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me. = — =e —— ———4 voi. Mo, 961—Whole #0. 4334 : 7 \ x i NEW YORK, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 1846. Prive Wwe Cents, MALLE AUE, we, ADDITI places, even after all politigal power.{as well us militery | invariably h roray a oun Naval and Military Affairs, | knowledge, did not exceed three thousand, nor fall CENTRAL AND MACON AND WESTERN oan si TFRACTS | oot. cbrit calle, Bas aes Fe Lae learned that the | usion, hes hed ts entacon ‘lower divi. | Major Graham, bearer of despatches from Washington | short of twenty-five hundred. General Ugarte subse. in name, ond that it had not sions temporarily stimulated by the ve sures which | to General Taylor, passed through Mobile onthe 20th | quently marched at the head of such troops as he could RAIL ROADS, GEORGIA. FO been wholly abandoned ; ‘but the remnant of the troo He C1 | f Chihuahua, fe < t ; pe | were calculated to advance the strength of their eventual | inst. ind in the department of Chihuahua, for the purpose of REIGN PAPERS RECEIVED | stationed there consisted af no more than an officer and union. The movement party in British Canada, at frst too | Col, Whistler, who wes recently arrested and tried by | proceeding to Santa Fe, followed by Gen. Armijo with AT THE one soldier. 1 was not able tolesrn the rank of the for- | weak to crush their conservative opponents within the | » court martial, his {ris will be grat: to learn, has | bis sixty men esa rearguard; but while on the road, NEW YORK HERALD 0! mer, as he was absent, appeared, at least among the | limits of their own division, fraternised with the French | heen honorably discha: from ai d restored to G82. Armijo, who was a day’s march behind Gen Uj FFICE, | foreigners, to be little known. | Cunadians, and, according to the invariable practice | his command, by the President, on a full exumination of | t@, #eXt an express to the latter to inform him that he , form a, coutt ee ieteret po eeeeas | eeoriiy: The sein tuategeme Beimilar sbeence of ell an | ef © dieedvcied minority procered from without 8 the jucte, tes: Suasges ‘being’ sutively: wnewrteised by | Jeesved pouitively, and beyond all doubt, thet 6,000 Ame- orgin of 371 miles, viz — il Fy j ; a cer was ce who dw strength w: i t : ricans would eppear in io del Norte on Gentral Bestrond. nglo-American—Anglo-Hexicam and Franco srthe mission of Noone (eee de low Dolores, some | French Concdiens should ‘foal aggrieved by thoes | rete: Col heapens eviene to his post in Mexico. | doy of August precisely. Whereupon Gen. Ugarte came Pl al A Spanish Affairs three mile Fectytont which thar proviens vileuce had engender. |. 7%2 8 snamebiy Mammchuvet “ie hat ried from Sayanauh to Adanta and Ooth- It must be acknowledged, from the data furnished by |: that they should refuse to hiss the rod which | 1.0) 0) Brazos” A decree or order w land at Brazos. They ha en! 7tu and 8th infantry, and are under the orders of officers most of whom were ‘enguged at Palo Alto and Resaca de Palma. ‘The troops are organized into a battalion of four com- lige ‘ : : | | panies, and commauded us follows :— intelligence that the Amerioun squs- | ofcer and one soldier” a ned. "It isadded by | Botwithstundi: opposition from the Lowe Porrevet Me) E 8. Hawkins, 7th infantry, commanding | “aZ,°%, ie, Tesular troop. SS iptiee eee aot california,” must be taken the Washington Union, “What the result of this sum: | tiaus to which erive cient 8 the peevine ' i i! Fiek, Lard. Tallow, Boost ly. Our transatlantic friends also believe t we are not {ufopmed. We pranacs the result | 2"igiually expored, when the French party had some real | Patvalion and the recruits of the jones iil Gearing, Pig Iron ead Grind have invented the electrival telegraph n that silenge which gives consent. Sxverience of the condition of afairs inthe united colony. | “prover oa) G Wright, ofthe Sih regimont of infantry, | sort than to otles a higher road thea they recaive fi y the exclusively American novelty th lence has ordered for some years | ‘he alleged tujustice of that junction, vanished like a | recruits of the 8th. lat Lieut. J. Beardsley | Sur government. This decree is part of a scheme for to its operations. “The seizure of California, thus tele. | the wits us should also suit England, it| dream, uni its "exterminating tendency” upon the | of the ath infantry, is assigned to duty. cojoling foreigners, sketched some time ogo ins V graphically announced, is naturally announced with | suited this porerful nationy as well during the “Liberal” | lower provines proved to bea fabrication. When thelr | °'Caie' George Morris, ih in(astry, commands the re- | Cras reper, ahd epnarcolly” now weriousleadqnedee electrical faconism, “Yeni, eidi wit, in message enough gration of 1928 as during that of 1843, to conciliate | Sane ino some practical aciimatagce, with the feelings | Cfuits of the dth infantry. Lieut. D. Wallen, 4th infantry. | the government, Vn iv eget by stl prendre nnd ceerain (us oe ction of the emigre apithor neve nor less tna: ‘sndjdectrines ef their opponents, the conservatives, cy Capt. D Ruggles, oth infantry, commands the detach- | . The Diario Official of the 7th of September, after an- should say Great Yarmouth and Great Britain} had been s hg at these two distinct periods | !atter were not found to be such monsters as they had pol prdag rode eclne wont 4 > rene ea jus hr Mees nouncing, the rival of the 4th brigade of the ormy at taken by one of the vessels of the United States squa- | had the good fortune to gain the shore of England, met | bee? represented ; and when at length the radical minis- , Sau Luis Potosi, on ite march to Mouterey, saya: * dron.” " Prodigious ! on those shores with abutalant eympathics, which great: | 'Y overreached itself by grasping at supreme power in | Winne sore commande is oe 100, most of | Prenat eehre sioners id deserters from the Ame- cable to thle deoree, it op. mble to this decree, it only the foregoing A: Official acco: scourged them, isan oo strictly consistent with 4 yell Chetan paint eee ears BOO | Kaman infirmity to awaken surprise The force of Bri: the Portsmouth, mate his sum, | tish radicalism and French disaffection combining to we are told, en the 9th of July, to ent party in power under Lord Sy- | isting) “commandant,” or the “one | ¢¢oham and his successor, wes @ natural result. But, mentio: Tales, . ToAt- To Ooth ko ki lanta. caloga. (Fron py wee OF CALIFORNIA, rom the London Globe, Sey . an (absent he larg a pt. 25.) (absent or non- on Basen, te i vernment has exhausted all its They came ten thousand strong, the distribution of patrovage, the whole dependency ra- in order to mal uccessful campaign against the inva- eck cr arang Bahn ak gel fuente Sal tei ures Pentel | Room are rg oimes char weer ey fr | dre AS SIME"! Soo a a wa But what was that to Jackson, cumb, and her valiant soldiers participated more than | ®!¢ction consummated their defeat. The temporary te- | regular service, They are chiefly irish and German, ened circumstances in which the nation ls placed would ‘The British turned their backs on. once in the dangers an@iglories Stour Gwn. nure of place which the radicals had enjoyed, combined poten ata hop A i A y y of men. California is as big as the British islands, France and |. It suited England that the regency of Espartero should | With the attractions of « democratic theory presented to spon tr Si tke inh Sng | tus icra om aDion he nary Ne | ethan ean LACT, a | ag aS an Sw SS rorre enlle, by one vessel of the Untied States squm: | res ott Geld an lie CeMen: as Brczee ta tea iene | DOrty French Canedian began to | The following letter, from General Kearnes’s guide Gulliver's corquest of the kingdoms of Bintcen* | pendence of our nation. fe all these ospital polate the | fe¢l his power and to exercise his discretion. He no | to Colonel Campbell of our city, though of no later date blockading force. Ba verrtins Beer LES | Calivens cocauert ofthe kingdom of Biafesce. | utee ef Goniarone wae synonomour, ami | longer rushed wildly into the armsof the radicals, burn- | than ha heretofore received, will be read with éditorials of the Mexican newspepers on. the - 1846. albdm*rre_ | Monterey and Celifornia. It is not exactly that one vee | her's, as well as our to that of France. To | 19% With blind animosity, but he coolly observed that the from the writer's well-known cha. | Ject of the war, like the dclarations of the public . and euthorities in the departments, are all fessedly in NGEMEN we iee eaat autice qauseat Dat thet, tanking at etm) SAGs tale enn metas eere an mamionley, while the fedboate ors sonkeseaty flisra' Bp, Sigh, told. | taver of a vigorous peestoutionsé tee coart hates, ‘rench brig Duvirier, of 209 tons burden, from arrived at Vera Cruz on the 14th of September, aluable assorted cargo, including, among other q ity of swords. She must, of course, e Reid, ot, Bavannsh, Atlanta or Ooth fons. . WIN! AvAWNam, Angust 15. while the radicals were coniessed! ea | aR: | ls teed pa souk Hat mle, they be evn chan who gad one proach | agnosis thn etc peri or Retin rand dy ‘ them. They took Texas, saetha (em hanes now she is opposed to the Montpensier match, al in (ged stra el things. -fodeed. | Of patriotism, if it manifests an inclination for peace, st a invidious comparison) tak ViA RAILRUAD Penicrn INE, ly ney {oer wll dle ey tla Ly any one ther on the s| to le FROM PHILADELPHIA TO PITTSBURG. | ambition scoms now too impations fre it fone ee | ba The fu) ion. " nt 1 eperetion Faasenaers leave It took Texas by first peopling it—then Aad when nobody is at Fenty dale apted | ae oatirolant fe ‘would think from the present espect, that the in| Decause the men of the present situacion will not | ‘Tapsmitted to our dependencies abroad, w: quest of New Mexico was now complete ; howe tarded in ite current bor mitigated in its violence by the | much remains yet to be done, and Gen Kearney is t orca iam ged marge ellamngh how | Sant eRe bibs aed id Mites | sit pal Get of Ch Bes jock, ting itself rid of Mexican op néed by the will of their | *sility of Sir Robert Peel, but failed to rival this primo | might be prejudicial to the interests o nited States moat eursteruble degeription of cars for Harruburgh, where | YOUDK Juels rid, Of, Mexican sovereignty next ripe for | Country, Bat what matters ft thet if Cowie Philirren | weathercock in bis facile obedience to the sbifting gusts | in this quarter. ates ‘one of the most agreeable romtes that is to be found | i But there is no te: per for gradations mariiage scheme is not realised, it is owi te the | f political expediency. The organs of conservative Ex-Governor Armijo is yet in the province, and is said sacrifice of territory, if a “a is nation opinion in Canada at length reminded him that ‘ though | to be prowling about the mouateins with a band of two | he future, is the course Sea riverane Gren avomatedinn nn, ali bet eayecplod rviie mee eeret eens pected OM 1 Spain will not be the | {Tyiant may stride over a river, a dwari sticks fast inva | hundred mens and, atrangeto say, tho inhabitants ofthat | dictated by reason and sound patriotiom What it ring i ditch.” The functions of a roment carried on by | vicinity where he in more dread of him papers contain very little with respect to the thelr fale m New | thelr own li between. The sppetite grows by waa | erage te ne ee reagan’ | in executive tail of state offivis, soon. fll into actual | and hue bend of gu lean sapant e ane ier haa ee joie a isno one inthateity | 604 9 check except in dissevered union and discord | strengthening ofthe fatal influences which make of our | *eyance offices were hawked about till noon» would | army; and well th ° ” nothing at phe sohbet > a ees eld PSA | {UMMINGS, Agent. | amongst the States, or collision with sume external force | Country a mere French cvlony:? [t suita us to expel i mad to thio state of wttar Cleecganiention | sil te lear irom ns, chouie they sontoem to tho lawe—on.1 0 "2, artaseutels publihed inal “oldtfre_ | equal to its encounter. For that encounter Mexico hus | t#ese iofluet.ces; we ought not to perceive that it may | Lord Elgin’s assistance is invol te oealary, (ay here from a gue. } published, amounting ie all to: ceventy> sacrifice of any of the alleged rights or interests of the country. All, therefore, are obliged, in self defence, 10 keep up 6n appearance of ardor for the wer, and to be manifesting — Lapa But in i urnals, it is easy to per- a that peace with the ia, October, 1846. c ill reach Canada at a period when all the which Armijo isdi-:posed to wage, not only | Sve dollars, CHANGE OF HOURS. Given too many proofs of feebleness. The restored Pre- | ¢ually suit England to expel them. When the will of ofthe Radiol batenx. celal & ‘ Dut ugainetsil te Panavitants of*New Men] | Great dissatisfaction is expressed in come of the jour boy Peery a RAILROAD. rota org haere eee een ee ge ae pres who ares t shes ey ee fueron of the Sitter per. are poll ceraare 4 Ir 5 Wi oe is dartarily sends nd his ingiorions fom LB cay rand ned a Oy Fi a | INGEMENT, + rane + t the 11 of anoth hich rival courtship of the French Canadians He will meet | flight, has not im a single partizan, save thow wit . : oad " : Se canine ent teeae ae tox Eesbonlios OL ine wth thetofeac owe ee County which is conformable | oy dministration," of which one man is bead. od | bin, inal N ais, together with his already | the Messrs. Schneider, agents of the republic for the con- are dispersed, , ; Lasva-Bieextrm—at 7 gelccs, sence of General Houston, who, having been wounded | quite sufficient to account for the dito! ation of the | ori party ‘completely disorganized. Lord Elgin | Had Armijo acted as a brave and patriotic man should | to be highly Guocneningrestite Mexice, partionlariy. (2 . M. (Boston trrin) for | in the ankle during the engagement, was 1, ing und y the alleged sele of thi ‘Greenport. daily, (except Sundays) sto) at ~ a »ing under- | whole statv. The ranks ere filled up ei Ber with country- | will see a Radical o] ition encoureged by conserva. | have done in defence of his country and the government RB Farminaiae Eo aeeeer are ooree Ces lt nealing m {Joneral rested upon & rough | men and Indians, taken by force from their village ower | are teoscaiean ani — devoted to the single object | which supported him, with the advantages that the na earn etteane 6 atois A. M., daily, for Farmingdale and inter * q nd - | steads, or with criminuls let loose from m for the | of retaining their French connections as the weapons | ture of the country affurded, together with the exhaus- Py e places. et was placed beneath him, and this was his only couch * b * him and the other commissioners is void. Sevor Luis pI : ly purpose. 1 was told by a Mexican Colonel of a regiment | with which to recover power and place He will likewise | tion o1 our troops and horses after so long a march, he i Worclock, M.. for Greenport, daily, (Sua | Santa Anna was led up to him, and boldly announced | «t Guadalaxara, that he had been ebliged to replace the | flod the old cry of" two races” ralsed once more, andthe | could have certaiuly given ws very herd work to per | ' Koen, the Secrevary of the Treasury, under whove di- RT eee Bt ae eer meee 7 Yai mieees ae Santa Anna. | deserters, who bad thinned his corps to a skeleton, by | seeds of distu: sown between the eastern and west- | ‘orm, and he would have now held & very different posi. | jectiau the agreement was partly made, has addressed & at 4 P.M. for Farmingdale, daily. F ceiertiam Gele | ordering out the eight hundred criminals who lay impri | era settlers by a distinct attempt to create acoalition | tion in the opinion of mankind. But he bas fallen, never | {ug inter tet hare ol tie Zep uaieene, saat ° Tat 8 A. M., daily accommodation train introduction, : 4» | son, and parading them before him,in order that he might | ministry, not of radicals and conservatives but of British | to rise. Gait hc tiseaidenecteneis e ried pacco revent t Brooklyn. 3 < mpdichae Cea st ‘Sonavasdas te seating | select the finest and stontest among them to replenish his | and French— wherein the whole control of Lower Can Gen. Kearney Sasunate tte ee ace Novick) ‘Moston prasGalls. (encore, Sem, | rather falut, and not a little agitated, the chest was oper: | of winichecat) rar ey od Cone chee tuquired Wasir term | should be surrendered tothe Ualic division ofthe Cabinet, | eight hundred men, for the purpose of fhillion of dol and was to ormich) poston trata daily, (except Sun; | wt for vena remedy for thoes comphe te tae at cbety | of punishment; many of them who had Veen condemned | and the entire superintendence of the upper province con | imjortant settlements of this provinc ad wan Nrolegine. pectin fee tae nace Aeaenre Sipe pera Peagien Mey sO che waibaya for ten years, had their punishments com: | fited to the British portion of the Ministry. He will en- | to manufacture the iobabitents thereo! in 6% A.M. daily, (excert Snndays,) | Clared himeclf batter, tat fora weedeat soy pee suuted by agreving toserve fiv In | counter aa uttempt to neutralize in this manuer the legis | can citizens, which, I fear, will be @ siffic (oa train, and SPM. So Seca eaas been to beaetineredeaee to his cap: | ai ed en kept rby | lative union between WO provinces, to preserve te | sent. | have frequentiy witnessed the P.M. and 636 P. | (or red the Nopoleon of the Wart} you have for authority desertion | animosities of rivel nations, and to perpetuste the jes parently ix all palatable enongh watt ee ‘ Bosion | Conquer @ Napoleon of the West! the rustic soldier takes to his heelson | lousy of distinct r will meet, even in Upper | the oath is being sdwinistered comes the Litter | Yernment, ans consisting of the ehiet clerks of the differ- In the course of the conversation which followed P Canada, the irish Papist, the Scotch Presbyterian, and xe is fovecnued nealiowed i good grace, How: | &! wegartingnts, aad of Senoré Rejon, Haro y Tamariz, Santa Anna, telge mag Pa ot or otherwise, addressed | wards, while the ‘ish Protestant, breeding an intestine conflict of ulé General Kearney be able to capture Armiyo | Férias and ( anto, met to teke into consideration the Riemnadeeataecerse Tceviek [ten cena nd.and findse |raskness, cunning, aod obstinacy, He will find these | a2? bis band, (I think itis hic intention to make un effort | 88@emnent wud documenia relaiiog tu it subsequently, bod: % ; . version of th Mexican foreign debt, amounting to sie PP Sap ep DeereeaaeMere A wie cen ee Rieti bat becaume he is the maa ofa gover rae F etpor wretch ary hole hy whlch toa | malooe v{Metioun fandein'London, The madre iin x — From the Unit . ; Pah ; t adepey, no doabt, holders of Mexican funda in London. particulars of a AY, Qejover TE, 166, Traicawillranas | ‘Santa Anna was conveyed without delay to tho pre-| ‘The materiuls of wich, the army steompounded are | Issatice ane diparsed, his ci loiswert sre linseed ep | big desparate; wwe | Suseneys ne doubl: to make | vag not been made public, but the terme were supposed x ( was not forthe ent, an advance of hal! a in all, more than 4 million and @ bait iv cash; and thet the terms of the agreement would have diminished the national debt from eight to ten miltous of dollars On the 25th of August, & board appointed by tie go here yesterday morning, with ab ncipated criminal car attached, of General, omitting the wor. | ship with the first band ol freebooters ‘ Cox 3 resident, kc., and thus, according to Houston's view oi | niding place in some remote quarter. They ace ol ‘4nd other complications of a Chief Governor's ori to that effect, and he has kept it secret the better to ac ppears by the Monisor of the 3uth of August, the go- * y and Saturdays, stopping at inter | the matter, tacitly devying bis right to independence | fice red dy gentiomen ¥alonging to the mont respectebie | <u@loulties collected: together {or his ow especiel evse, | coroplich it, no doubt it would tend greatly to qit the | * ‘At eppointed « commissioner, Don Berito Farias, SUNDAY TRAINS. and authority. ‘I only looked at him, gentlemen,’ said | ianilies in the country, was the case when Mexico was | fort, within two years of general election for the Le- | fears of the people, for they yet hold him in great dread | ‘2 P*o gore oe onnerted with th alanve Brook}yn at 9 o'clack AM fer Greenport. Re fae Texan president, in his account of the audience, ‘I | 4 dependency of Spain, but by individuals sprang from | gislative Assembly, and he will be expected to over. | lest be should ugain get the Upper band, end resume with | Tote tbat 6 aondsara’yTambete bee teen , leave Greenpor M., for Brooklyn, stopping | loo! nce, and he corrected take 5 Sei ariz bed been cor Sal Re sdens, is aint; gue Weeee penta t abeuhe tare ahenen ~ the most degraded classes, or by the common soldiers; | come them ull. double force his usual tyrannical sway hese views ignorance and abandoned habits, in fact, seem at present | Wi ‘not Lord Elgin’s ability, and we heartily re. | ere absurd, ond are only to be found amongst the iguo- | ¢4 by the house of Lizaidi & Brothers, the fo: Be meaning he should have at once signed his | to be titles for a commission, The training given in what jolee ot | ne Pista but we do not eos on iat rant, (unfortunately a large portion of the population,) : ward t of Mexico. eee eS as inne ixcalled the Schoolof War, which has been recently | account to shut our eyes to his difficulties. His Jord: | who are accustomed to consider their rulers iuvincible ; | *PE" INK ine oom a he ech, is the style of ‘these border wars; and such | transierred to Chapultepec. is of the most superficial de | ship's short parilamentary career, his munly speech in | therefore, if the tyrant is caught, it will greatly alluy | | Cuive the, toregoivg review was prepared, we have tl sot f ome . ellingtons. Six months back, | «cription. All effective in the Mexican ranks is lim- | 1842—uorivailed es a maiden effort—on seconding the | their toolish fears. i peer doh lig : her a ‘era Crez, the latest ory Se ee the Mexican P: d to four or five young officers,who have received aEu | Address in reply to the Speech from the Throue, his de: | ‘There has little or no change taken place in the gov. | “) Dulngniie 2th of Sep\em ‘li ting of the citi petits emeapee: | oe nie teenie ete A pemonunelamente ; and new, by | ropean education, and punish Generals and Field | termination in Sghting to the last his election for Soutb- tes yet. The nativ have aull their | zene ot Vera ¢'ruz wos held in the Town Hell, the chiet chogue, $1,624: Southold: | arise (olimeation tgtinet the spe eetoniredes. Che | Oiticers,who are not deficient in military science, the tor- | umptonon the cogservative interest, his caution and | places, notwithstandiug there are aspirants here as well | OF ge varcment acting as president, The otject of Bai: Grrennon ecommodation ‘Train, $1 75; Gfeeuport | Popular indignation against the aggressions sof the Uni are perpetually thwarted by theircomrades | energy in the government of Jamaica, justif; ts with you—men whoare reaiy to fill any office in the | 0 a tine was to constitute 'a funte pattiotiens on} Dohion vrata, $235 . ? ted Sates, ound ite leader in les. His crime has | jealousy, and the latter held in opprobrium for having | «bl is rule the Canadians git of Gen Kearney or the government, trom governor | Ti, di¢ peed phar pages tore phere va Stages are in resdiness on the arrival of Tyains at the seve. | Deen, failing to achieve much of glory, or of safe betrayed the land of their birth and borne arms ogainst ii. | quire wn; the very meu | receiving subscriptions to sid. the goversment it the ral Sistions to take passenge.s at very low fares, 10 all parts | his country—acrime, which, considering the a in spite of all the President's exertions to increase the | ondition permite, that they may x to, Aight the | Tar wits the Umned. States. A comaltee, of thirt a Sutra acececiie hes of Whireiel | oenoar” Meet nist ee ae ry resourses cf the country, he has not been able | political sensibility and abstaia from the indulgence of | battles of t fete gre pp cringe 14 iT thersaveral trates 90 sminates | 105 senor eet rie is br ver Peer Porpeipentecon the army to more than 25,000 men, the majority | as-much national prejudice as the circumstances of their | in order to fille ah from he Brooklya nde Behe baad bees a ‘a rrmaltd “rd suneaes Mevane Sank peo on “ a m are pai bie shoes Cra stockings, sod anes bs swe will aliow, and that they oe enjoy pece Poy mayeole are atesruau” leaves Greenport for be desc: ion f are | uureserv: than e: those sources of ay bor on che arriva! of the Boston from Brooklyn. arts aa ne is feo seppeeee paren to fail by excess | quart in the capital; 2,000 alalaxara and in | piness ‘ually most abundant dui that pertcular astonished we! : of scrupulousness, whether as regards personal acquisi- | ihe department of Jalisco ; until lately, 1,000 on the | stage of social existence in which a « repress as much morbid | who were so full of patriotism, and »: Fr country, would now tty office in Santa was accordingly elected, to compare the junts petri- otica—and there the matter no doubt ended, inasmuch as the subsequent numbers of the Locemeter contain no ut you know that | | further mention of it, nor any account of contributions jé kind, and even if | had obtained. 8 Srooklym, Met. 8, 1846. have now the | am very modest i Se ______ ©. | tion, bli " Hi th 7 > : . : General Salas,on the 22d of September, dismissed REGULAR MAIL LINE FOR BOSTON. | which he is yet represonted as putting forth, is,-ihat "si | falove: ant ue? tee better at Tay ae (campat | goud fortune to be placed Bat we would remiod them | any i i ence {would be vety particular In the manner | cjngral Tornel irom his stueton as director of the eet VIA NORWICH & WOR. the Mexican people are for war, then ho will be for war. | Cruz end in 3 Juan de Ulloa; and the 1emaimtenin tee | cones that thet? ecto are mived te thelr weie8e; | “Gen. Kearney will be absont about fifteen days, at the | leKe of mining—an important office. Tornel, ia his lot CESTER, without change of: though personally he is inclined to peace.” a j,and the remainier in the | vernment; that their people are mixed in their o1 jen. Kearney ‘depart for Califor- | ter acknowledging the receipt of his dismissal, com Care or Bs y + y, a ty gong . i seth eel a «ae instance Mes show the | and various in — creeds; that the rept) m9 a — ey men eGeect fo depart ae len pom wey tata thas hed So al right to dismiss crossing any : Iti in that reat ial b i - — ¢ regiments usually cou- | of their present stato are enormous; Elgi ple Bas sve is. . | him: and the Republicane, while denouncing the ‘aanenx the ni ch, tis certain that m lory has been gained in } sists of two battalions, brigaded into di taken; and let it be cenducted as it may, its accomplish: 5 7 seraaguare, ing thelr ones ob Norwich, are fasnred shout in the one hand, nationa! | manded by a colovel, calepcn beatin boas Tecra man, not a demi-god. seri be attended with great difficulty, and its per | Measure as high-nanded, whatever might be the Mer | erTors of Tornel, saya: ‘We cannot do less than mani- that communicate: amboat and rail b energy of action ; on | colonel, and fi AFFAIRS IN SPAIN. Db: ill feat has hi V t Pasesoers by th : throuxh by the cou: | the other hand, national aggression has exhibited the ar. | sruster alee £00 ten anit Ranks ateo tr | From the Medrid Espectador.) formance, Pyare But l willnot dwell longeron thie sub. | feat all the displeasure which every good citizen must lactor e train, who wil! have particular charge of their | dor of acquisition, without the immediate means. It is Every company, though not above 25 or 30 strong. is ‘ing contrast is tormed by the conduct | ‘ject, as those unacquainted with the nature of the coun- feel on seeing guarantees trampied under foot, aud per- baryage, and who Will otherwise give his attention te their | impossible to say what Mexican fecblesnoss priteliber me papa ts nly dd pede Pome og hua observed towards. usin these latter |18°suti-eaapect fue of seeking an excuve To Deck out | #ecuton let loose against thove who are repuied as tne- “Thusline leave i 1, North River, foot of | 0 Surrender by treaty jeneral Tuy loi under whom are a captain, two first and two second Liew. eously observed | from so arduous ao underteking. Far from it. On the | Mies of the existing state of things,” and that “it isan on the Rio Grande have been d) Battery Place, dail) je only American glories | ‘enants; so that there is an officer to mu wey Fo mg me hing merely to examice | contrary, | wm anxious for it, so far as my individual unworthy policy, und one unsuited to a country split at 5o’clock, P. M., id arrives ia eastern trai in the field. ble it thi it if the differeuce with which we ncerned; moreo I hold it a high h into factions, which seeks to cement itself by vengeance “ihenere teamer ATLANTIC, Captain Dacian, leaves | {From the London Globe, Sept. 26) valry; thore is bot e squedron of Aity Morten, Chitty ioe | 10 acquaint ou ‘ fo belong to the sdvance guard of that American army | 94 perescution.” |) ©) on sa eve ies , rae ry tars and » ption ee Sty, Sagem What Commodore Sloat, and two other Americen offi | aot six or seven officers. The whole quantity of artille which will have the glory of planting the s1 Anna in the city of Mexico, wes most emnusiastio ‘It inp piece elie, pete ’ tain foundation of morality which irty ea, mou! atteries, heavy metal fc jin foul etter pontoons end Leggescyirainn fre | oF Rationality and independence. say among the ree incognita; nay, there is scarcely | that this differeuce exists, and that Great Britsin suc any powder, but what is of American or English make ceeds, by her manner of proceeding, in attracting a+ stripes on the shoreaot the Faciic. a, together with | #ays:—' Women, children, old men, men of the 4 lively | 8nd of the higher clusses of society, all wished to em- oa Be 5 reed Will be made here | Face him, to take hus hand, end approach as bear es pos- verPaapavy, ¢ c sible to his person. No one wished to lose a single one deficient both = sym a Coop teed Ga ag of — y will do with them unless So or be prevented from hearing one of his i q Philippe alienates by its mode of acting. We are but as we have learned nothing o! talion of 200 | othing more than exposing a fact that fe palpable to ali | (202 Q¥38% movechouts, ite considered too much rink | Dy a decree of the 20th of Sent, overs talasappaiat rf au TER, Captain Van Pelt, leaves | cers, have achieved towards conqueril ria: oa Salock rate simply to have been getting withis ball ar si ttre’ | ing her to consider hersel! conquered. We beg pardon a! FOR CHICAGO—Probably the last Boat | ROL conquered, but starred and striped—" destined to | qu this season—Upper Cabin fints'ed entirely | 40Fm part and parcel of the United States. with That California will become severed from Mexico, and | Pie corps of engine Bteamb at BOBTON, | a » T. Pease, will leave taken possession of by the first adventurers, who come | in materiel and artille! fal. for Chicago, tor t the intermediate ports, on Mon- | in sufficient numerical force for tenable settlements, there | men at Matamoras, and a company in th every Monday, Wednesda: For further information Battery Tbe traders hav: . touching day, Nov@mber 2d, ac8 P.M. can be no manner of doubt. oes by the ridiculous of us, and it would even be indecorous to seek in the that direction, until there is sowe certainty of | ed & council of government, co: Fos fight or passage, arply onboard opty 6 oe we "Any tool of any kind Aeaition to ta roe, ame of the citadel of Mexico | Coote: of England, which #0 highly favours us, the | ‘Soin seat, diucction, Dole) ‘them now wish they ved | duals, who were to have a salary of two hunured and Baffalo, Ort. 1846. MBE! 027 5t®re Can separate what was never joined. litia, wretchedly organized and equi 4, and held in | motive of self-interest which may have actuated that | staid at yhome, for, with the immense number of stock dollars a month each. Gomez Farias was appointed - i ~ ness ma y instiga modus operandi o| 7 is necessarily much more than they can af- 5 Po a a aagnene reuzcnarn, oy pratel on fu sha te Pz Sa serous |e culeh." mata Laie ich tiny ace key | mente end trae be lawl We a of Gat running between Amboy aud New York, on Monday | field, territory might bave been ceded in liew of paymen: (From the Paris Constitutionnel.} who received a benefit—be it people—strove | to make this trip. . + 6 oe” | Recording eRe Silements of the revenue in the 2¥th Sept leavii Amboy at 6%, Perth Amboy at | of Mexican debt, and California, instead o! "Aasteclia, ‘or Every country which possesses a number of rulways, | to discover the intention and the motive of selfconve Yours, ke., Ke, the official peper, the wi income of the government is To'clock A. at Bently, Rossville, Blazing Star | New Zealand, might have a trected colonization. ‘The | i hastening to adopt a jectric talegeepest nience which animated the benefactor, the word ‘“‘grati- Tuomas Fitzrataicx. | Dardly equal to the aggregate of the salaries assigned to eS —. in New York shout 9 o'clock, retura- rospective importance of that country, especially if its | ‘hey suspend the wire: ‘and will svonen. | tude” could not heve been invented, and assuredly the the members of this council baw ar) ‘ork from Pier No. 2 North River, at 4 | im ceve yo Harove ‘were shortened by one or othero! dow the cometry with a pew mode, communication. — Glotionary would not contain another so utterly super- INCIDENTS, ke, on bie eet] Insargente, of Guanajuato, of the 10th of Sept., Fare from South & Perth Amboy, 25 cents; Bently 25 cents, | the modes of transit above mentioned, was ably pointed | 't is known that England ready established this ra- | duous. [From the National Intelligencer Aitats tensint te id a that England an France. in their acts, ex: ; ; 4th i who y an express, which reac! is capital on Sunda; ar Rc de Be ent AUEa tle abs | roe Yrs goin Mr. Ferber volute, ent | egcnee Sow hays tnceristaritom ie Monette | casvey Samat thane own pares canrenioue’ Se | lait Set thant carga the staves Sam | It, Selene wfc ha Sane Fe, tow Mami (4 & re i most \mhoy, Sept 22, 1046. 8% Im*r 8 problems of the | shall inevitably be forced to admit that the inte: een taken by a division of three thousand men from passage from the Atlantic to the | 288 solved one of terey on the 2ist September, was a native of North ingeniou! 3 of ‘of Panama, or at some more fe- | @chanical pert of the invention, informed the Academy | Englund are not found in hostility to our own, and that | Carolina. He graduated at West Point in 1836, and was Jnited States, who, after taking possession of Boa OPPOSITION MORNING LINE AT 6% O of Sciences that the electric telegraph had been a those of France are; and through selfishness also, we ‘< time of bis death. Asan | Mexico, are preparing to invade the frontiers of Landis OSE PUR ALBANS. eivowhoed Wy means of wcenel:'| £ ie tinited Gebteetoe's Clatsace of mere hee 100 heey | declace curestyée Uke frente of the (enetsene tas 600: | cake a ee ee ee etd tie renter, | heehee, A at Bapmond street, Van Gortiande’s irectghta e i fish miles, and that it regularly worked every day on Whst matters it to that when important services in his cepacity as adjutent in “The enemy is advancing on all sides with « frightful Coid Sri las To h, New hig) ih Se Bae 1, | Tied into effect, the voyage from Europe to Californie | ines of from 220 to 230 miles inlength. The day before injary she may not a it in order to | the battles of the 6th and 9th of May last. As Quarter- colar and, it may almost be said, without meeting any peers ill, Hu J 001 natols | would be comparatively short, and emigrants would be | Yesterday we announced the opening of an eleciric tele- | prejudice us, but only to favor herself? It is equally | master in old Cherokee,nation in 1833,under Generals b ne _ ; and we behold him penetrate the heart of carried there;wita little more ex, than to Canada. graph between Brussels ond corigh 5 We are far from | oertain that she dees prejudice us. What matters it to | gcott and Wool, his services were pre-eminent in all the | the La lic with an iusensibility and apethy which are THE uew low. xe | If ever this route shall be ope: alifornia will then be | Preceding so repidly in France. We have no necessity | # that when England renders us a benefit she may do it | operations preliminary to the removal of the Cherokees. | horrible, which freeze the heart, and indicate future steamboat MET AMO! rt. Feil Smith, | one of the most interesting commercial situa to mention that, thanks to the irresolution and tergiver- | in order not to prejudice herself, end not forthe sake of | ‘T'o attempt to bear ony sufficient tribute to his rare | at which thesoul shudders. II leave the foot of Warr: LJ ituations in the TK of will leave the pier fout o! on 4 en street ld; t case, sations of our government, we have only just began the | favoring us? It is equally certain that she does favor | virtues as a man, & man, and afriend, might cause | “Never can we sufficiently curse the selfish and onday may and Friday, at 34 o'clock, A.M. Re- forall Saker Geanaee Precg beh Tahal penne Cxecution of our great linge of railroad. ‘Ihe nee ob. | ws, and tbisis what we require; we look to results, and | {his notice to transcend ite chiracter sea Teor interest. | cldal calculation which induced certain alaterdoses tarning, leave All By m Tuesde ars Asia by that route; it is nearly mid-voyage between | *t#cles have presented themselves in the establishment | care nothing for anything else. ing to the public. But that public, which cherishes the | to regard the Texas war as an object of . Bat jain, depriving «pooner ~ tonsa sae iene ‘coal of our aystem of electric telegraph. Theline from Pa-is | We know not if France, through the medium of her | glory of the Republic, and “Ay covords lie admire, | it Of fs preatige, rendering Ht odious 10 the people, whe eee est eB cask conte lotee some Yaapee ebeateaoey tal Hone bes klode been protien wih Heat ‘only a | own private convenience, could ite ws, an explanation eh cuch hereto dnotarerih. tooinn Daaenat in bane ‘appropriated tu it the numerous contributions For fewigh ly on board, or of A. CLARKE, | most probubly would become s mart for the interchange | '@W months since that the necessary funds §were voted | of all the acta which constitute her policy toward us, | ing of the exalted private worth of such men, end will | W! ich it wes made @ pretext for exacting irom them, corner of streets. 7 of the commodities of the three continents. No other sta. | (oF establi iton the line from Paris to to the north- | but it is positive that these acts are atrocious, and that | sympath ze with who lament their depai and ing the national and the Fare to Van Cortlandt’s Dock, 25 cents; Poughkeepsie, 50° | tion jn the course of this route would be in any way |e frontier. Why is there so long a delay in taking an | they render her odiou: be hearts of all Spaniards | extol their virtues. Lieut Hoskins , in order that they might fall an easy prey to the Hudeow, 75; Albany. ot may | Squal to California ™ an setive step? The lines of railroad arbi nearly. cor oe are, ee ee We know not whether, and segacious intellect; be chi TO TRAVELLeRS GOING SOUTH. hese are views for the future, perhaps for the re- | "e*pond with our presen| es of telegraph, are either | (nr e sense of honor, and wes remar' ‘ 7 " ecuted, or in course of e: tion. for a distance of | she could hit wy an expl and chival: f nis character, and fur those winning NGS fined, Pane Pert peer me paanaune titg Liz beried. however. | Shout 6000 kilometres (1280 "ied teaty of which the. Spanut s watulh guar oom Fredericksburgh, Richmond, Petersburgh, Va ; Lynch. | must be cor hurgh, Raleigh, Welden, N ind Charleston, $C. AE PUBLIC are mformed thatthe new | continent. ‘the sing and splendid low pressure steamer MOUNT | nexation-by-proclamutio: at all events justitied in oauectig with the Great Mail | coutrasung the comparative advantage which Californu ‘omme ce sireet wharf, Balti- | would derive even from the imperiect freedow of the 6PM. for the ~ der the tell red the regsrd and respect ot thore with whom be moved. ‘The sold " North. State” she: e of the country a more bet Sia hed for Re Gaeeet my “4 ah orgia, hitherto witnessed op tha i modere Sloat, iv his an- ed war! erey, ot F ements are ei who, qe from their country for he misfortune to seek an asylum in know not in what point it ca: suit our ly to compel these poor proscribed wretch from one point of her territories to the other on hall rival hie slightest requisition from a vindictive conrul, or in| Second Lieutenant J 8 Woods, of the 24 infantry, 34 NO! see at seque Creek, lew more, every Tuesday and Friday evening, shove paints. ‘ Se nae ee what point it cen suit her to conflue the unhepyy vic- | then on duty with the 4th infantry, who was killed ine Gs rian 9 the other Stdlet ot rimlar origin, bas not ha vigor or ie. | Present a more alarming Sgure..1 time to distrieta where itis impossible for them 10 fod | churge.was anative of Pennsylvania He gradusted at . “to Weldew telligence enough for consistency in uny of the. princi | 8ccordiog to the grants in the b anhonorable means of subsistence, or in what it can in 1844, He was breveteda first lieutenant The fine uew Br packet ship BRUOKSBY, 500 #4 to Charle ples absolutely emential to new institutions ard a new | for the total distance of 6000 or 200f cou int © make ee Ce ee oe e8 with | for his gallantry on the 0th May at Resaca de la Palma, ons, Capt. Hugh MeB.wen, will sail as above, her Bring atthe same price, more She uns mad of freedom, and peopled | Metre. The grant made for the line ef electric teie- | chains around their necks, naked and bare footed. whilst serving in the 4th infantry, in capturing a field | Tegurar aay. : thu «hi r more than ever did Spanish colonial sweh ; proe | staph from Paris to Rouen, is ouly 170f per kilometre, | We could cite many similar acts, and if France com: | piece from the Mexicans with a very few men. He was| For freight or passage, having spl id modations, l the wid ‘ough portion of the Bay, | fom bocce ell either would be saving in favor of the uew mode. mite them in the consultation of her convenience, we, |) young and modest officer, son of a clergyman in the ia- | spply on board, foot o elt street, were mouth ofthe Potomac and Old Point Comfort, COU! it of commerce, while aT hi od young hy WOODRKULL & MINTURN, Late ed cat the? wavien socal euictem Dr. CANADIAN AFFAIRS irae Pesce all. oor soavemeusee” ‘s aks, conve: Prat eeoe a hee to fm for hie fullentey on the et eae? pert Sled dhe tiysex Mal Line Drones Vicmessend | Manteo] decoction een oreeraee tecte [From the London Herald, Sept. 21] hiences and ours are diametrically opposed to euch | ti dratey lite teeming that he wes s0-s00n to exhibit a —ONLV KEGULAN LINE OF PACK: Ts FOR {tis the iaceation of the Companies composing the Great | custec ly commercisl regulations and | The finai and official publication of the fact that Lord | other. In the year 1923 it suted her to invade out soil | the same spirit in another signal victory which numbers GLASGOW Packet of lot Novembsr The pl Mail Live that passengers shail be conveyed by them iu com: ‘American Kepublice have Deng cae cia De eanush | Elgin has been appointed to the Government of C; with an armed force, to wrest from us our liberty, and | him emong the slain. oe 6 at aE ete eee bor regia nection the Mount Vernon, always *s cheaply as by any | tous restrictions, by ligne of al pense hei te ron which appeared in Friday’s Gazef‘e, natar lly leads us | to leave the liberals in the cla'ches of absolutism. At | "First Licutenant Douglass 8 Irwin,ofthe third Infantry, Will posi i Tencremetign epee tiny ik py Sale ty ibd a rubsequent period it suited her convenience, when | yilled at the battle of Montere to admiai u cular difficul i. wi reqair- | war jan to Ze \e provinces, fuel to its tort ictiia tlie Niinis éont/i ot (hn Gomttieds Testieed ob ‘enpetty beng | traffic, a Moat preposterous at: | 64 to enco the animosities be may attempt to re- | flames ind he finally administered a narcotic to the ee planiy secpected by ail officers of the army. Te tant a fee, Prett st, Baltimore, of BIOCKTON & FALLS, orat | siuce the independence of those eee canton, jons he must necessarily demolish, | whole of her police, in order that Don Carios might | Lieutenant Irwin was at West Point, and dis mi ates en bewre eck at he ‘Commerce st. wharf, or on Tuesdays and Fridays on | and capriciously altered in form. Thete reguletions, 1s he will be compelled to disappoint. | cross the French frontier without being seen It uiier- ed himself inthe Florida war He was a mild, | & ; 5 eet APeCOrT, Hoard the Sount Veraon, of ©.W.GUNNEL, Captain, | #84 prohibitions, and duties bave, like the revelations of new Governor-General to s colony, | wards suited her to overthruw Eapartero, and how it an, beloved by the army, end his fate ie deep: | Hogrevelt streets OF ia! ou door below Burling stip a * i Ot _ 7 J FO re Cy ey rE, emt N. B.—Travellers by the above Line will bear ia med that | those unfortunate countries, been suddenly or capri- ts fine climate—ts a | sppasre thet It suite her convenience to merry the tted by all ae at pap eee he) of SN ONEDACE eos Dg er the son of Major ntleman well known » and ODL IT, and ag than By aay"oiker Line except the Line via Wash | of commerce and finance. ‘T'ne most absurd restricuons | °° & cousideration of th by hd Seng Bf faut ite they heve two hours more in Baltimore than passengers by | cioudly changed by every new ruler, but aiways to the 'y hand of death upon four sui —Lord | Duke de Montpensier to 1 fier it be Chesapeake Bay and | Ri vat injury of trade 3 cor * Durbvam, Lord sydenbam, sir Charl ind Lord | her to marry the Queento Montemolin, to Trapani, or of an able officer be! ‘or freigh: oF apply wo Se ar EE Pema os tee ee tan ao toe OT Saisdtels bas boen eames ex tataane ems Mexico ax | 2eteaife—cannot be regarded with iniifferexce oF apa | to whomioever else it did not suit our Cony enierce that | reguiar urmy who have | Sammmelst of NOvEMNTT SR ORES Wl at las! even when there is ao breach of connection by the Bay | from the rest of the world, the sleepy regime of | BY- im the distant dependency or in the bap Ante hould be married ! | fallen in those briiliant battles at Monterey w: TET SHIP BALTIMORE From Havre #18 im*re Mr. Forbes observes, and the case is not | ‘ete on the one hand, we can scarcely tail to eee ates of West Point, except Lieut. P Consigaees by this Ship will wb their ver: he: wiet— plate the appointment of Lord Elgin as an event suboro goats | i Meer of ma FOR STAYEN ISLAND. hate in importance only to the selection ofa Governor | Fire at BeLrast.—Again has our village | {rom Virginia, caloaieg lentes upeat oes oben ja and after er “Califor ids hardly the relation of e' r/ - BYE, Cape Biabtedt's iI smite the fore | to Mexico, M4 nico pas tore intercourse with hits ia, | General for India, or a Lord-Lieutenant for Ireland,while | been visited by fire. About three clock | jinit'a remarkable iustance of what American (roopa can r A ‘Staten Isl fe the time | the mere association of ideas recalls to our minds his | this (Friday) morning, fire was discovered issuing | accomplish even in storming entrenched positions held , ¢ store rr er Sot, Sor h Tut to | bre DOWD te WINCREN, to ‘Wattat wT goods not permitted 5 uays, wilt be sent to the pab- T Sul? KOSCTUS, trom Liverpool ——TAUR® i ‘ [erro Staten Islnd. | Leave New York. or twice in a he list deputy elecied by Califor | the cabinet of ated Sestade. On the cabot head: pe not Aoaginpe sagt ry Honma hy re Fy Fa re me po 0 1 AM, Sle te the Be: Congress, iniormed me that during | in Canade, hia approach will be regarded with mingled | Yeo iso buildings. a: it would seem, ‘were on fire ut the ‘Translations from Mexican Journals. tedinfve dave the pablie store. 082 ia hi 1 Pit the two years he served, he only received two letters | ieglings of hope, curiosity, and apprehension hope | tame time, destroying both, and also the dwelling house From the Washington Union.) “F6&. FON LiveRLOUL—The New Line Recut ace ) ee from California, while in Mexico.’ strong in the breests of no one political party—curiosity | of James Cook, next adjoining the Bable. The progress | General and his coadjutors in the new ge Packet of ig November NOUE! peg pre re It is curiously illustrative of the sort of quarters in ee expectations of a divided ple—ond | of the fire was he: the fering, dome ‘of a | ment appear to be very active in issuing Georeee, a suiling Decks ny ~$ ie Mey ular ht oF passas — eienaid tee Nene " of peo ‘opped INDEPENDENT MORNIN: which American conquest has proclsimed itseif in Upper spread, where it will be least realized, yuil med bj min Hazel buildis the papers are still filled with declarations, from differ | Capr NE ii rin AY trem the California, to find the following account of Yerba Buena, | sent where it would be most justified, Soarcery ever vet Sones hein and High streets was saved, but | ent parts of the country, of adhesion to fe present au- | att toot of Wastes t pier at the pier by Capt. Wilkes, commander of the recent exploring ex- | has a man assumed the goverment itis colony | w . It was occupied by Ignatius Sar- | thorities, and to the plan of the citadel, breatoing a very ‘Barling sp, of to Pett 9,93 0. "oucting at the Yoot of Hammond st. | pedition of the United States :— under circumstances w! more ly demand the | pin} aren con’ vy Hendrie & Bi uaeary, be dealer: patriotic spirit in pompene terms; but there does not | 4 NP PGODHULL & MINTURN, Tea ee ane eticent stexiner IRON WITCH, coma | jn, 89 tW2, aa it is called, or rather the scattered build. snot the fine theo: | Their stocks were removed, and sustained some damage. | seem to be any tation of ‘substantial patriotism tones ae evaiaa ti. ones Rew Vos tom? | ings, cousins’ of a larg occupied by the mist—not the w ‘The largo building was occupied by Hersey & Wilder, | among the Jc, publishes | Fiict of peseene $7 en eOOL,, 1900 tons barthen, Yeley and Batarday. Leaves Albany. ‘Monday, ol the Hudson's store kept by An vlate workers’ and stove veslers; William Quimby, | The Diar of the 10th of x, publishes | The preket ship LAV ERPOOL, 1200 cons burton, Cat % ding xt Van Courtlandts, West” ‘bin | finesse of a political t the bold temperance of | provision shop, William ‘Tilden, (second story,) paint | the documents relating to the occu ot Mexl. | Jobs igo, wilt sue: oe lottinguer, Newburgh, Milton, Po'keepsie, Hyde Park, Kingston, 5 as dwelling by an angio-American | ability, the ready ceution of f-rosight, the perception of | bhop, sud a part of the building wes unoccupied— | co by General Keerne) General Armijo, Ime latter | regulu day. “ . n e Thadeon auasre | captein ; a bi shop, and some outbuiidis | constitational propriety, the management ot political | Building owned by A. Osborn and William Tilden. | 4 ‘at the town of Manasny, Angnst 20 hr: f TA. ke 3 .T3 Te wotit sail WOTICE ‘After through the entrance of tie bay, combinations, the weight of honesty, the attraction of ‘There was insured upon Luther Coomb’s stock of , | to the commandant .aner al of the department of Chitiie vy by C November, Ror freight or v TROY EVENING LINE. | Qualtnectare lars Scimataayae Coal wet | “westignr elt wereedt coset es ree ening, eral ge ata ae lot | een AIN © EE ’ oy é le ‘ c 01 Ci bi | ‘ eid , F D. ieee ae eaey fag: , we could not | Lord Elgin will proceed to Canuda at @ period of great ingnam do, ; Cook, town with si: rain to explain verbelly to Gen. <d on Wal nw aeceriained uation. Fro im. He | _ol7re jOYD & AL ‘this staff no flag | political disorganisstion, not the less remarkable avd | Hersey & Wilder, no insurance, joss about | from Senta F floated ; the decause it be hy the others abendened woavcar r; srg, dimounied, andovory ing expated A seoewe La peo | ring ogee pion. w. F. fiieet ont sae See ‘worth of stoves. Sagerts a resee 7 wes, gonncliy in aver of the 31 RS f % Meatorian Lange 0f come soldier, ve eustemasy in Beaaieh | seloay, ‘The anted provines of the Cesedas, os slmort Pied OY Fieavae leet Ruown-—Beifect Bignet, Ovi we Saised*Stolee troops in Sent fo bis conten oW 3