The New York Herald Newspaper, October 20, 1846, Page 1

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~ . + enggge =< we ” a fr rs ——-- — + OO — - — - — Vol. XII, No. 282—-Whole No. 4525 al Bie : NEW ORK . TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1846. Price Wwe Cents, ~ — ti yess fe Se ithcinidiaaaaiboa = — ~ == a a — ee ———= ———— | pe ‘The Mextean War: | their wish to’ remain in the public service. Commands | Hantronp, Oct. 16, 1846, Avnorta, Ga., Sept, 1846. | of their existence. Monsieur Nicoalai, in his tra Sea gE ee CORRESPONDENCE OF THE NEW voRK wExaLo. | Were unavailing, and mutiny at length broke out, dut- | Paragraphs on Politics—One in General—One about | Athens—Mr. Cobb—Location and Origin of Auroria— | America, has sovigned Sie, OF Tmace: hen RALL ROADS, GEORGIA. | 3 Matamonas, Mexico, Sept. 28, 1846 fractory ¥ ra; this they did, andthe rancheros | Connecticut Democracy—One about Connecticut Whig- | John C. Cathoun—The Gold Mines— Scenery, $c. $c" loorluh river, sixty miles east of Amacalola much better Inthe mean time I give an extract of a lotterof the | Cons ees meray ter, Governor Armijo threw | gery. | Since my lest, Ihave traveled through the several | knows. ‘This stream of tolerable size, is suddenly pre- | 9 entrenchments, and has not! The din and tion for th t 8) ntest counties composing the Congressional District of the | ©ipitated into a mountain chasm 16th, the a ber — St. i ie preparation for the next Spring co! oul \por ng! - ‘ulsion of Teen EY NEMO poles, ca hateaaongaany ls being sounded by the political perties of Connecticut. | Hon. Howell Cobb, and find that he will be re-elected | Hee! Tent asunder, during, some, terrible comeatsion of SE Re ith the W est Au: “Co . | (of the Stare of Georgi, form a continuogs line from Se. | ‘Neat! Matto, Menton mopar ié.¢ jon Lexington (Mo.) Express of the 6th inat., contains | whist the partios in New York State can prepare in four | without serious opposition. Cobb has a high degree of | of the finest p in the world. The writer promises Near Marin, Mexico, Sept, | a few items of news from San! which we b e anal the Site of Georg ey , a 7 | t n give be- Y , ; . ‘ full description, from his ‘antah to Outhealoga, Georgia of 371 miles, viz >— Our first day’s march from Seralvo was about twelve | low:—“ Mr,»Hill, of this county, who went out this |tosix weeks for a State and Congressional election, it personal popularity, and is regarded by all, both whigs ai ple eras Savanmh to Macon... .Ceutenl Railroad, ..°. ...,. i! i i 8 Cl les | miles to Arroyo Mujeros, or Woman's Creeg; the road | spring, se yesterday, making the trip in twenty- | takes the politicians of Connecticut as many months. On sn! democrats, as a conscientious mon, anda “clever | yor the present he haste remark that after the consul- Auantic “gg « | Waa very rocky, and also muddy, from the rain of the | eight day: says that General Ke Was prepar | th i he whig del Mow,” in th ‘ine and tion of the | tati ith thy t critical Cherokees, he hasnot been joods wilt be carried Jrom nnab to Auanta aad day before It was intersected by numerous littl» streams | ing to lea | the 4th proximo, the whig delegates will meet inthis fellow,” in the genuine and common acceptation of the | tation with the most IC! 5 i hang Bi r aa | orm | city to nominate State candidates. The democrats will term. | fee) rane the name: of Tah-loolak to its derivative loga, at the followin yates, vie: iy — ee through which we had to wade, ‘6. sf iv Wright Goops. Tot To Ooth was, though but a short distance,a hard march The | completed the fart. All was qu: | soon follow suit, but will it at Middlete Auroria is precisel; the dividing line bet: th - oy “Teh- ‘Rope, ania. P quie' 2 low suit, bul meet at Middletown, as per | roria is p: ly on Ing line between the “| very intelligent Cherokee lady has defined it pe, tanta, caloga. | next day, ever a similar road, brought us to Papagallos, | dull; the w: Country being literally flooded with vote of last democratic State Convention, held at New | western ond eastern waters—betweeh the rivera of loo-lah—there lies your child !” "This suggests the con- the rest of the Bugnr, Coffee Liquor, Bagging Tie ienen Ware ig en: @ ranche of about a dozen houses. We found i ; : : | ds, which i 5 fie, Ca Ya Ta: Fapthe,deteried: not a soul ving ia be houses. ‘The | Nany'a! the tears were golag south’ The ross were | Haven, to meet there before the 20h Nov., 1844, which | euphonious amee—Chertaee, (a fre inthe water) and Jecture tat acon time, while party of Cherokees pad Castings $0 50 $075 | eae Arg ginceh hesusat. 29-09, our present encamp- | in good health and enjoying themselves finely. vote their State Central Committee will, of course, | Etomalis, But these are Indian classics, and lest some of jeen precipitated into the abyss below, at which another : | rfield’s | excluimed, “there goes your child 7”' But I am not suf- Pork, Beet, Fish gu, Mit Gearn r F, one anda hulf | expect letters by a | miles south west from Marin The nery yesterday ar . the was truly magnificent, with high mountains on our $050 $0 6236 | right, and the Sierra Madre on the South. The road was | over little hill id thro FP company ot traders now nearly at In- comply with. Whether four times as long before the | your illiterate readers, according to Lord Che: women hed fled to the “Americans. and ne | el#ction is necestary for Connecticut political partis to | signifcation of the term, should conclude that Auroria | ficiently critic! tomy whether the derivation os the mouatains! Another example of the natural | make nominations as it is for those of the Empire State | claim some such barbarous derivation, be it known to S‘nseaiola and’ Tah-loolah is better worth » journey wig | Ronee le hills and through pretty valleys shrewdness of the sex. ia owing to the hard and stony soll of the former, or its | il auch that it ie genus Latin of pure classic significa: | across the ocean than to Harper's Ferry. Mr. Jefferson, | road ia rocky and a bad one for wegons. every | ‘The bark Mi Hugg, Capt. Li int | Corrupt politicians, or its greater size than New York, | tion—a pure Roman term for “gold mines” according to | it must be remembered, never saw the lormer, | prety ‘situated in valley, and has about thirty Or | Isabel, (Texas) sailed from Fort Monros‘on the 13th inet | {leave for ablor minds to decide. Give the politicians | nnd received its baptismal name from that great | ,, ‘The world does not afturd « riches tandacepe {han may $5.22" W0ihs. 35 | lorty “houses. "We found here, as at , the | with a detachment of two hundred troops, lately station. greet-scholar, John C. Calhoun. Mow,. the | oe it Sea a6 The growth about the 1" "35 | honses, with one or two exceptions, deserted. One of | od ut that post, under the command of Major WW. Mor. | Neveabouts thelr way, and they would have no business and naming of the plac: ait from some | fit IM eenPadords a nich trent. to the botanist. Here the few families left told us that they had been fo ris; consisting of Company A,” 4th Regiment U.S Ar. | done from one year's end to another but in elections and | habitants, who have clung toghe town through | little stream aflords @ rich treat to the botanist. | Het size | ore. mest ‘d > te iy “A, giment U. r. : . lining fortunes, happened som chow | the ivy,the laurel, the wild cucumber, the honey suckle, } y Torrejon and Ci , and that Ampudia threat. | tillery, Lieut JH. F commanding, and Lieut. A. L.| preparations One thing is certain, and that is, if both td » Mapp the magnolia, the dogwood, with its’ white leaves, 1 49 | Shed, if hoes Diag not leave, to burn the houses over their | McJilton. Co y “K,” 4th Regiment U. 8. Artillery, rties will follow my advice, one of them will certainly » 4 cpipas chesnut, the ‘‘chinquapin,” the varioui s of sturdy i aS | wives’ he From Ramos to Marin, about six miles, | Captain F. E. commanding; Lieutenants J.P. Gn: | be victorious! That set down as “a fixed fact.” B: that is,about the time goid was | Cophihe evergreen cedar, the juni spruce pine s |t very good one, the last three or four of it | resche and Jj. .4. Brown. Each ef these compa: both parties, {mean, democratic and whig The aboli- tate of Georgia, Ueing in 1831, this | ‘ie holly, and various others grow in rich profusion Up of {ible land, on which Marin is situated. | strong. And a dotacement of 20 Infantry recruits, Lieut. | tionists, alas liberty party, are a faction unworthy the bo ividing line between | these wind the vines of the delicous “muscadine,” the ery, per foot Crockery, pereubic Molasses and Oil, p ‘casks in proportion. Ploughs, Tera, ai Ploughs, the road i Marin ia immediately on the edge of this table land, and, | McJilton commending. —Norfolk Herald, Oct. 17. name of party, and should be treated with silent contempt, tte the. diniding- line bevmeen .d fox grape—the wild rose, and many others praia to, Macon 0 U appearance ot the houses, isthe | Passes 10 Qup Roven ano Reavr—A_ splendid | id “left in the worse company inthe world them: | {ha herokeet and the whites-ad although the Indians | Wh ichtmy. forgotten stock of bolanleal Kaowledge CR rh habia deere eda deere er tuated. From the edge of the'town you look | Silver pitcher been completed by Mr. W: selves. bounded with gold,as their statistics prove, yet had they | Will not permit me to give names. When we con- silversmith, utiful valleys, and see mourtains whose tops are | Yachw city, to be presented to Generat | _, The democrats last spring, although their gubernato- of thi ity, Ba, Prevonted to General | tne die han O10 votes logs thaa the wig’ to which | eacelully concealed the discovery from thelr more ava sider the richness of this mineral region—tbe sublimity . victories of Z Resaca Dut after gold was discovered in the | 4nd grandeur of the scenery—tho profusion of the vege- Freight may be paid at Savannah, enfien PWINKER: Forwarding Agent CoB ie” orwarding lost in the clouds. Marin, like the other villag ‘é i gees | ames satehbere i > —Savanwant, August is, isis.’ "TS" ais dmerre_ | pearly deserted, tie people being actually driven out by pos eo Rad tementbe tray cee ee aeaieaton! One of or okt, sak ne: Deere ane neighboring counties of Hebersham and Hall, and many | fon ai ranean penn) Georgia, hae not attract. ~ FALL ARRANGEMENT” Torrejon, The advanced wuarGot the Istdivision drove | and appropriate chasings, Its weight fw 20 ouecen. i | rotten borough system of Connecticut, where a town of | {fom all parts began to congregate there, tho waters Of oy or or the attention of the geologist, the post, and =e 8 party of Mexican lancers out of Ramos, woundiog one. hors | 140 voters sends two representatives—just as many as | Swoside of theriver. low could'a simple river afford | tbe philosopher? It is not because men of genius and . | Dearly two feet and cost nearly $200. The doners rs ‘ i Zorrejon was here when Gen. Taylor was a shart dis co of geatlomen of Losivvilie, Kentucky. * | (Nis kiving over 3000 votos—-merely because it was 3 jent barrier—for upon examination of th 400 or 500 latoors ee hl ave intime. He had town when the constitution was formed, causes the dis- | teities, it. would, seem that the United Stal PIONEER AND EXPRESS LINE Inthe Woods where w6 are eacasiped,. wore several Aunany, October 14, 1848, | Wile Seton een fled theme, The sone thing hes he, | Yet¥ foolishly mate the eastern bank of the Chestateo | RAILROAD AND CANAL, ‘g families, who forthwith returned to the town aasoon as | Politice—Whig Preparations—The Weather—William | pened to the pasta and pisced them in arene aint 4 Now << it wee neporecad: that (ue abiniog :* p * ; ; of the Univer. | the will of toe people, although not by. auch a majority. | Pebbles forever rolling, on thé gravelly bottom of the | (rev Attn ago, in search of the precious, metals, has snow in fall operation, Passengers leave | Padre, and there was a rumor in camp last night that the | yi¢y At the last legislature the great bone of contention was | torcted wohl this line of demarcation sepeared az tinren. | destroyed all taste for romance and love of real science. at 736 welock, inthe best and | Alcalde was hung for having consented to furnish Gen ‘: . a bill granting the right to build a bridge across Connec 2a ay, von epg leer oe hich | ‘Thus have the materials, which would afford pleasure of cara for Harrisburgh, where | Taylor with corn. Hay’s regiment with Wood's, also | The whigs of the State are concentrating their finest | ticut riverat Middletown, by the talked of New York a te the Georgians as did tne law Of Home, which | and solid improvement to the world been pormitted gra- Butler's division, will be here today, und we shall pro- | metal, as a necessary: preliminary to the contest just | and Boston Air Line Railroad This bridge was not asked | $910 11! ‘me propery 10 # eli to Khows wa Tomato tt | dually to perish, in oblivion; and the many Dably eave tomorrow for the city of Monterey. It is | opening up so richly’ We expect to see an election this | °F bY the Middletownites, and thoro on the line of the | there because they cold net get awuy to Cicero. And | advantagé’ which the country presents, for the ssfe and | iting «deh "At praca {unk Ge conghare ss | ll remactble forth immunce umber o candstr; | ena ie ong Gases Fr ia pte dems | tie onargmos son meovered ta inn eae form | Sd nrenne se coger le Indian | education have not been attracted hither Men of great had | learning and science have visited the gold region from almost every country; but they have been attracted by the love of the ‘almighty dollar.” The passion for driving a river from its bed, or sinking a tunnel dee) VIA FROM PHILADELPHIA TO PITTSBURG. we reached it Torrejon carried off the Alcalde and H. Seward—Silas Wright— The Regent: timbark ov the Peeket Boat is one of the most agreeable r@mtes that i be fe athe crantry. ‘Lhe sceuery on th and Ju ‘ta rivers is unsurpassed for beauty ‘Office in Philadelohia, No. 274 fee in | ¢phemeral and visionary stronger illus- et. cting 8 speculations. shouldbe careful os to pay thet fairin New | majority: and for the uncompromising energy with which it will | crats are held resvontible, becau the major oe rar permente ineia eoe aa ceees Sle. $0 thei Re 22 | ration of thia cannot be ound, than is presented in the in z , - | ty, ecause all of their leade: nd the . ‘ i foundation of the little town of “Cross ins.”” setae TMMINGS, Agent OUR RIGHT TO SIEZE THE WHOLE OF MEXICO. be Fences As ay material fixture injthe spproach” | ooiite (not only strenuously) advocated its passage commancels Cpe be Feral geist ns Oa town of Cross Piai the terminus of the excava- Philadelphia, October, 1846. olot re {From the New Orleans Delta} ing struggle, George’ Dawson, of Rochester, has been | there, but they also worked as third house members — | ['1, Mr the tion of the Central railroad—the rails at present are only The taking possession of New Mexico by General | detached from the Roghester Democrat, and has been | But when it came to their Governor he vetoed it on con- | jnet.in bis 7 Guy Rivers,” bus never ball porttay ee CHANGE OF HOURS. K , and the proclamation of th i in C i LONG ISLAND RAILROAD, te give over oben on our prints some | c™ployed Dy, end sseélted with, Thurlow Wood, of| ‘Mtn EN in ute a tens ine nened | awa of Oty Rivet” | may remark that hii ty i u a . i eatre on whic! ero and heroine play e ‘ir parts r4 FALL ARRANGEMENT, serious comments oa the part of others. The jokes we | the Albany Evening Journel, as a reserve or a ferlorn | by ‘the sai ng two or thre in | ““this the town where his lawyer displayed such elo. | *PPrepriation " 0 know the old General will take in good part, it he hope. Dawson is now about town looking hi what light stands the assoc: who have for years biennial, it supposed rail soe tham, for he laves fua es muck aa eight. But 40 vastly confidest;\be 1 6iaitiaethe hesks eet heretofore made the welkin and our halls of le- arenes, aad. his) heroine eae ecerolenos.. One ball | reect J \crininus, Chataneego, on Tennessee pth oft ce ad ot we Hand’ Yeats ta dedeey hint | ed laid Y f= : Gislation and political campaigns | ring with— | Thay be seen the long and rich tresses of Guy's victim. ree years yet. Looking to the advantages ‘aud alter MUNDAY, Qerober 166, Praias will runes | Pr conduct, we stand ready to defend him, | being out on Young very freely. A casual anden- |} down with exclusive privileges”—‘ down with the ‘These were no imaginary, but real characters. | which the depot forthe sperm me =’ — iles of this place; but the road will be Plains within the present year As e road, I believe, depends upon State laid within forty completed to Cro’ the completion of rT fol : ct the only one which he could properly | tirely unpremeditated ice through the ba: " ‘down with corporations’’—“‘down with mone- Init roduce, a calculating “down Easter” purchas Leave Brooxzyn—at 7 Gucek A. M; (Boston treda) for | Pursue. that dictated by common senso, ‘and it 18 | dow’ of the execulive chamber todeer bettered a sees Nohave also thrown every possible obstacle, | g,,18¢ horde of plunderers were expelled by the United | tose dice at Crose Plains, at a cost of thirty thewsand Greenport, daily, (except Sundays) stopping at | perfectly in th the rules of war recognized | of high interest. An animating cenversation was appa- | by laws and otherwise, i of banking. insurance | States, troopt, ae eo Hewsrd Payne, the "Georgia | Jollars, and is surveying and bringing into market the wm Kariningdae and 8 Gearne’s Mar yall civilized nat f in which his Excellency and some of | and other corporations—who have proclaimed war to | Mortslised, hy Joun tows tyne. Mie © CiScne | lots, to which men of speculative notions are invited. y, for igdale and inter- | War is no child’s play—it is the attempt of one nation knife against “the lords of the loom’—who have shed | FUSral Nut tey wort rction of Georgia laws | Loki present rather than the future » bigh pri members of the sustained ver, cnlire Ignorance ‘of the ug Medinte places, for certain reasons good or bad, to do as much injury to at IZo°elock, ML, for Greenport, daily, (Sun- | Sroth iis pasext $0 | both ance ak cod.) Hope another as may appear necessary to compel its psseut to | subject und: It is a fugt, not to be conceal- cippping at Jame ae certain propositions,to force the recognition of which the ode tbat the demecracy have no conkidence in the tiver umodation train To acquire rights by war, however, the war must be Tenens = Epis. perriunies foe tears, end made up doletul faces to catch 4 y |e for town lots, costly bui r mock sympathy for the poor poor labo the rich dispensations of the lottery system. Tiius Geer. | and very soon Cross Plaine will become a town—a town oppressed by the rich aristocrats! |And are | Tas hat which might have been a neverfailing source | Which must however, lose its Importance with the exten: uM " . » 1o ie le, an rations at4 P.M. for farmingdale, ds ily acco! t lead enront—at 8i¢ A. M., a) rs—leaders whose only principles are 4 for Brookly s a justone. That our present war is just we shall not | ‘The whi by the | d fishes ? Are they one year to follow at all cases cheated the fortunate crawers out of | be extended to Ch 0 or Koas Landing, onthe “48336 BM. (or on the arrival of the boat from | for a moment appear todoubt by an attempt to prove it | delegates to the state Consteton Maal saa oe Of “denan cwithaderparstions’: scons. with x which the fickle goddess had cast in their | Ton.cesea river; nor will t stop were, Already the rail- Gt eaipee a he Oe te so, Being just, then, we have all the rights that war | cuse on the 2ist inst. ti vi privileges”—“down with monopolies”—and then | “47, sine gather wie owere anaes te, ‘ale 1m pany at Nashville has b d—the route ce eo ad among the’ most important of these is | 1 met William H. Seward coming down town fromthe | presto, wheel right about, and ion their grants of | ¢idorado was the paltrealy feveledrter the pur. | surveyed by Thacepaan, the Saae poor fi ‘umbe: airy” corporation— age ucross the Leave Fanwincpace at 6 A.M. daily, (excent Sundays,) | the subjugation of the enemy’s country, the sovereign | capitol to-day; his green portefeuille fill the most unheard of powers to a1 L accomanedatien rain, and 12 f and 5% P. ™. » control over the acts of its citizens or subjects, and the polos of self eee sup) jae, mentee not for the benefit of our State citizens,but for.as they cail ave Jamaica—at & o'clock A: M., 1 P. M., and 63 P. | taking of all measures which may be proper to strength: | un his arm. He is engaged in the trial of a civil suit in | it, ‘the long travel between Boston and NewYork?” And M- for Brooklyn, or on’ the arrival of Boston | en the conqueror or weaken the conquered. court. Matters, too, of a graver import may en- | Willthe democracy of Connecticut sanction the move- A freight train will leave Brooklyn for Greenport, with a | e#e Tights one would natusally think that the taking | gage his aitention before he ieaves the city. Seward | ments in certain quarters to immolate their faithful and eugers’ car attached, on Mondays, Weduesdays and Fry, | Possession of territory, th» swearing of the people to | iilis a prominent position in the party, and is re ‘as | unflinching Toucey—a man who stood by their long pro at 936 AM. Returning, leave Greenport at 13< o’clock | Sustain the conquering power, and exercising acts of so- | a kindof appelate oracle, It will require all ie activi. | feasted principles and vetoed the measure fearlessly, not- ae a ee eae etccl ycursa | pructicuble. ‘The day is therefore not very distant when ‘An enterprising citizen from whom Mr. Cal | he passoge from Savannah to Nashville wil honky ese hased, ‘Nathaniel Nuckolls, reasoning that | 'W2,°8)s; and the sich stock and pork growing diethiote Pet Mee eee thal port loca, | Of Tenvessee will coutribute to raise the Atlantic city 0 Savavnah to an importance of which few of her present aged," but not drawn.” inhabitants dream. A journey across the Cumberland P. ‘uesday, Thursday and Saturdays, stopping at int Vereignty, such as granting protection, levyicg taxes, | ty and e f the whigs t Si i withstanding the threats by other than ubove nemed loud mountains in Cave Johnson’s two horse semi-weekly et a DAY TRAIN, | ees end te gromimens And wetuing’ more tas ts | Walon sath’ Se Seward minion hero pa | mouthed braving democrt ad deo, some of | Nererhcean ova svn urn at ME am | Hack waning bak comioranie., Lop ost sow tt Leave Brooklyn at 9 o'clock A.M. for Greenport. has Gen. Kearney done. a political ove. whom had so long been recipients at the public crib that | Mori ener tothe Gulf of was 000 Cove is to 0 amae. toe the. bad Fe sand bed 0c epee Re. | “Iu doing sohe has strictly conformed to the rulee of With the consideration plainly before him thi the: their political kind: MM. r: at the yy bear the cognomen amongst their po! red ng, leave Greenport at 2% P.M., for Brooklya, stoppiag | modern wartate, although Ne may have possibly depart: | sult of the election next” month will pereshaily vateet | of politcal peupers 7 reared near the town, ablackamith'sahop abutted against | ing’ tie green young lawyer, and still greener Doctor Farr to—Bedford, 8 cents; East New York, 12; Race | ¢d from our new fangled notions of conducting hostili- | his political prospects, Mr. Wright is still calm, ¥ ’e shall see, by the decision of their next convention, chs ah Meotes for want of tise, pushed his medi- from Georgia, to smoke the very filthiest cigars in the ; Trotting Course 163: Jamaica. 25; Brusbville, | ties‘ by killing with kindness” There is no auch thing | denily unappr he! Every man knows that there is | Whether Connecticut democracy is a going to wheel out | Smith shop, & doctor, tor wast et Himas, Plain out, not | Close coaches, But then he might cause the mails to be les) 3736; Clows: a fare the ses- | that we have ever heard of as holding “ provisional pos- | a momentous stake depending upon the | democratic line, and engraft gnew article into their ob veal elaker6 ‘door to Exgula, | c&ftied in four horse coaches, and the time to be short- | RyRy ce eR session” of a territory—we think that no such idea was | Wright had remained in the Senate he wo slitical creed to run’ somewhat thus :—“Wherens, we ign, but the real gingerbread, next door to Escula: | ‘ened by ten hours. : Pog a ag Any ay a et ever published until some wiseacres in this city and else- | available for the Presidency, alw i Ft heretofore, from principle, opposed the granting ot | P oe hora mroceries, accommodation houses, | ; Ai this evil, however, will soon be overcome, if the i ‘Medford Station. $! 18%: Ya where discovered the new principle. In proof of our | imprecatingly, that Wright has invested his only chance | ex¢lusive privileges to corporations—the creating of odi- | "00! Lips J i. “9 eps ‘ofthe chapter. Many of these | inert Tennessocans will speedily emulate the spirit of ry {Riverhead $ 4 position we shall refer to some acknowledged anthori- | with Polk’s breaking and broken fortune: ous sednapelies te the injury of public rights, we now Fs ahah iidatea foe ethos wider to gow or. | her rival sister, Georgia, and extend their railroads from 62; Cutchogue, $1 62%: Southold, | ties cn international law. Polk, and if bis own offer up as a sacrifice our faithful exponent of these prin- mutase Of the ane tn Cherokee, Among these it | ©2atanoogo to Nashville. The advantages which they modation ‘Train, $1 75; Greenport | 1. Van Bynkershoek, an authority to which all na- | forever ‘This is the ciples—Toucey—at the behest of sundry corrupt party | Kabisnon & Ohi aren kore meal for aio here.” | Would thus derive, in opening the rich coal mines to si “ tions refer, thinks the question as to the rights of the | This conviction fore: leaders, and “presto, change,” ge bavecder only for men | “4 Mother all wore ‘Gindainiog Webster hed itscorn meel | Naehviile, and thus build up Nashville asa greet manu- rp ohsok nd Pgnee teers conqueror so well settleu that he does not even discuss | struggle between th parties th who will grant “airy” chariers, with unheard of powers, | irae ate eee an ene ied at their ‘Orthography, | ‘eturing city, would soon repey them for the outlay. very low fares, to all parts | it, but contents himself with the simple remark (Ques: | of the closest and est in our anuals. A roputation | to fetter commerce and dam up the navigable highway, YN jetn sadal Oe aall Rese (bate fourte, | _ The grain crop in Tennessee this year is ve ‘tes will be in rendiuess at the foot of Whitehal) | /onis juris Publici cap. zzv. ii) that “‘ conquered coua- | whiter than snow, and clearer than virgin gold, cannot | Created by a power above all earthly po ides U ; | ant. Indeed, in this plenteous |, one might at this receive baggage f.r the several trains, 30 minutes | tries passin the same fnanner as lands purchased, cum | save a mun who trusts hi 85; neglects him now y the Look of fate elf upon . and his character to the | look at the votes at the Jast election. Toucey was far en eeeeine eect pe beet py ty oe had | time, with a very small sum, lay in an abundant supply . ‘ Brooklyn side onere,” andcafterwards explainsthe meaning of cum onere | ever varying tide of popular passion, from being the most ‘candidate on your tick of the substantials to last him an oge. paeni 8 at ret Greenport for Sag Har | to bo that the conqueror can hold no higher right thaa | “The Rogents of the Careetaty of this State will meet | viz :—Toucey, Gov., 27-2085 Billings, Lieut. Gov ,20,18 Hee. niko the o and oe /SSOF. , | at the capitol on the 24th inst. The meeting is a special | Bradley, Secretar: 4985, pirge, Treasurer, 27,453; it was getting to man’s | Mitwavare, Oct. 3, 1846. Oct. 8, 1846, ree | , philosophical and peaceful Burlamaqni, | one, and the occasion may offer subjects of ‘interest. mptrolier, 27,467, With a candidate evidently | ort's name. is state of youthiul precocity the in- , h of Milwaukio—Preduce of the ‘ = | in his treatise on public law, (vol 2 chap. 8, §1,.9,) pronto A nina will be political suicide in the democratsto | out 4 name, 1 it tf Je morning wo fad among | Western Rivers— Growth of Mikwaukie—Preduce o though evidently, endeavoring to soften the horrors 0 Witveares or Heaximen Co., Sept. 9, 1846, y for one year. ‘The Ides of November will | toma real Jonathan, with his printing press, types, | Soil—A new Settlement—Prospects of Western Emt “ Wi ss ly in nominating candidates, un- | Pollers, and devils. He immediately gave notice that he | grants. Mrs. Brevoort and Child—Indian Tradition. | der the superst. belief that a five to six months | would po [oe range army Be feeaaletecnate Having visited this country with a view to a perma: now passed through a chain of seven of the | 1omination secures them the victory: They will learn | Cri,is'the place had no name from which to date the | nent settlement, I will give you, for the benefit of the oe sly remark | most beautiful lakes, filled with savory fish, and covered pd og ooo" bie ‘he bint ome § pois male ene, Paper. A town meeting was immediately called. Many | readers of your Herald, the result of my inquiries and were for calling it Nuckollaville, the name of its foun- been requisite for a gubernatorial and | Were for calling it Nuckoll Tumgoeted the name of Auro, | observations. a6 well as all other offices in the ’ ms ris, and although the citizens were generally good | |! landed in Milwaukie and spent three days in and Lae stp green they iM Union. sien, got the classical notions of Mr. Calhoun | sround the city, and I may ray the growth of which is . W. BYR] . “ Bosides the effects of war hitherto mentioned, there | “/* in the Woode—Scenery—Duck Shooting—Lake of NEW YORK AND LIVERPOOL EMIGRATION | remsios one more, the most important of all, and which w.s 3 OFFICE. we shall here consider; | mean the right of sovereignty P, JW, BYBNES & CO,, of Liverpool, are denirous of mm | gequired over the conquered. We ha K « forming the public of the United States, that they con- | O59 When explaining tie different tinue sodespaich a line of first class Ships and Packets to preme power, that in general it may be acquired either | with ducks and wild game in abundance, that the heart | three things ha New York, onthe Ist, 6th, lth, 16th, 21st and 26th of each mouth; and on the 12th aed’ 20th for Philadelphia, and on the iolent manner, an: it, kc. r gloated over, or the eye of a white man | lieutenant do. candidi Sth and 2th to Boston, and at stated periods to ‘Baltimore; st, r,jobserve, that war or conquest, ted. 01 wenke'ek i ift of the party, viz alsoto New Orleans during the healthy season; by any of itself, is hot properly the cause of tuis ac’ | Ver coveted. Our camp is made on the shore of the | fie must b Been a federalist of the 1812 stamp, and if ied, gua. the ottice and town have ever since lines parties can engage for their Irieads to be brought is not the immediate origin of sove. | eighth lake, or, as eyr Indian informs us, Lal-a-Wonts, or | any of bis iriends had a hand in the Hartford Conven- Cae po heggtg tek csteaoa in the ‘department as Au. | “Paralleled in the history of any other place in the nS Spe clcert upreme power is founded on the tacit | Lake of Eagles, was the name by which it was known | tion, so much the better for him. 3d. He must be allied | (oF. “Phe name of Nuckolleville, however, is equally | United States. It can beast of » population of about ten aod large st establishment in the iverpool, " i » » and bar eney in the banat foe a ana nec ytte | tothe “Six Nations.” One of the latest acts of the cele- | ‘ane, tat familie Is "open esa With these qualif: | familiar. Indeed many have mistaken its origin, and as | thousand, and is rapidly increasing all the while; and « out withor disapporitment or delay, this bi d St ), for th t phi: to the honors ‘istic n cea teunts Stike Destensts eonling cokes leashes coe person to whom we | brated Red Jacket’s life, wasto make a pilgrimage tothis | satemolupents to the whig party of Connecticut. if | the town hes been celebrated for the pugilistic propensi- | 15026 gorough set of business men cannot be found any reapondence with a respectable esi ent, from whom | have promised no subjection. War then is, properly | leke, and, after spending @ week upon its shore, hunting | #Uch # candidate has ne it ts now generally spelled Knuck- done any work for the party, reby convey* to any but the antiqua- | where. This is manifest in the general arrangement of they can rely for attentioh and favor towards their relations i i ‘ it didate hi 1d contribute nothing to iergghfaai cauagysn tne BY Sow tying ne more dat the erction foun, ie | ver aa catching trout and ecg thn the egies di | tebseerhimced ese gue crane, Pan | ran a nigntcan Wau But wht W thre in sama | te cty an alsin the ample wore of goods opt com ichnoethers have attempred in a direst eommantes. | to the victor, than to expose themselves to total destruc: | Notrettre to their former nests in the tall pine: exclusives say, ‘he is an unobjectionable | Aurori®, At aad: a oe ae ey Mississippi, and, there. | stantly on hand—end at prices, too, to suit the most fas- hips. from Ireland to the United Sea’ tion : , vee ee damel: “where tne aoe avon candidate,” “ our opponents cannot accuse him of being | fore, this may be said to be truly the terminus of the | tidious. In short, every thing necessary for comfort or “Besides, the acquisition of sovereignty by the right of | trail no longer fall ;” and he a politician,” &e. Thus the workies, the merchants, | bing Mountains. bast and west, , much Joftier | convenience can be had here st but a little advance from ve, invariahly, vessels dure the spring from Dul , Belfast and Londonderry, by which grants are saved much trot at their own seaport and al it the ports of the United States to which wearly at the same cost as direct W. BYRNES & conquest, cannot, strictly speaking, pass for lawful, uo- foun the war bo fant itself, toa the cea, proposes. auihor- a izes the conquerer to carry things to such extremity as to acquire the supreme power over the vanquished ; that if to say, either our enemy must have no other means of paying what he owes us, and of indemnifying us for the these glorious old ds i v i dra- vt eae. pomenes | Eds sene tine ne te aera omer ce, | tye acta comey no wire safest | As id nt ed oping in Maal tld scenery among these inland seas possesses | rho assemble in secret conclave to pull the wires, at | Presenting a pictures soanery ne where § in hice ser cay eons Gallen a Gave 8> Ge tutests a jous picturesqueness that words can hardly illus | pach session of onr Supreme Court in the several coun. | ‘He world This is the very centre of the gold region. | Hore, for coy OOS ne nr icol while passing irm_ the broad bosom of a silver | ties, and made to submit by palaver, todo the drudgery | \en'raised probably an many millions of Goliare, hie | the praise that | heard constantly awarded to her 5 eet of pure water of some ten or fifteen miles in extent | and contribute their $5 to $50 each, to pay the necessary | Will’ he considered no extravagant calculation, when | upon the whole, I think it twurded justly. je andexpense, by bi of bi dun Bee damages he has committed; or our own safety must ab- | t'Fough an inlet embowered in wild grape vines and | expenses attending an election—and then candidate Minteat Dahlonega tthe lm | -The sof im the vicinity of the city is poor. It is of a solutely oblige us to make him dependentonus. In such | T#es, and every ection of oe paddle breaking the stalk | selected,not because of their devotion to whig principle: ee ae S10) will ona this att ing } clayish nature, and any thing bat Jesirable ; while the circumstances, itis certain that the resistance of @ van | te oe ere a gi vaert al alae onger te | but fortheir done-nothing qualities. Truly may we t8y | haifa million of dollars, averaging about forty-five thou: | timber is very heavy forten or fifteen miles from the on quished enemy suthorizes us to push the acts of hostility — vik Gee ahaa ret after coming in | unto them—wo unto you, ye lawyers, for ye bind ,bur- | 2,4 aollars per month, Lake. After you pase this, you come into « NEW YORK—Mr. Edward Saul, 58 South, comer of | ®gainst him so far as to reduce entirely under our | oer eee on betare, anton eh low a flock of broad | dens on men’s shoulders, grievous to be borne, and ye | Rit diithe ‘fold of tho mines does not flow into the | more beautiful every way more di ‘Wall str power ; and we may, without injustice, take “idvantage | Dille. flutter Hp before us irom the thick sedgy banks.— | touch them not with one of your How much | int. ‘The practice first of “salting” the mines next | of prairie and oak openings, which furnish sufficient for BO“TON—Mr. W. P. MeKay, 52 Milk street. of the superiority of our arms to extort from him the con. | Crack, goes the shotgun ; two have become victims to | jonger will ye, laberers in the whig field, be thus lam- | 270% into thie practice of “salting” the metal, and it is | building, fencing and firewood, without making it at all PHILADELPHIA—Messrs. H. C. Craig & Co., Market | sent which he ought to give us of his own accord.” bumps of destructiveness, and another is fluttering | pooned? Look at your last year’sticket Your Gov- | &/ ‘hg very ingenious artifice of aduite. | burdensome to clear. The soll—say in Jefferson, part of street, dent! introdi com tricken swain. Exupere | eruor, Lieut. Governor and Comptroller were lawyers of 7, wetted elver hes been en. | Wankesha, Columbia, and Fond du Sec counties—is a BALTIMORE~—Mr. George Law. It is evidently an attempt to luce the most liberal game ; a sight at her delicate extremi- | the abo ‘and the 1 ould ha ae gold with melted silve: en. NEW ORLEANS—Mr. John Toole. system ; even he, in every respect sustains the con- | tjes, that are as small as the foot of Byron’s lame leg, is | jroo sist Deere eee ve Deen § | tirely given up in this country. But, independent of this | black loamy soil, and will produce, with proper cultiva- axd Bxcnanae —Drafie for any amonnt, payable | duct of the American General worth more than the caneres, that look, qgiutening | AW yer slo, could s Baptist lawyer have been found | conjecture, the gold is not all coined at this branch mint. | tion. equal to any in the world. on the Provincial Bank of Ireland and il its branel IIL, Vattel, who is authority with all mankind, writes like the fect of Venue, whoce beat | {22 Baptists holding a mortgage of that office, as admitted | ‘Mining hus become a less adventurous business, and as. | Wheat, oats, barley, corn and potatoes, can be raised \is9 on all the principal towns of England and Scotland, | gs fojlows (Le Droit des Li 4 been trensfigured by Jupiter, As we | 23 the party. Keu well Know the ticket was thus | sumeda more steady character. The rolling lands have | with bute very little trouble, in comparison to New pm pot md The conqueror who takes a city — on y. Anpiter As we | formed by iawyer trickery, and will ye be thus caught | teen found very productive of grain, and corn and other | York and New England. . > r whirrs up near the low co evita, einses particulars ofterms ITIh iw, BYRNES &CO.,, | enemy can only justly acquire the rights which the sove- | wood, and our’ canoes wait till he is fairly ‘bag: | iincutt caf that of yoer children ia Smerl” sta | products are almost as cheap asin the western country. | | Fruit, apples, pears, cherries, plums, quinoes, and, jn $8 South, corner of Wall st., New York. inst whom he has taken up arms.— | goed—now a startled bitteren comes sailing slowly by, ‘and declare yourselves incapable and unwor. | B¢ miners do not complain of the tariff, entertaining, | the southern part, 7, be culiiveied bows, TW. BYRNES &'CO, Mm to take that which belongs to his | f%tover’ us hesdes Tom and T both ptvethon echo! ablic honors) because. you were not. bred | With good reason, less fears of the effects of the tariff of Srult rae i agh Milwackie, Weakeake, Jembe- 3% Waterloo Road, Liverpool : Af he assumes the sovereignty, he acquires it | she quivers, she fallsdirectly into Willie's lap, who looks | tehe treks end cheate of lawyerisam’ Are you thus | 1646,than the coal heavers of Pennsylvania. Ser sete abin counties, 1 saw some of the fiseat re opper 5 TRY > een, Th tt . thank before—and been rough ston master, will be des- | have spoken of a city or country which is not wholly a | not say, as you will at once perceive falebitaly 1 eed | water yo ag reheat itjvou {or your | citizens, however, are to be bound ia the mining regions jo—-and I have be he. AT a} Md Gregon, touch pation, or which does not fully belong to a so- | Adams, in the primeval Eden of the Empire State. yeer beunden duty to 40 fer that the of | ,, There is no region of country affording « finer field for | twenty-fo “ie seg lerciy 1" tae eter fe os eee. mediate por cere tigen, it whieh such nation or prince has only | ‘The lake of Eagles is about 7 miles in length, and is in their birthright,,and thet the J the pen of the graphic writer the mountain region head water is clear ALIF! x lakes 4 C.’s are the tal, while the oak ope side resemble a full- havi ‘sceommodations: apply If the sity or province fully and per- | depth from ten to two hundred feet. It is the last ood: ble of filling them--that to be a mechanic | 9f Georgia, The mountain scenery, the lofty precipices, | ‘ls card von tan'land, gently sellieg on board, at the foot of Dover street, or at No, 58 Liberty at, | fectly belongs to the domeln of & ration or Of a sove: | Cfiruar are mast wish ul we receh Raguette Lake iu | ohd/cars ovete dally A Rep rg ee pron pow t ow pee ome ge mand Tt well weulh, 2 trip trom yout crowael chy taam where leizers will be received up to the day of aniling. "| reiga, it passes on the same footing to the conquer- | let; that is abouttwelve miles distant. Owing to the | our country is degrading, that such aman is not At for | ‘He healthful atmosphere, all inapite, the spilt of te | 178A person disposed to follow agricultural pursuite ag] Bee iinads irk ele Pe ee riectness of the State geological surve office? Are you willing to continge to be all this? If | mance. Then here ray oo Biive been transferred to | could not fail to suit himeelf in one of the counties d impe: RB LIV ERPOOL--N ‘Regular it belongs, if it lose by the change, it is a misfor- i location > bk abe tihe clegant fase sailing Tesker kit | tune of which “it oan only secuse the pent | ie oe bin heern phd rouse up as one man, and put a veto upon this long: | their western homes. And were any one to attempt to | named, though, for my own part, | like Columbia very abave not, i ince of war — | *Tis true that they visited Raguette Lak: ¢ . i , whe i is but little marshy land it, and I GAKKICK, B. J. master, will sail as | Thus a city which. formed part of a republic or of a | ten by s few attestive musquiocs, they backed omtond | *omutec te dictation Show to the laboring 1 1 We | relate the many frolice—the ingenious contrivances for | much. There is but litle marshy ¥ For (reight or pacage, having accommodations unequalled | !imited monarchy, which had a right of deputation to the | the consequence is that the people are little better off | too truthful accusation that you are an aristocratie party, | raisin ‘he wine tne butts Pavel, oy th veninee ‘orcomiort. Apply on ‘Orleans wharf, | Svereign council, or to the general assembly, if #0 far as any real information is concerned. | (judging you by your candidates,) that you now are pro | fui truth would indeed appear stranger than fiction deeply regretted, as there is no country Cee ae ee ee Se and sre | Dahionege, the location of the branch mint, is five mi With, of and tor ily by New Yorkers—men who went there with but small means, but by industry and perseverance foot of Wall street, ar to EK COLLINS &'Co. poeeelige caper Ala gran ape dMmomenice "he ans Price of ze $100. A longer think of rights of such a nature ; the constitu: | | havo ever seen possess! . This will you a vic- reality call their own, and Packet hip HOSCIUS, A, Eldridge, master, will sneceed | tion of the new State to which it belongs does not auf | est portions of our State, when once brought into notice | tory-—this policy will crown your efferts year after year | {fom this place. he town has ebout one thousand ins y independent. They could Sa ee et ' ovaeis end cultivation with success; end itis the lack of this course of action | runing of lawyers and doctors. Hiascnust. | not be induced to go back to Now York again, and move _ TV. Martens, professor of law in the university of Got- We killed but three deer as yet, but | which has £0 often lost you the State. Every two or Pp J . in the same sphere that they formerly moved in. They PACKETS FOR MARSEILLES—The packer | tingen, at that time under the patronage of the English | when we once get into the waters of Reguette | three y ose who do the work and the giving, get @, Tenr., Oct. 1846 religious meetings every week, and everything in- Pao MHCOLE, Cape Win. BR Hoodlecs: will att Xing, in 1788 published-a treatise on the law ef nations, xpecting some rare sport. We intend to | disgusted with the pipe-laid, packed conventions, and avinLe, Tenp., Oo : ment. the ist November. For freight or p pply | which we suppose may be looked upon as good authori- a larger supply of edibles, having found | say, let the recipients do their own giving and own | The Gold Region of Georgia—Scenery—Utilitarioniem | { shall in my next notice such portions of the to vc aincnese a walt Etonsit, | the Celitorietand Now ‘esics basiacm we ste threat | Sahtenctoomente which eftroondnaty eepceas Tall | NOPE, ZOU aad My, ikto other, causes, but thi ie the | —Crose Pleinsend Reilreeds—Cave Johnson's Stages. | count splaing «re oi7re _orte BOYD & RINCKEN, 68 Wail. cor Water. | ened. In that treatise (book 8, sec. seems to have q yoogTy nding you thie, epiail S Seeceal Ponnd Bee lachane ee Spent i oe The Etowah river and its tributaries winds its way for ‘and consider thoes FUR B- LIZ, Hondacas, with despatch—The | had the very case of New Mexice in fine, fast sailing, Coppered and copper fastened bark | justified OHN R- GARDNER, James orthy of his hire,” you would have one | hundred miles through this delightful mountainous | tion who should and who should not go Weet; second, ited out to rock under which beautitul Whig fi en of Cannecticut, think | region, and every few hundred yards affords a site | the best method of going, or the cheapest route ; third, Brevoort and child were buried, who were taken Perpet o dersea, ma: er, | are his t the burning of Schenectady by the Indians, and dge whet m . i by pordes of sharpers havin: superior aecommodatiocs for passage only; Apply (6 | " ‘The conqueror has, strictly speaking, a right to make | here ‘perished’ of theit suffecings, It appears’ that | ingaer tlt ee, AC ogee Joab, whether Jen Gad | Where machinery of the largest power ‘may be eter- | how to avoid being swindled by the antain qn board, oF to ¥, ALESAL DE Prisoners of wer of i thi eu ecto eos Slate, wio| Mrs. 'B, with her baby inh —— torcticel commonsense men from your midat | nally kept in motion, with no greater expense in the on the route and at the land office. “ 7 ——— eee ma, into wer, they have committed no | from the encampment at rul State and national affairs. Out of the houses. Th 5 ent.—Nathan FOR LIVERPOOL—Regular packet of the 26th . ‘ainst y ro! P' to rule over your State an erection than the cost of the house e mountain APppoinTMENTS By THE Paresip fid<: PMV HUGUENOT, Capt raves, barthen 1000 remove them 10 eee feet hat eh seh he Tae tse ot we thei a is ; | Your entire Congressional delegation ell ere lawyers | cones and valleys furnish & suflicient quantity of produc. | Clifford, of Maine, Attorney General of the Unit- . bove, her reguinr day. 4 conqueror ‘generally carries his rights, in this respect, | where the Indians used to raise their corn ; and it Is here | room for a New Huven Co lawyer. See to these things | ‘ive lands to cheapen provisions to the lowest prices vice John ¥. Mason, Tesigie a ; tons, will sail as The accommodations for cal urser in the navy, Vice Purser Breese, de- register of the land office at overt C. Newland, deceased. Pe- of public meneye at Greensburg, no turther ceased. John Miller, i to submit such subjects to his domina- | iu these forests that they left their wives and children | —you have loi h been bamboozled Your vote, | 4; ndanc: 7 fe vp An , to exercise cer- when they made the Vloody Wyoming. an polled last wring, = you had a muerable match: | Rich vectiigis bot a asthe hat sae ag omaha r them, such an raising and | These impregnable forests ba for | ed ticket ; and if you would succeed this spring, insult | tonmay be purchased at the very sites for the factories ever been a plac wiring elsewhere _ For term: making them pay taxes, ; hi i 1B J | | gathering and of retreat ; and ainid their fastnesses have | not the intelligence of your party by again cramming | Nor could the number of operatives employed ever ky ned. JOSEPH MeMURRAY. | obey hi d punishing ax rebels thove who at: | frany captives perished aud many tories Deen shielded | down such a tcket—one ¥o. elec ually coudemued last | cause a rise in the price of produce, For little as the arco sae cor of Pine and South sts. | tm) ks from justice, Just to the north of us is a rude mound, | spring. if you do, you enter the election with # mill- idered, I Copied | “ ro 1,2 we have not at | with several graves near it—a trace of the French and | sione about your neck. ‘Their respective merits, os de- | fact is considered, I am of opinion that it will neverthe- | GREAT SALE OF LOT: | PASSAGE FROM BELFAST DIREC lay di distinct lec re— furnished @ greater demand for prov sail panctually the 15th November—The 4; hand to quote from, lay down, we distinctly recollect, si- | Indian war. The legend runs as follows: A party of | cided by your party, were—Governor, 27,922; Lieut. | loxs be found true that the gold mining district has NTs’ EXCHANGE, oo J, hip GLENMORE, Capaie alichael, | milar doctra it will be Leto that if the Ameri- | Indians ade 6 descent upon one of the border villages | Governor, Xei6t Secretary, 27,723 ; Treasurer, 7,957 ; | of late years agi r dei ui isions 7 THe Mie CHA October, (iast ) sb ohiveke ty bet regular dey ait pap iy gedaan ingyen Gan Kearney | of Canada, and bore away with them the betrothed wife | Comptroller, 27,82. Give “hen, ‘“e strong pull—a’ pull | than any district where millions are employed in manu- | ANTHONY J. BLEEKE, Aucuoneer. mee mm ge ye on Oe Oe eS in ore , it) of a Frenchman named Raguette. Collecting a few | altogether,” end the result will exceed your most san. | facturing. A miner ape in a “ de) 7 mine, | “Phe following valaable Lots, being part of the Rose Hill Pa. 1gth of exch | has acted only in accordance with the acknowledged | brave spirits, he pursued them, and, being a chivalrous | guine expectations. You can, if you will, rid yourself | needs none, or very little capital. He employs his bands ap 3 = t | tions, and that these commanders have coniined woreble 6 ity to those who may feel Gesirons | ewe oe nations, hunter, followed their trail up Beguete River (now | of the self-constituted lawyer clique, and you yourselves | from day to day, and tho receipts of one lucky day will sees ne cir fetends bro nt out from, she herth clang, For | ‘bemselves strictly within the rules of war. written “ Racket”), and pressed so hard upon the fugi- | are alone to blame if you not succeed. y the expenses of © of unfruithal search. y side, between the 24 and Leziag- farther particulars, Via (i letter, Fd sid) to EN eteen ‘aioe tives, that they murdered and scalped their victim, and ese laborers have all to and thus the mines af- 95 feet went of 34 avenue, osre JOB, MeMURR. cor.tPine and South streets, Military Affairs. left her exposed upon their trail. When Ri tte ford a ready cash market to the agricultorists. th side, between Ist and $d avenues . 23 TO D, uo “ . 9 Jove 40 pei 1, ew jn 3 ‘o render the m reg! jeto ‘em | Tai 5 Tt ENG. WWEMENTS IN SANTA FE. found all that he loved had rished, his Maenetic Tstecrara rrom Burravo to Dr- | To render th jon accessibl East T regula! AND SCOTLAND. ” * | We understand that despatches from Gen. Kearny no bounds. He buried her, and, when in the act of | rnorr.—The Detroit Free Press contains a pros- | nesses, a turnpike road has been constructed from | 5 lots ou Ist avenue, west side, between 22d and 234 streets, m in Georgia, weroes the mountains, through ie commer lot. One of these lo is 10 feet PARTIES wishing to. remit iV tae to thete fiends tn Great’ Bri Detwoen int and 2d avenues, t, south side, between Ist and 2d avenues, ic to sits Hey ward and we.e portion of ioputsble having been im the family for of sale D Dimer oa Murray counties, to the Tennessee line. Jn j= B ners J 1 passed one of nature's greatest and ‘ted in the St. Louis | Served by all true Cai ), & shot from a concealed | }juffalo to that city. A company, composed of Samuel acta | panslgie £0 the rer Coat ae aisiog his mulitary force, | Indian transfixed him during this blessed act of devotion. | L, Selien Hey We deen, Jonathan Child ele D. t and 1s for the provisional govern- | His companions buried them in one grave, and,as winter | Ely, Heman B. Ely, Henr: Y) bag George Dawson, | most sublime curiosities—Amacalola wae be F Meg wa pat of New | wo now eee); ia he, hope of remaisiog Git spriagy set | {Ta aTenes “ay right. to uso. More's petont, le | Sis adnan creme to hele oor lengusge, Sopplly U lexico which f for the pur * 5 bu je with a re uliar to pate ns gm ey wat | rae cr, cna Sante | gat etr ars to oe Mae a Sal ines RS ecobites _ i . , Apply So RAHAM BELL & SON, Pedition to nia. — Washington Union, Oct. ‘Woods. energy inished. The wi will be acted Calola, #} ne ess Ag 13 er gene 117 Fulton street. A gentleman ofthis city received a letter, yesterday, | { congratulate myself in being so fortunate in | in the most substantial manner, and the iron cord, in . It was, therefore, natural to them w pd ntend November, and the of the 2h | from his brother in Santa Fe, under dete of tbe Uth of | the selection of my pilots, for there is hardly a spot | stead of the light copper wire, will be used along the asit la ite way over @ ae Salen om yours with inkorest ot sailing packer ship | September. There are some additional items of intel- | of any singularity but the Indian wil fix his quick, at- | entire line. capital stock of the c y is $170,- | precipitated two hundred feet | GNercenr, aie hall 7 n November. sarah We oomarets | ree ihe Longing rock inte the smooth basin below to ition ‘maps will be ready three days . = ‘or further F eR at C18 B. CUPTING, ums to their in Jarge or | the 1st September, have been received. They make no plac! @ cross over her grave (a ceremony ever ¢b- peaes for an extension of the magnetic telegraph from | | | 5 d the t safe and iti snare Tough the ‘rabseribeay Cyrarats “ ht paresie | Papers. ‘The General prin win egland, Ir p | and mak ; jbo d ag agian SyrTeter (pos paid) from as peceatad: | ment. He had sent a part of his force into “tt over half» century. Re rm of Sale—10 on the delivery of nm 650 tons, will sail | ligence, to those already received. The writer tent upon, and with that peculiar expression that | 000—$65,000 is the whole amount ‘ns avove, her regular day. pip h vg that when Governor amis hed retirod from Santa temp to find out what past recollection him, | and vere the line in complete operation. ‘This sum is to | exclaim, “Amacalola !” (combling watee) This is = information apply. te the auction ving Very fa) erior somvmmnedattons for os * cond he halted in the direction El Passo, and threw upa breast: | and generally he yieldsto my wishes. He spe the | be raised by subscription. Certificates of stock will be | highest water fell in the United §' |, but owing to the bee No. abun and steerage passengerr, and terms moderate, thove in- | work to prevent the further progress of the invading | Canadian patois with much naiveté and correctness, | jesued in shares of $00 each, and each subsoriber will | smaliness of tho stream is only seen in ite ar af cage pound. ites No: 5, Nonb river, orto riny. Lecoming satisfied, however, that his force was | But stop—Exupe receive $900 in stock for every $100 paid in. Already | tor agreat rain. Had it as large a stroam, Loy WW Hearse pes veatote, Hing) id | tomct JOSEPH MeMURRAY, lequate, he determined to disband volunteers, and | in a birchen bark basin, and from $35,000 to $40,000 stands @ to be sub: | Genesee would become ‘nificant com| Ama- ‘ae beste} comer of Pineand South sureets | #0 informed them. To this they expressed | adieu. soribed for, at the various places the route. calola falls—and yet com; ively few Americans know .

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