We have, there. | (&%t miles of Bent’s ley of the Arkansas is | and, in so doing, we feel.an assurance that alarge por-| His Hon. Judge McCuleb delivered, eterday » an bor on the arrival of the Boston train {rom Brooklyn. city of Mexico, arranging the plan of an extensive cam | : ly to meet them at the point of the bayonet.” from one buniired yards ta mile wide, bounded on | tion of this community will appreci mpathize | opinion at i@dgtt in the caso of the brig Nalad, Livelled Brooklyn, Vet. 8, 1846, paign against ‘the several American corps darmée, | ‘he iatelligence of the 20 dvsipates ommeehat the | cach side by low barren hills, which soon mount to the | with the feeble tribute which we are able to offer tothe | gf u prizes by the officers and crew of the Ynited organizing, recruiting, encoureging, exhorting thein: | patriotic expectations founded on the statements of this | ‘ble lands, presenting an arid and barren waste to the | memory of ove who was esteemed and beloved, in pro- | States brig of war “Somers.” The facts of the habitants not only of the capital, Lut the whole country, | ‘writer, as it brings Gen. Taylor no farther than Seral- | North and to the south, ‘un with a view to meet the danger that threatens Mexico | yo, where he is detained froin want of mesus of trans or P. . RNE! cOv’S with the whole of her defensive resources. 1 i NEW YORK AND LIVERPOOL EMIGRATION | " Wo Gnd that Sania Ann hd at length quited his re- | writes Jat tied oat ate ae you encounter the narrow tion as he was long and intimately known. Born in roved, are these:—The Naiad left the valloys of the Pawnee fork and Saloky Hill fork on the | this country, the pre Fhe portion of his childhood and tamed of Hamburg on the oth of June, and arrived north, and the Cimmaron on Lee Cather ee che | early youth was passed in England. Returning to the | of” Vera Cruz on the 27th of August, when an : valle land of his nativity while yet boy, his mother being “Somers” boarded her, notified her of the OFF! treat—his hacienda—where he had been no doubt lying | tyonspility of Jeleat or felling Decks mast gest upen Awe, | 122! the traveller's decessed, and his fother cngeged in’ business which ro | Crucgtc! He, Somern” bonded Net sited: whether she W. BYRNES & CO, of Liverpool, are desirous of by for opportune moment to arrive when he coult tesla fon, oe alia ts any greelncry pr prea aut. | 82 in vain for any object of vegetation upou which | quired his absence, he was left, in a measure, to carve | stood in need of provisions or water. ‘Tothis ing the * forming the public of the United States, that they cov- | best exhil thimaselt to the inhabitants of the capital, and So wot Rane, whare Menta ale to re pt the cactus, which here is very diminu- | out his own destiny in life. He conceived the determina- captain replied that he was not in want of say thing: tinue to despatch © line, ry in’ oT Cgpen Pe ie fob d proat by their highest enthusiasm, pushed to an extreme . y their alternate hopesand fears. On the 14th ultimo, i y mioaehs gadom shel iein bag 20th Soe F he reached Azotia, a small town distant ten or twelve | teat thoraty also er Orleans daring the heal ; by any of | leagues from the city of Mexico, Here be received a |” ‘The bulletin of the official which lines parti tive, and the thinly-scattered buffalo grass, which I never | tion of entering West Point. Without friends or influ- c f the Naiad then, steered for Havane. but { presume at San Luis Botosi, and ficient quantity out of the bottom of the Ar- | ence to further hisaim, he voluntarily, and alone, made | criet reason for selecting that port wes, that he bad been y Point | kansas to give ene horse a meal within a circle of a ri | personal application, at Washington, to some of the dis- | there before, and could enter the harbor without pilot ; of the 10th inst eth dius of 2,600 yards. Wherever the rocks cross out on fog junctionaries there, for an appointment. His | pesides which, he was informed by the boarding officer, ; tied can engage for their frieads to be broght | coramunication from Almonte, the ad interim Secretary | ant excounten bettreen tae Yerieeee toe coe reee rt! | the Arkansas, the cretaceous formation developer itself Prepossessing appearance, and the singular decision of | that another Dutch ship, warned off, had gone to that our without disappointment or delay, this being the oldest | of Wer, proposing. ofhim the supreme Executive power, | mics, in. the pass of Pacuache, in which the Americans in the following order of superposition :— character and confidence evinced by the circumstances | port. After sailing towards Havana forty-eight hours, and [ara at eaten Me ge Che en Seep or Dictatorship. ‘i'his offer was made on the part of the | Jost six killed and two prisoners, and a quantity of pro- 1. Limestone, and sometimes a conglomerate of lime- | under which he appeared as an applicant for a position | and stone und round pebbles of the primitive order, and | which wae i at by nunibers with the aid of hey Dio omen ied fy rcpod ng = } fe rovisional government, organized by General Salas, | ¢j 4 4 ler, and | which was in eager request by numbers with the aid of | brig was totally becalmed. e Captain eee aie Gee ease ne a ecehe ac | aides the fall of Paredes. Pearce eee Ge MgEaE ee Ne ee ee ee ae ‘ powerful iriends and influence, procured cor bim what | glarmed lest, from the calm, the adverse current, the respondence witha respectable establishment, from whom | On the 15th ultimo, then, Santa Anna arrived at the |“ ‘The relative pumbers are not given, but I tal 2. Sandstone, with amonites and other fossils in great | many, with all the of the latter, failed to ob- | very bad sailing qualities of his vessel, and the distance they. can rely for sttentioh and favor towards their relatuons | cepital, amid rejoicings more enthusiastic than bad ever | have been another Canales and Thornton affair, abundance, the whole underlaid by dark blue marl. tain. By the particular efforts of those to whom his ap. | (near 1000 mi he should be short bg og er 5 ring the old country. BYRNES & CO. offer man: soggy tay be Sie OES ‘es, as they | testimonies of attachment to his person were unboun vessels during the been witnessed before. The people seem to behol’ in | de gh _, The whole country from Fort Leavenworth to Bent’s | plication was addressed, and who had become deeply in- | and determin im to the “Somers” to dice: communtea. | tim their savior, and were almost frantic with joy. The rks cokal a ths balese Mexico is removed to To- | Fort abounds in limestone, and the road is sometimes | terested in his welfare, his wishes were crow oo supply of water that had been offered and declined. He white with ‘pulverized carbonate of lime. The dust, | success. Greatly to his father’s amazement, who ‘ly turned, on the morning of the 29th August, luca, which rose in volumes, had the same effect as when in a | left him pursuing his studies in 4 sca Ali 3 . The next day the most vigorous rr ad the. obscure village in | towards the squidron, and on the evening of the same P sel _ Aurion she apri from, os Cork, pe Ba o~ es pe BA age 80 fa ‘ _ room, where the plaster is being knocked down, pro- | Kentucky, he found him on his return @ Cadet. Appre- | day came within sight of land, and shortened sail, so as 4 grants are saved much trouble andexpense, by being shipped | ment. A levy of 30,000 men to recruit the army LETTER FROM SANTA ANNA. cperating |e esng meeting and coughing. rie, | Bemsive hat, of his father’s displeasure at his | to keep off the shore till morning, when he hoped to see attheir own sonpert and also that of being landed in any of | ordered. ions were forthwith transmitted to all | ¢%- Santa Anna, Commander in- Chief of the Liberating As far as camp five the country is an epen p faeiad assuming the management of bit life, | the “ Somers,” or some other vessel of the squadron, On the ports of the United States to which ships trade from Li- | the principal places in the Republic, for an immed sirmy, to Gen. Almonte, Minister of War of the Re | beautifully undulating, waving with grass and flowers, | at that carly age, the young cadet referred him, in dep- | the morning of the 30th he saw the ‘ Somers” between veppra] rasan ative same cost as direct to New ¥ ork. furnlahiog of their rerpective quotas ‘of men. Puebla, | ?UC of Mezico : id intersected wit streams fringed with timber | recation tothe High position inthe class which his in-| him and Vera Cruz, end socred directly for her, varying xe ell A co. Teme 3} - a Ue Neen and the whole of the towns within a circuit of fifty of Arotua, | o’clock, A. M., Sept. 14, 1846. Wherever cultivatiog ' attempted, bountiful crops are | dustry and good cenduct had secured him. With the | her course as the ' Somers” bore off, so a8 ly to Guy al the trerise wats cave toner mmueive ty ty leagues of the metropolis, are stated to have com: |, 5!%—I have received your favor of this date, ac- | made. From that poi up to the Pawnee fork the coun- | sanction of the government, a portion of his cadetship | head towardsher. On getting within hailing distance of — emigrants Su geaberte whom any mosey can be | plied with the requisition for men, with the gr knowledging a decree issued by the supreme govern. | try becomes more and more arid, making it doubtful if | was passed at Paris, where he prosecuted his mathemati- | the ‘* Somers,” the Captain of the Naied put outhis beat paid that may be required to precure sea stores, Kc. i the nation, embracixg a programme of the pro- | cultivation could be attempted except by irrigation, | cal studies, with close assiduity, under the best teachers | and asked leave to go om board the former, which was ‘The persous who act for this Company in the United States | on the arrival (hare of the veo fe levy of 30,000 | °eetings adopted to regulate a due celebration of the re- | wisich would confine it to the few beds of streams. Bo- ¢ acquired the French z are eee ee ae ae cee tipring cf tis | extablishment of the Constitution of 1824, the assumption | yond that, except in the narrow beds of the Arkansas, it c poke with the gr a | Gour tamumbery be taken of, ands supply of water gives. wt fw YORK —Mr. Edward Saul, 58 South, comer of | | body of troops, the gove e ordered that | ®Y myself of the supreme executive power, and the an- | is quite certain that a crop cannot be produced except by | fluency. It is hardly necessary to add, that se | The captain of the “ Somers” replied, that having return- BOSTON—Mr. W. P. McKay, 52 Milk street. on all muni of war cease to be levied, | yoraet, of the glorious cry of escoag is irrigation. | ) of his course at West Point, his rank was among the first | ¢ after being warned off, his vessel must be seized as & PHILADELPHIA—Messrs. H. C. Craig & Co., Market | until further notice. My satisfaction is extreme to observe the enthusiasm | As an evidence of the drynoss of the air, I beg to call | of the class. The department of Topographical Engi: | prize. ‘The Naiad was then taken to Green laland, her street In view of this extensive armament of the Mexican | “ith which preparations are made to celebrate the two | attention to the extraordinary results in the meteorologi- | neers was not thenorganized. So soon as it was estab- | hassengers and commercial letters heving been handed BALTIMORE—Mr. George Law. people, and putting implicit faith in the truth of the pr = bacco 3 bps oie fallen - this ree gi cal journal. ished, he was among thore appointed to that branch of | over to a British vessel to be delivered in Vera Craz.— Tpsapte qua kesunens Dede teu amount payable | Ceding news, (of their authenticity we can have no re: the deepest gratitude to find that my arrival at the capital alge Ree Poop righ fe us y aerate i Mau} ef the services poriormied by: him were of'a de | Aer Rone ase edgnaws at sight, on the Provincial Bank of Ireland and all its branches, | #0nab! Harel rig ap Pinas tc Woetien cote will be inade to contribute to the solemnities of 40 great | {he journey + yt see oF pei y what she already had,jshetwas st ease ani alacrity. A regiment wes immedi ly raised in bia, | ment of i » at the cl p the ri the Timpas, one day, . cross to \e1 'y important description. The topographi: iled for New Orleans on the Ist of - and slad on all the prineipal towns of England and Scotland, | reach us), it would, an occasion In furtherance of this object, I shall make | ing ao water for twenty-two’ miles, norgyrasé unt you | cal survey of the Cherokee country, preliminary tothe | (eo eee oe ee eke Tothef sept only withoutdiscount, ith this infat people. The war must now be pro- y y ber mart 4 pt, ‘or particulars of terms apply to secuted with vigor ; such, indeed, seems by the late in. | mY entree in that city to-morrow at midday. and desire, | reach camp 32, twenty-nine miles from the river. removal of the Cherokee Indians, the survey of the | 100 gallons of water were Notwithstanding « fa- P. W. BYRNES & CO. telligence from Washington, to be the course traced out | i" Contributing my share to the national jubilee, to ob- | From this point, camp 32, to the Hole in the Rock, the | route for the pro ship canal round the Falis of Nis- | yorsble wind daring the whole course from Vera Cruz 58 South, comerof Wall st, New Xork- “| by our administration If any hopes have ever been en- | *e've such a course as may best accord with. my duties | road follows the valley of the Timpas, through a broken | gara, a reconnoissance of the Canadas, at the time of the | to this port, 80 slow'n sailer was the Naiad, thatshe was ‘iebsadiees = Goins tee gat 1, | tertained of pacific policy on the part of Santa Anna, |‘ ™Y Least (perth of my heart—and with the re- | country, descitute of grass, with now and thena few | border troubles in 1837-8, when a ruj 16 days on this voyage. There were 14 persona in all, —S ee ern ene iver por — | they must now be abandoned. spect due to sovereign will of the peoplo scrub cedars on the side: : FOR CALIFORSIA AND OREGON—Th Uhave been called by the voice of my fellow-citizens | Rock there is tw pS Class fast ailing, coppered and copper Nhs | A rumor was current in town yest , that Gerieral y ‘ock there is stagnan je! e hills. At the Hole in the | Britain was threatened, were amon; the Naiad, on her vo; from Hamburg, and 16 on 1, but no grass. Fifteen miles | ed to him, which formed with great credit to | har voyage, from Vera Cruz to this port. The above Hole in the Prairie, there is | himself, and to the entire satisfaction of the government. | factsare proven by the testimony beth of the captors From camp 33, the read descends } A portion of his early military life, by cousent of the | and of th red— thei ' ise the oftice of Commander-in-Chiefof the Army | further, at camp 33, at t! ; La Vega, now in this city, had received a letter from 4 P wore hy HITON, Re A eet hat escau ache ow A die, stating that San nna, with fifteen of the Republic. { was farfrem my native land when ity, Ci - | intelligence of this renewed confilence, and of these ley ofthe Purgatory, a bold, dashing stream | government, was devoted to civil ines , during | them. The crew of the Ni further testify, that po ys pee mee dlp ame pags in Behe fansite ine eet, eoeoee tions pew giligetions, imposed upon me by my, country. was | for this country, with but ile grassin ta bed. he road Shieh time ie was associate chief engineer ofthe con" | there ware about 240 gallonson board when they turn- For freight ha od i nm, Tat railr to connect nati, jo, wi ed towards 6 squadron ater—that board ut the foot of Dover stiect, ore No as Labertyec, | PY tue Mexicans, they will never touch bottom. surrounded her on all sides, formed the chief motive for | of 1,200 fee South Carolina, The s upon ‘which | fed about 1000 ill be received up to ons when they left Hambu ¢ day of sx first aawer JAMES BISHO r.— thiv great scheme of internal improvement was based | jjis honor, in the course of his opinio stated the army. I now : up abruptly to the height of 1,000 to 1,600 feet, | and commenced, was i the case, which [From the N. 0. Tropic, Oct. 10.) aterrible | until you reach the summit. On either side, the moun- Our correspondent furnishes many details of the move- | Contest with a perfidious snd daring enemy impending - f «reat measure performed under | general principles of law applicable FOR LI VERFOOL—New Line—Kegul ments of Santa Anna and the Mexican government | Ver her, in which the Mexican Republic must re-con- has @ good growth of cedar. pinon, and | his direction. For the last 7 years, Up toa short time a teod to demand a condemnation. He next comment- of Oct. 2%rh—The elegant fast sailing pac! which will be found deeply interesting, especially the ensignia of her glory, anda fortunate issue, if | pine. T' in no grass of any consequence until you | before the Mexican war, he was general superintendent | ed upon the cases cited by the counsel, and the testimo- ABKICK, J. He Trask master, wil letter of that crafty tyrant-demagogue to Gen Almonte ious, or disappear from the face of the earth, if #0 | reach the spring at camp 35, nearthe summit. ‘The road | of harbor constructions, and at the same time, carried on | ny offered. ‘Ihe fact that made most ly against ine freight or passage, baving accommodations aneqaniled | Phe correspondence is Presumed te have beena rure be: unfortunate as to be defeated. | also see a treacherous | in places is bad. On it, about 16 miles below camp 35, | a triangulation survey of the lakes The jatter, as is | the Naiad, was the declaration of the in, at the for -plendor or comfort.” Apply on board, at Orleans ‘w tween Santa Anua and Almonte to pave the way of the | faction raising its head from her bosom, which, in calling | an immense bed of bituminous coal, thirty feet thick, | well known to those conversant with the subject, re- | time of her being boarded, that he did not want any’ 4 foot of ar to E. K. COLLINS & ier to po’ ogain. It will be seen that the Mexican | UP 4 form of government detested by toe united nation, | crops out, and irom here, on to the crossing of the Cana- | quires profound scientific attainments, and abilities of 8 | But the boarding officer himselt testified that he staid on ence of % rnment were making a great demonstration of re- | provokes a ble submission to foreign dominivn; | Jian, coal is found in great abundance. high order. The occult nature of this branch of engi-| board a very short time, and that the seemed Packet ship Ri qU8, A. Eldridge, master, will succeed e to the march of our invading army. The details | #74 | behold, at last, that alter much vacillation, thi On the north side ot the Raton, the geological struc- | neering precludes its general appreciation. On this ac- | quite bewildered, and at a lose what todo. Jt farther ap- the Garriek snd sail November 26, he: lar day. tant. ur forces approach the capital | tion is resolved to establish her right to ture of country ismuch the same as the vailey of the | count it is probable that a large portion of the commu: | peared that this was the first yoyeRe on which he had nen to see a spirit aroused among it peo- | and to arrange such a form of governm Arkansus. In the Raton it changes materially ; and | nity were but imperfectly aware of the delicacy of the | acted as muster. Taking all the circumstances of the PACKETS FOK MARSEILL"S—The packet 1 give our gallant officers and soldiers another wi All this I have observed, and turned a lis. | thence on to the Vegas, tho surface of the country is | operations, which for several seasons, were carried on | case together, as proved, the Court saw no evidence of ship ARCULE, Capt. be | ag ae will sail ier reception than they have met with | te ng r to the cry of my desolated country, satisfied | covered with fragments of lava of various colors, and the | under his management. and the responsible nature of the | bed faith, nor anything to discredit the testimony of the the lat November te iaty a PEE evenat Monterey, But Gen. Taylor is a Cortez in brave: | that she really needed my weak services at #0 important | summit of the ifs crowned with it. The scenery and undertaking. ‘The archives of the department at Wash- | crew, and concluded that it was a case of urgent necessi 7 went ry and judgment, without any of the drawbacks of that | 9 Period. Hence | have come without hesitation or botany seem to undergo an entire change, except in one | ington will show, to those who are qualified to judge, | ty, and that the captain was justified in returning to ob_ oltre _ otto BOYD & HINCKEN, #8 Wail, cor Water, | Bteat captain’s character. Jay to place myself in subjection te Ler will, and, det respect—its excessive dwarfishness. From the valley of | abundant evidences of the zeal and ability with which | tain a supply of water. The judgment is, that the cargo” perfectly understood, upon reaching my native | the Canadian to the Ocate, the country to that place, and | this duty was discharged. Possessing in an emi- | be restored free of costs; and inasmuch as there fine, fast sailing, coppered aud copper fastened bark | D&Val officer, stationed off Tampico, was received in town | *4l, I gave a full and public expression of my sentiments | from thence to the Moro river, becomes tame and flat, | nent degree that chivalrous disposition which | was probable cause of seizure, the vessel be OHN HR GARDA ric, James Peders aster, | Yesterday, stating that the Mexicans were fortify ing that | #4 principles. The reception which they met convinced | the grass is very scarce, but by adhering to the camp | seeks the most active and dangerous business of | upon payment of costa and expenses. hating superior necommodations for. passage only place, so as to render it as impregnable as possible, and | me that { had not deceived myself, I am now the | rounds occupied by the ‘army, it will be found in suffl-| the military profession, no sooner did he learn FUR B+ LIZE, Honduras, with despatch—The | .,We Jearn further, that a letter from a United States | rous t wh 1 ‘were suppose be ned i i m | cie antities for small par ic ‘We learn that the Rev. Archibald Maclay, father of the ptain om board, or to . ALEXAN DE that not Jess than 5000 troop: . | more confirmed in them, not from having given the: nt quantities for small jes. of the rupture with Mexico, than he solicited orders for ol7 Lw*th "ai iii ie ot mm The Monitor Repubicese, a ‘Angust Dork, says tani more consideration, but because they have found a gen- ee Ks ate ® ie leks feet; of ntry | the field. If he could not bo sent as an engineer, he po Mie B. Lom hos recently been appointed a * FOR NEW ORLEANS— Lowmiana and New | D0 Benito Farias was about leaving Vera Cruz for Lon- | ¢t#! echo in the hearts of my ree me changes. At that point you begin repidly to ascend the | asked to go in the line. ‘After the battles of Palo Alto | Cheplaii the Navy. pa i don, with a commission, the nat f I come, then, to carry my views into eperation, and in rn . t Ticker (or Rarurday (erober BideThe fat suiting | known, though It was in consequence of the resclation | complance with the mandate of my country. She calls | great chain of mountains running north and south onthe | And Hesnea de fe Palma, Bes Koqnant eae granted 8 | treo Nauvoo.—We have taken a short extrac ih UENESEE, C: Minot, will positively sail as | adopted by government in relation to the national debt. | me as Commander-in- Chief of the Army, and in that ca | west side of the Rio del Norte. The road is constantly, | Aon” ert it was decreed that his cereer of honor | from the Quincy Herald, which we give below. ere DEP CERIAE aa ve i That poper further says it was reported (itkxnows not | pacity I stand ready to serve. ‘The enemy occupies our | traversed by sharp spurs covered with e dense growth of | Moneety we hol cease, ‘The division to which he | It is all that we cen give which contains any thing of in For ireighe or passage, having handsome furnished sccom- | how truly.) that Messrs. Haro & Tamerce ted bees | hatlore—he is despoiling us of the richest of our terri- | Fine pinon, and cedar. forming at almost every four oF | Wl “ti ched had stormed and taken the outer batteries | torest.. It is said, with what degree of truth we know modations, <PPly om Bowed) at Uricaus, hart foot of Wall | authorized by the house of the Lizardi Brothers to make | tories, and threatens us with his domination I go, then, | five miles, na lary defences, which, in the hands | 1%) ting the point of the attack. and had ‘penetrated | not, thet Governor Ford is about to interfere and put an sczeet, or fe ce wok K COL LINS 552. % South “Soa | Hew proposals for the conversion of the debt. Our cor. | to the head of tne Mexican Army—an army the offspring | of Ter the : iaeteaty. but the | within the Of the eile, ‘end to mob rule in this devoted city :— October . “by. esata respondent, however, in a private memorandum to us, | (#0) of « free people— and joined with it, i will fail my | Keep ot Diy the forgent army. Water ia plomy, Dit te | ea cruel fire from an enemy on each sii Nauvoo, Hancoce Co., It. Packet Ship Louisville will sueceed the Genesee, and sail | says that the merchant Don Benito Farias was not | Utmost duty in opposing the enemies of my country. 1 | only good g! from view, and with jouth onthe | and Reseca de la Palma, his request was granted. He rs, Paulding and Mullican, and all other persons leisure rtunity to gi M ber 4th. passenge: D: i " A dis th: Jiant Mexicans to the en- | the ruins of the Aztec city of old Pecos. i to purchase property in Nauvoo and its promptly fo! ress. ol7r * Justice, by their warlike character, and by the dignity i, he must ha: f | this town and all prot i A 4 “Sie, ONLY REGULAR LINE OF NEW OR Ore Vena Cnvr, Sept. 24th, 1846. | ‘and enthusiasm which they have preserved of a free na. | a0 army. | ‘he valleys of the sma Llmeay ty EEEe | ths cartotaty thet he wea-aboot to yseteioe itis tor bi ¢ to the utmost of our ability all of said LEANS PACKETS—The shi fl In my last, |irformed you that*Santa Anna had not . Th neces: imme: tance; | narrow and few i colts Regaine New Orleans Line, in their praper xe lett Jelepe, anal that nk Position was by ne means tet: ayes anes Cabetiiter cme ee laters.) cumtot renee Hus procers of iesgation, afford no relief, being barely ly wounded to’ tir are aa fol a . . t ‘ | able to sup) . : onthe packet ship MEMPHIS, Captain Bunker, foot of Mai- bee ‘ulghi have farce’, Dat bis. food ‘fortune ¢ pearyitd pe ag owns, bin 1 sivahd Gea tpen eyed ¢ mM within fifteen miles of Santa Fe, you will see marked on | His literary acquirements were of a high order, and y tretship GENESEE, Captain Minott, foot of Wall at,, | *mphed, and he is now really the master of his country. | censure due to Ingratitude for the favors with which I the map the strong and almost impregnable position oc- | tale nt for painting would have onsured eminent success ~ * bh had he devoted himself exclusively to this lite o! S To crown this result, some manceuvering between him- | have been overwhelmed b: Citi: ; or, un- | cupied by Armijo and his force , and abandoned by him 2 ae this line having now commenced their regu. self and Almonte was found Beceosary, end they entered | Jess I would behold her huinbled ond ‘vaffering ‘under a | on your approach. ‘ Such was his fondness for this branch of the fine erts, 0 al hed Kou injury or destruction, if the property, the and other property belgpging. to the Mormon arch shall beZsold within six” months. We are fur- desirous that the Mormons may effect @ satisfectory Il their remaining interest in this place, for event, we believe peace would once more be re- i that he bestowed a large portion of his leisure to labori- | stored to our country. . I sail every three d into an interesting correspondence, which was immedi- | perpetuation of misfortune. Signed, THOS. GEDDES, Col. Com. ans will find it mucl ately published in the offciel Journal, for the benett.of | "Your kxcellency will et once perceive how grest an THE SEAT OF WAR. aba Sonne et JAMES D. LOGAN, Capt. the government and the gratification of the gullible, | error I should commit in assuming the supreme Magis- | The State of New Leon (Nuevo Leon,) extends over directed activity, he devoted to refined pursuits. He | JOHN McAULEY, ‘Major. whore name in Mexico is, excellence, legion. I have | tracy, when my Rog gah @ field, to fightagainst | a large part of the plain of Monterey, and the mountain was interested inthe National ‘Academy of Design, W If the accounts from this unfortunate city be eure y translated, and enclose herewith, the most important | the enemies of the Republic. } should myself, ying between it and the Rio del Norte. The plain an honorary member of that institution, and its apni they are from anti-Viormons—the existing state of things several packets as above, or to communication embraced ‘n this correspondence. It is called to the point of dai little known. The plain appears to consist of ex- | eubibitions” always contained creditable productions | areto be deprecated by every citizen. Many of those W. & J.T. TAPSCOTT, 86 South street, from Santa Anna to his confrere, and declines the Chief of power. Neither my loyaity nor my tensive levels here rsected by hills of mo- ‘ - ant pursuit, who participated in the doings about Nauvoo, are << oir two doors below Burling Slip. | Megistracy which hed. been ceutiously:tenvered to him the abandonment of interests so dear to me. T elevation, and exhi of fertility, but | (rom his pencil. In cultivating this i, ‘higher depart: | suring in strong terms the conduct of that of REMILTANCES TO \GLAND, IRELAND, | ¥ the latter. The publication of this letter paved t glo motive of my heart is to offer my compatriots the | js littie cultivated. There are a few important mines in | O one of thon ty of ‘his compositions, if we mis- | mob who remain in the city of Nauvoo. driving off ‘AND SCOTLAND. way i his entry into thi capital, through which bis | sycrifice of that bl which yet runs in my veins. I | the mountains of the northern districts. Large herds of | take ant, would ‘not do Injastice to artists of distinguish: | the new citizens and refusing to suffer them to retures CANIIEE, lh care en" eaiete | bam mn nt esse ecliujon tte vevls | tn uric; snide: cope ils Cotas | Settee tet al conie chedy | 40S Ing apa ofwute stunt tren eR cg ie oi tion Cer | the charter ed 1004 dariog which Senta | rons further, to be permitted to point out the course b of whi “ig seis ‘ 4 [From the Now Orleans Delta, stile as at of iamabited houses, he., ho, to say nothing of the report mt h the subscribers, by drafts Anna was to take the oath of Chief Magistrate. And the | which Mexico may attain the rank to which her desti- |” vonterey, whero the last battle was fought, and which | _ Lieut. Col. Duncan, of the battalion of artillery, 08 At | of robberies, has completely cared some of their st in pal towens in. Rogland, rel rtillery thundered, the bells rang, the people shouted, | nies call her. is now in posession of the American arm capital | Palo Alto and Resaca de Ia Palma, signali sympathies for the mobocrats.—St. Louis Uni on, Oct. Ni chet, Lites the abdiees sod ine nears ofthe | And the politicians chuckled a welcome to Santa Ann In marching against the euemy, and declining to ac- | of the Stute of New Leon, and contains about 16, his bravery at the battle of Monterey. Col. Duncon is 1 in mn the hero of Tam and " Pr ~ | ke to fastidious in his drese—rather neg - | by the ie Toate nnn Trad | Senay oe an gerne te Neu beloved | er cout (ving rms bextgwnire tc. | anaes ighnorhoed ae minet "7" | Rigaain metro the tlo-end che lod Yo arate | The enter phiaye aa eeu ons by JRAHAM B! & SON, © government has issued requisitions upon tho | ty to dispose of herself aa she sees fit. Tne elections for |' Saltillo, the late capital of the State of Cohahuila, | ludicrous error at the in | he stecg boat train from Boston, iT Falton sever. states for their contingents of troops, requiring them to | members of « Congress to form the constitution whieh | which Se. Toyler hes praers nant to tebe, is situated at | rals Taylor and Ampudia, et which many of the officers | /* steven