The New York Herald Newspaper, November 9, 1846, Page 1

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Vol, XI, We. 208—Whate No. 4545. NEW YORK, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1846. Price wo Gants " | treated him very coolly. There was no intention of at- | the definitive arrangements, that (those credits are in no ‘pert Austria is bidding against us in the marts of th¢ | cross and candelabra. On the left of the altar were six | Saturn and since these two planets, as well AFFAIRS OF THE WORLD. | | tacking the fort of St. Juan de Ulloa, and even though | way prejudiced. » Mediterranean. Odessa is well-nigh drained. And Ame: | court chaplains to assist the archbishop, and behind these | are each attended by # train of satellit | such an intention existed it must fail, From Vera Graz | "Aw i 'y be interesting, and serve to illustrate this | rica!—that land of fabulou: redundance, anawers tothe re. | several others us ceremonies le that the new planet will ha | Santa Anna went to his estate, about four leagues from | negotiation, I will edd that Propositions for the conver- | quirements of an ordinary the de- | insurplice and squi \d their majesties were the We had the pleasure of seeing the planet ov ADDITIONAL EXTRACTS Xalapa, which he did not leave for Mexico till the 28th | sion of the foreign debt had already been presented un- | mands of an extraordinary need. It has a sufficiency for | officersof the ,the intendent and officers of the royal | night from Calton Hill. Tt comes to the meri | “— | der the provisional administration, and thet Senor Santa | our average, not for our ‘present wants, Shehas sent us | household, and the commandant ef the be oy halberdiers. | dian a few minutes before 9, and is within a shortdistanc, PROM THE | hen the Medway left Vera Cruz a report prevailed , Anna (as! am informed) did not prove of them, al- | 641,112 barrels of flour more than last year; she is about | On the right of the throne, immediately next to the | of Saturn. With a power under 260, It is not distingwis FOREIGN PAPERS | that a counter revolution was got up in favor of | though the conditions ofthis arrangement ware then loss to send us wheat and Indian corn; yet, even with this | Princes, were stationed the grandees of Spain, the minis- | able from a fixed star. | Herrera Nothing is more likely, for the Hispano Mexi- favorable te the republic than which were after- | prospect, the of bread has risen at Glasgow, it has | ters, presidents of the legislative bodies, the gentlemen Miscellaneous. RECEIVED BY THE | Gan race are sure to dethrone on the Manday the idol of | wards adopted. risen in Tanioon and Indian corn is becoming’ dearer | of the household andof the kitchen. On the left were ‘The negotiations of the Danish court with some courts STHAM SHIP BRITANNIA, the preceting day, so false and fickle are they. Paredes, | “‘ This is what! have at present to say on this impar- | every day te the irish peasant! And this, too, inthe first | the ladics of honor of their Majesties and the ambassa: | of Germany, relative to another marriage of th when the last accounts started, was in confinement, but | tant subject, requesting the public will be pleased to tus- | quarter ofour provision year! What will the state of | dress of France, and next to them the archbishops and | Princy of Denmark, are said to have AT THE the Sepeeek impression was that he would be released, | pend its judgment until the important documents which | things be when the American canals are frozen, when the | bishops then at Madrid. Fronting the throne were the | Tue ¥, 7 vy and that the war would be a war not of bloodshed, but of | are to be public have been liners have ceased to run, andthe passage is alike blocked | ambassadorsand foreign ministers, in front of the gran- ‘He Expepition or GENeRAL NEW YORK HERALD OFFICE. | bribe = 7 d,) UIS DE LA ROSA, Santa Anna and the American autherities under- (Signe ‘h other just as well as Mr. Daniel O'Connell | “Mexico, August 21, 1846” 2 Débate has published a docu the far it to th 9 ts, and th dees of Spain, the majordomos of the week, the generals, . : ink tons of the the lier ant Lord Joke Ruel ger aglnd "Vet tsi ice of sich rite we | tho ema of (hy chamber, athe yea ching gto hy ural of Wich Nie the following American Affairs in ni | elder and Lord John Russel can we say more on a rate of dnt hich, th it rid; in front of the ladies of honer, the judges the wie Pi aA on i ° Mexican War, Yhese “truck and barter” hostilities ? Y, State of Affairs in Mexico—English Views. x become rigidly probiblrery. ey dotarrte tas | corregidor, the committee from the municipality, and the | #84 well aw are Se iis pla; L was se-reieed sneha ~ {From the London Oct, 12.) | {From the Liverpool Mail, Oct.17] {Correspondence of the Londae Zine! speculations of the corn trade, and complicate a great | provincial council.“ Behind were the officers of' the bal- | Pay ip cgotelet aah eh pa gins. pedition The circumstances which led Santa Anna’s re- | The latest intelligence from the United States is re- |, M=xtco, August 20— The political scene has | catostrophe with the evils of delay, uncertainty, and irri- | berdiers. The principal alcade of the palace was stationed | b¢ is now preparing. Desirous of rectifying tte ‘i " again cl |. The outlawed Santa Anna has returned, est plan is to a Seth te eee od aero with | vivedly warlike in the direction of Mexico. ‘The Wash. | Sgtin changed. | The outlawed Sar . tation. Isit wise to bolster up such a system,or brave | on the right of the door of the throne room, and on the | it contains, my best plan isto address you, persuaded that ents of, nd of tl t the Ha- journals i voned < While Paredes, who | the odium which it must excite? left the servidumbre, and the suite of the French Princes, | YoU will appreciate the delicate motives that eccasion pee the ties for landing and the deference | mien Seercaaat Srcinta ve. Ih eee n pads eler the destinion..68 Irexico, in a prisoner Kage When the many starve, the fogd | The whol i Maritadan ball oe became mibkaeri ion Ser showin shim by. Commodore Connor tnd the American | talk of vigor. "None has yet Deen exhibited.” General the monarchical party, and iia ea Canrar aos with | of the wealthy few must bo tre on. Ht matters nat h pn ME onetime cm ethan kading sq 5 correborat P nt | Taylor, whose officers act in defiance of his orders, is | (oven here an ‘of power) caused the form: of nally, but the g at rights duly obtained. He has not, nor ever hud, — that ro anger aia te Moxioa wim tracking his way. Ball under weler, ever a gvamp, Ih cee Telitiontaaient te Woy mes exDe- and clothing. The the intention of crossing the Isthmus of Panama Neither a place of no con- trading classes have more yee ve @ interest jm, and rienced in the campaign against the Americans, do- ; cd by Dontran, | didhe seek the permission of the government of New G@usen Christina pieced herealtaa tha ght | Gren da, and, in consequence, the Spanish government f given support toa plan which never ex: enehie, Sean hee eae on isted. ‘The engineers who are occupied with the pro. Don Francisco de | jected plan of cutting through the Isthmus can, there- his re-installation in the rank of first officer of the repub- “ rh, he tal ill not furths 5 Hig, would be the signal of peace and accommodation | hs Jenign any more than he had remained at Mataner | rived him of the little infueuee, which, a a solder, be ‘Those ideos and hopes are net, as yet, directly contra: | ras. ‘The volunteers—we mean the piratical troops—not | til! retained. The army (isregularly paid) shared the | of lasses with the best means | of Queen Isabella, dicted. But the delay of Santa Anna in resuming on ou-| under his command, but attached to his invading force, | (iscontent of the people, while the friends of Santa Anna | of getting food, by selling that which is exchangeable | Queen Christina, led by the Dul thority to which there seems no opponent, naturally | are not his auxiliaries for any national purpose, ‘but for | bored incessantly to increase the embarrassments of | for food. whose right was the Due d’Aum Tope, continue the oparations without feer of helne die Fives rise to doubts as to the sincerity and consistency of private plunder. Each man isarmed on his own account, siRigg Be hmece hy ielad RO , Faulo Antonio stood on the left of his son. The Patriarch | +2°5.0°by Generel’ Florez” oad is conduct. % and will fight, ifthat be unavoidable, for himself. The (From the London Times, Oct. 7.] then proceeded with the ceremonies, w re a " ° 1 thy fi rdea' ikl e'arl st amas seins benno he | serremineanuute upon the sespris of Caliorna are mitt Pre Foley ae pd oe gh eng BT gee ys cal ‘ i " ‘ i i and t i i ny mes. He commen A 3 rn ¥ ‘e will not answer for the similitude. He | commonplace robberies. Certain brave—brave in the pe orompat ny ikon “aren ne sed ting Se tap betes: cell thanite tos Bride wi a spew in the highest termsof the results of the vintage to occupy a first place inthe public attention. It is a questions whether they were fully aware of the purpose | of the present year, now nearly completed. In some fact which for itself, snd ie sure to make itself | for which they were met, whether they were aware of | districts the quantity had fallen short, ago gasllts Js hi other } ‘ i hended and felt. i ady writ! {| there being any other impediment than that of consan- | everywhere reported excellent ly eateeme: the rable Lande” Hie adeeese tothe’ Bp eee oar ng cg SR Teoall. of, Sant. Anni, and tes sepapeuraoe of fhe go, | Sieg, wThass usihee tock, Neviver whick ts wi unity, which fad been removed the dinpensaion of | wine harveat of 1834, 1841, 1834, 1630, 1811 the fa return is @strange compound; very able; containing s{ul plunder is not conquest. Individ ¢ more serious, and one still more necessary to be exhibited | the Pope, and whether they acted freely and spontane- | m' bo if 4 great many truths, a great many lies, and in domnent does not uniforely. redound os national Salis (hitherto vather an. SGeeaes, is) it pated, fo Ct is most unprincipled, certainly; he has given proofs of | Belgic sense—and adventurous citizens want settlements the most daring courage at one time. and of most inexpli- | of land; and taking possession they find is cheaper than cable cowardice at others; but, after all, ke stands as | buying them. In these enterprises they are distinguish: ings. ously? The bride having answered these questions sa- | Blaye, small wines compared with those of the present os almost as mystic as a Mormon’s mani honour. If Mr. Trosident Polk ‘sndchie ‘democreti | tis, revolution, that of Valentin Gomez Farias, the man | tock Por ccgcel food Ix. this comet Or ee in uke | tisfactorily. the Patrirch then demamied ot the uiile | Jeet tor color spinie, antaromas” Various parte of the ro is, here and there, however, a naviefé about | adherents, (the scum of the earth) ruink wn of the people, half of whose life has been passed in pri- | world for it is the common cause of nations—is, aftor | Whether she was willing to take for her lawful husband, | Champagne country appear to be particularly. {ayored.— it which’ deserves credit. “I once tried,” Conger Maxine, Diisoueeen ah people with the | £008, in hiding aces, and exile, the result of his sys- | <i ‘the chief economical question ofthe day, Bread isthe according te the ordinances of the holy Catholic, Apos- IE wea teered Shek tharwinen might be tao fie ane Ames Selle i ee Rare reek eae citizens of the United States, they are grisvously mis. | {em#llc, opposition to Miso: every, Mee Eament which | staff of life. When the potato and all the other treacher. | toli Roman Church, the bridegroom, giving his | therefore might not sparkle; but the more skilful wine- taken. Whatever be the intentions of Senta Anne, 01 titles at fulllongth? Before giving an answor, | tasters pronounced them of remarkable fin for a hort time acting President of the Republic, of | °°* makeshifts of poverty fail, the nation must fall back upper classes; on the proprietors, the educated, the | thi rtain —he ani ¥ : upon corn. Itbecomes the first duty of the national store- rned to her mother and kissed her hand, and | & delicious fragrance. Jn consequence of the extraordi- Professional, the few of property and. enlighteninent. mp ett pap ge orig tng Re ghana which bo availed himvell to Sane hie favorite theo- | ¥Po of te national store, plied Twi. This g i repeated three | Hary domonstrations of the superior quality of the vin ‘ain attempt; those classesjwere divided, were waver- | the United States are already exhausted Sent obligation to oe tithes “a antare which pe that last resource, and to practice as well as to instil the \d received the same response. The same ques. | tage, the buyers were numerous in al 5 sit that suppart Oa which alone {tchult fives Upon | mencement of the war. They naturally made he church ‘his. irreconcilable, foo. | Steer of impeovidenco Yo: think that grettresotvces sre r , A en it was 16 Ce uniting w: nna, ud, ane Petien tea a ai Oy thom all These eee ing Sep RID bane Fennts: | Sterling were | overturned the Federal Republic, and compelled Gomez Seestcdeen oath =e Mg a ea ee using the lowing torms +‘ In tha name of "Almighty: | Femembered, and long have traces of prosperity.” found it vainto rest; and I shall not try again. Expe- | and ifnot in Europe, where cise ? “Tho ooh thes toed | Fatias to fly forafety to the United States. Hehassince | somebody or something to go to. The gone, what is | God, of the blessed Apostles, Saint Peter and Saint Paul, ore rience of them has forced me to try the democracy, and | invaded, the poopie they hope to cab;onat ah | Teeppeared at iatervals, like the messenger of the storm, | there for the masses to go to but the food of cattle, the | and of the holy Mother Church, | unite in lawful mar. to put faith in the people at large: from whom alone I | them with ne fa Th woninasts, i whenever a popular insurrection was a , but with | roots of the field, wild berries, acorns, the bark of trees, | Tiage (naming tho brides and bridegrooms,) and I con- | CrvitizaTi cam expect some zeal, some patriotirm, some disinterest: | through which they march--some grass, perhaps fox | invariably bed fuacess, Nothing Geunted, he agein en- tnd grass? ‘There are several great and | firm this sacred sacrament of marriage inthe name of the | day belore. y See eae | roe ee ee Le Mace their Rorges—bat no bread, for love or money. All’ the foe to ace, fed i bi ges recaline, =A ome fi ta beating onthis question of our present | Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, amen’ The Patriarch at | which eight persons, men and women, were eng: lity, bat for deferce of the national territory against in- | [nited Stites. “Tho war Caatiot be. carried on, wie | OBthe condition of a return to the federal form of govern- conquest.” months longer without the ways and means, derived | Ment. ..m {is glance pot parties probably act with put to the bridegrooms, each of whom returned | distriets, and prices had risen, and were ri daily.— Patriarch, with the | ‘The year 1946,” says a writer from Bordeaux, ‘ will the parties duly married, | be signalised in the annals of champagne. Jt will be long most resolute, stern, unyieldin; Y In Prrrssurc—Procress oF There was a promiscuous fight terday, near the Hand stres Beige, ia g to one inevitable and very serious | last sprinkled the brides and bridegrooms with holy in with, the British crop isnot great. | ter, nit last year's proved insufficient for | £0 t We have been requested to state, more defini‘ely, the naj nd thus the ceremony was concluded. According | ture of the difficulty between Mr. Younson, of the Dit- ustom of Spain, the brides and bride grooms did | patch, and Mr. Clark. Clark had circulated a handbill in Such, paraphrased into plain English, is the language city ; the military, believing that with Santa Anna not exchange rings on this occasion, but this ceremon hich Mr. ¥ led In very sev ‘ of Senta Anna. It is ‘mpousible not to give it and him ie prananene Panubiie tanta Not th Fe a ap thats nels Hees wil be phone alt ae, sides other grain, thot being the Beans preter! ae was reserved ior, the nuptial benediction, at the ehurcl Youusoa 'aslanlied Clark in cobesquanes. | Glade thee pcg rt ee it sear cree Foye eics ; deed. They grow corn, cotton, and tobacco to sell—to ple, oce sade’ fois xercise of power, will useit tothe | °°" ‘d into use before the completion of this year’s har- | of Atocha on the following er some ny signa brought s1 inst Youngson for assault; and Young: make money—not to taxes, ute fore; vest, without permanently affecting the demand. Hence sed in mutual congratulations, their Mi son aguinst Clark for libel. Youngson plead guilty of ustain the army in great towns | war, the object Of which fey da hot Goose’ to compte: seared chester oe tae einer A Bravo | it follows that even if the circumstances of the two years fanta, the Princes, and ho Court retired w the at- | the assault, and Clark was convicted of the libel. A % = its. tl di mm for some tranquillity, { pen aay bend: and the burthen of which they will rebel rather | refused to surrender, though with inferior numbers and | Were the sumo, we should havo to deal witha deficiency | tendants. On the following day the Royal brides and | watchman anda collecting constable had some words the Like my gebdecsentrs; to eep down the po} P. pop ™ onthe year to the amount of t addi ts f | bridegrooms, with the queen mother and the rest of the | other day at the Court House, when the formerchal- seen fare Men se ome The Meztean Bonds Shug dapat tt Hh a Swat ed er | bo eneu star ran The cumin of | Noy em atm yawn wert ine cre | longed riot he alley we remy can be more plau: . No’conduct can loo! ¥ two years, he 80 m bei: mony, were in gorgeous state to the church | accepted, an o parties were proceeding to rear of more like honesty, or'be better celewated for facing, | sir—in frome Sie tocen Seanine OS. 14) public | Sleomy uncertainty, all the shops being closed, and an- | {0<,J, ore ing the same, are very P decidedly sgaini pens, Aad tai of Atocha, which was splendidly decorated. ‘The party | tho jail to fight it out, when constable Scott interfered. even with the purpose of making po e pretensions | mind concerning the conversion of the old debt ofalexico | 2°C2Y, spparently at hand. On the nightof the Sth, Pa- pipe knt pater Doapiecaaeees baler a was received by the Patriarch, seated before the high i Neaniibetate of affafrs!”— Pictshuagh Jour. Nev 6, of that most exorbitant and merciless’ foe which now | into tock, which was created by cintee of the | redes left the city with a guard of 40 Lancers; but the taking England, Ireland and Scotland into account, it | dltar,with his mitre on his head and the crozier in Dis | ___—A— SR Presses upon Mexico. agreement entered into between the Mexican overs. having timely notice of his movements, imme- | jeemp no exargeration to say that there is @ destruction | hand, surrounded by anumerous body of the priesthoo1. | "= Unfortunately we have to relate, that corresponding | sft und the begihenior oe oe exican > nt a larger body in pursuit, who effected his | or shure coming of foodon this head equivalent to the | Immediaiely on the entrance of the royal party, he put New York, Nov, 7, 1846, with this mistrustful and ambiguous attitude of Santa | lication of the following truntlation of « Intox aed capture without resistance, and consigned him toa prison ty of at least Ihre millions. Compute the lessor | atide his crozier, and the service commenced by the ber- 'TO HENRI HERZ, ane t the Americans have resumed their projects of OR: | by the ox-Minister of finance, Don Luis de la Ross, to o ae Decay thew to meditate on ee. petal ae Solauiéy of lant year at the food of one! million, and it | ediction of the of ring, (tn sarras) which the bridegroom © of Orchestra Leaders. before, the, sp. ression. It is net so much the activity or progress o! | on 4 a follows that t of this . presents to the bride, consisting of 13 pieces of money,and d ion of a senes of con for whic! worse of than last year by. the food of two millions. | Which she immodiatoly presente to the Church. ‘The offi , Jaed ‘at Matamoras, and obliged to move heaven and | gust ast, may tend very much toallay the uneasiness ao | enpOunced that Bravo had submitted, Tat any stipa: | The failure of the potato is already telling most power- | © con then presented to (Me Patriarch on 9 salver, riciee tammencer Seat Od teoealcie eeiaeaaee ae = Fy rr by Phen merge rite ea Mae: naturally felt at the present moment, and we therefore | that ofa guard of honor for himself.’ In this movement tely, on the price of corn; already, mark, even before ie as etki ine — Lh ae ts Ament pain les capacity ou the part of the one 40 displaced.” re 3 see! xpedition i - it i 6 ? harv. tire, . i a pow y a Tampico, Guatinacedcot of the Susticreg ger ey ped past varpene, the pains bey liberals took no part, the breach between either rest is ent ly concluded. The supplies of ‘d to all ing is, the mor pee ed to the etiqui estat from ,and with which ¢ach person mark- e Patriarch | Pp! by ight hand | the proper discerame =o i from all parts of these islands to th t » | Present an ths may be the scene of more formidable operations Sesen to the public that thor by the fact po ie ister thelr leaders, Gomez Pedraza and Santa Anna, being still | Fete which feed our manufacturing population sre r pidly ed hii than Matamoras. At any rate, it gives immediate facili- | by the one which preee ott Reived any | Uabealed, Intelligence of the revolution being commu. | Katine of irolond, from th e onsistency wi dge of requisite if with f the ring: it, have we received any | nicated tothe army on their march to the North, it met abided by it, issindeed passing strange. They have de- offering over to the church. The prelate assumed his clared that all the ports which they shall seize in ‘70 THE EDITOR OF THE MONITOI P tages i i - unici trious of the bridegroom, who me finger | iv ie ised jn ma- ponion eCMstemitea pate Der penal ee | comm lal information: whatever covcormiag: tue | {weit immediate concurrence, But the civil authorities | Meant ’e'its core, ae hee a a ocomemy, | oCtho right hand of the brite, ange for another | Ki the original elec HM rable Mining Our readers perhaps are not aware ok oF may not have | mmission of Sonor Gomer Fort hyn hed rning the | in vae departments have shown no haste to adopt it. ur millions of money to feed and employ the famished | Ting, which in a like manner had been placed on h Siding tap ielmsbine saan deat ast beaie Oh oe Paid particular attention to, the peculiar mode of Ameri- | have not seam, aud fro wees oe pate ee ae nan we | Their recollection of Santa Anna's tyranny, venality, and | ONL mi ions of money to feed and omp yume Bat | ger, which she gave to the bridegroom Upon this the (0 Ole Bull's leader, previously engaged for hie oan naval warfare. The Americans have been used to | Celvod any communication ne nwve 8 SF Yet Te | profound hypocrisy ix still too recent to permit their de- | multitude, the island the bulk of the Iriel rts, on | bridegroom took into the palm of his hand the offering jeed, no exception fo th inlet to make dreadful outcry against our old prineiples of block. | “7¥°* **¥ communication, nce, or feeling any confidence in his pro- a have taught this island to depend, | nd poured it into her palm, saying, “Spouse, I give you | be n any musical community, the limits jof 90- ade. But their own is something so new and so monstrous, boas Balk one &CO. they offer no resistance, and appear in- the very moment when we can east | this ring and this offering in sign of marriage,” “Sho re- focdunbcbucis epomecioee callers ef Vilionaed, alitter that how our government has quietly tolerated and | No, 10 New Broad-streetimews, Ont io tet the course of events, with the consolatory | go without it. \Imperious famine lays an emp go on the plied, “I accept them,” and immediately delivered tho | Ceney'ad quod {athe You! Sin ae the ia eh af Rothing in Mexico, good or bad, can, bY | ioajed vessels, Ravenous multitudes plund PUBLICANO. any possibility, bo lasting. On t! landed me “ gir— 0 crozier, and, followed by the bride and bridegroom, | York what neither yourself nor any one els ou! «shall be open to their own trade in all commodition ; | concluded in Lenina en sera eee eee Vera Cruz, having come from the Havant ina | Comments are felilled, In lesser, ber yet tee went to their rotpective places to. hear mest. the choir in Paris or iu Loadon, you mean paly to meke a+d exclusively to their own trade. They will allow private steam Arab.) hired from an enterprising | Seprees, the arrivals (rom all ether, pars of tke etapire| Chanting the Psalm cous , | pe not been nationalised in Ameri: | Rimonge ering cuore nen I discharged the duties of | Trishman, wh Beati omnes qui timent Dominum, | return to the American public forits very, indulg tothe American customs. Man. die jus.” f the | deration of your professional merits. With rey e mum of more’ than any | {c#hman, who teoms always to have a, steame ore dimladenall districts of Seotland are in'the | 4 Gmbulant viis ¢jus,” On reaching the last steps o! a “s i 4 4 ption, ex ff |. | altar the married couple kneeled, and again received the ns of dollars is embraced by it, and on that account | Soy¢ by the military, was cold, nd he has since lingered tine evil cna and Reatland i eaualy low Bat’ thers | nuptial benediction. The Patriarch then robed himself in r government. He his pablished’a man, | #e other chebamstances of no trifling weight to the pre- | the proper i kee ca eat Seki 6 m their fellow citizens, thst | ifesto, in whuch he reviows his own political care judice of our present, ascompared with our last year's |. rfid + ceding the ile. ‘%s ren tare as nt upon it without examining | takos'credit for the most,patriotic intentions, tho Prospects. Perhaps people are tired of hearing that the | een ene ee tec each of the wewl merrid vartion stem adopted by them, | previously, and with all the needful impartiality and oit- | tyvits having eatertared cotiakor ens vopulation of these isanes Shcrenpes seers, Coane thew: | EOC Lo tuey eflerwarts offered to tie Vitewm, ood he’ tafety for the country except in a roturn to the | std aday, and that there is a third of million more | &nd which they afterwe Be appt Aes homer : iy ee mouths to be fed this year than Jest. Still, if the truth be | Ving kissed the cross prosented to them by the Patriarch, stale, itis nevertheless very important. What is food service proceeded till it came to the dominical pray | way, direct or remote, applied to you for the leadei itself but a stale device for the support of life? ‘There | ¢f; When a white veil was extended over the heads of | sought me first in company with one whovs wstly be- | jg not much reason to. believe that Nae now teqdeetion ile and bridegroom, and when the Patriarch had | here tthe head and omament of our profession, e ve that j aber ae, ; demine, ‘ou at ouce of the existence of an unprineipled, bec Meantime, whilst the Americans are sailing egainst | financial operations, has been and ought to have been Foctoes erage pa eran = Roee: Boetee pt impo ‘ at—much more importent, remaine— them the blessing of Heaven, and hay siven the Pix ruina chenldpave spete chcaah fir’ the tonite ots aon q houldshave space esough for the footing of so mighty ‘Tampico, less bent upon carrying its fortifications than " - 4 Th i that i bread- bal Solo . Ltold you that this clique, cont le < its custom house by assault, Senta Anna is declaring Using its conclusion, but which now been ac- | stitution of 1824 is declared in ree, until a popular Con- ere is no det oA awe Ps, berengr lat Se} a Colossus. ‘old you that this clique, ry a for Nothing, therefore, was written on the MK | self, owes its great strength to the countenance against the machinations of ‘his predecessor, who con- | arrangement of the foreign debt, notwithstanding some | 8*e## x peal fie erect aexteon manly mas they delight to e, snd tantly, more wed-oe | 0 Mowing words :— i and but for the fault of Sivori in preferri spirod, be a: s, to introduce an European monarch into | public writers have spoken of it’ many times very erro- | ght hile,’ the great performing thie wretchad farce the | med. Besides-other great works, it is said that there re ated telephoo lexico. It ie very esr ‘that Paredes and Herrera | neously, because it was impossible for them to have had ‘Anglo-Americans are appropriating whole provin ow not less than 200,000 men employed on the rail- him,woutd a may have been so foolish: very possible thet, feeling | under their notice the ne data for judging of it.'| ortheir torritory. without tenistones. “Nore feemces no + Two hundred thousand men imply qo themselves and the State drowning in the troubled wa | On a late occasion the editors of the Republicano, in their already invaded by a strong body of adventurers; Chi. that ‘number of mouths, all consuming | * ca ely fear of God. Amen ‘” Th ters of Mexican disorder, ar ky Sr ky to grasp, like | number 164, have attempted to sum up the result of this beghun, cos of ht idee Gudea ae north, will | ™oFe food, and that of a better description, than they | }ast Bospe! eing read, a patriarch, addressing the Iturbide, that straw sceptre which Lear hed, and | most important negotiation in these few words =~" that Soon share the seine fate | 464, Gt Masta the Pa. | Would consume but fortheir employment. Perhaps not | bridegroom, said, “il have given you a companion and | that! felt every blow Frick beteens monarchy. lt is, however, but idle and | the national treasury will receive almost nothing of the | Con” Gommndora Dicer kas anaes senia to the | much less than a moiety of them are irishmen, who | Hot a servant: love as Josus Christ loveth his aan OR pete gnarl godly Higuetion agatat e lonany, Sod eke (ag eaPulas in| enormoussum which is treated of in this afer, and that | Cinifod Staten oy a simple, troclanetiens ae aoe | would otherwise be starving at home. ‘Thove, however, | royal party retained fo the palace in the order in which | Feemens oF hus ow judgment, tabu gems poy Feality. ve ‘Anglo-Americen conquest ett : fan ripc ‘0 in the name of Mexico have con-| General Ta has found his most forminable enemy in | °° only a portion of the consumers which railways are Siemae the arrows shot at to myself, gvods to enter that Ita Shows pasate eat L ll. They decl: chester produce must give way to Lowell. They declare | jt claims the attention of the entire republic. Those of us of our calicoes contraband of war, bless the mark! Their uty i fa thie Se eshin ee own are innocent, and may go‘te clothe the Mexicans Edeapsteg Sgatte rencded B copy {sitoes tiveas ther | sume the reins of 4 without any remorseful encouragement of a foe that they will not pass jud; paya in dollars. Suen being th drafts tolerated by us, we are not. done me, in selerting me, the necessity of m es which, when anothe: be made by the pul ly answered, to my rised at their attack | cumspection, the important documents which have to be ing sees It may cost the Washington treasury | published, and ich will be seen the origin of this some but these dollars will find their way back | arrangement, its initiatory bases which were fixed by me immediately into the pockets of the New Englanders. | when | had charge of the Ministry, the modifications it ‘The Mexicans will not suffer much. It is only John | has undergone, and the terms on which it has been de- ion to me that I nev: issed with contempt, and he sneer et the church. ‘and. songs ion, reproached myself for being of the persecution Biyori, dat him pass throvgh my own ned onl his heroic resolation by rt im from the invisible ° : in for themselves some millions of the .heavy rains, which have rendered the roads to the | Ptinging to the market. The expenditure to which the enticisms, and ly to rpise hi if far ie Motan epee, ht het tan thn | tno ea thou esas | al ets Lon inves n hi wagaoe an |S igiea ny nomi eres Aaah | wo New Planet—ePhe zxtrnordinary Die | Sider Lagrimas dey tor alas ¥ e i: ty A 1» Col ir r a Vv the dast. To js you ve theidia before hisoppremor or Brutus th pein, me | Sew uae atau eens Ween uae, | wil esbably tack. Vara Gray and Tampico It has | Moa i this the at angen be gee OUD etaalaine trom (Fis Galigeiaty Meamemar} head the rzheae fod by Lader, ad the onrted by me eee iiactaemtzee Hberation, remains an enigma | circumstance was the reason why the baser which I had | Secuvict by the fortcn of ake tine ‘Statos, American | the session of 1845, and we have £130,000,000 to be spent | One of our contemporaries publishes the following | pose? Findin as’ thought, ski spirit to time in rrom tes London Chronicle. bo op were disapproved in m. But I believe the | manufactures only, or foreign gooda which ‘have been | in railroads in the course of three not much Jess | note from M. Arago :—“‘On examining with great care we fOr oa ye fpord Cae Sr vans Capen ‘da he tals Gare cling Of editors of the Republicano have very much erred in | Dationalized by the payment of duty in the United Sta than a million s-week. Whether eae timer an the oy characterising in so unfavorable a manner the negotia. tor, the miner, the collier, the Shenae techni, Polery bape yet Batata hl edged , | shali be admitted, the fatter to be conv t oun. 4 ? * tS ‘ “ iene, Mibsions welientere ine mpi tion under notice, and 1 am, suro that their good faith | try in American bottoms. As a natu . petbed has of | the mason, or even toth Iandowner, it gill contributes | that had been made on the motion of this planet arose man, dnd where there is an equal diversity of the respective documents before them,” I, therefore, en. | eke disorders, ‘commercial ‘affairs hero are wholly | {2 jarraue ene demand for food. If we add tho | from the action of an unknon body, whose exact posi und motives, there js an ample ‘margin for guose-work | treat them to nuspend their judgment for afew days, us. | prostrate. The conductae of silver, appointed to leave | tmnual, deficiency denoted by the provent year's | tion and dlameter he determined by oticul ified, and our In most of our previous notices of the affairs of the Rio | tiktten on bitch “A judgment for a fe 8, U2 | Zecatecas and Guanaxuato early in next month, will apes - oo we very — ce es a” predictions of the theory are just yoiry aoe — Grande we have contessed oursel nonplus in re-| ° «Inthe meantime, I will notice th into, which | Pasueniy. te Getetzas, both trom the want cf & udicteat 115° food ‘of, fear “millious withizwa from an | lina of tengabe tebe veh wontons et Senibh eter | Te07 san wh rn iin What Senta in the meantime, I will notice the errors into which | escort, and from the uncertain position of Tampico, al- | ‘the food of four millions withdrawn from an (about 3,125 millions of English miles) I i i , i er 7 but whose ‘qualifienti ight Sk de, thd howe tora & pe Pom all elas Ar i appears i im Seay. in fal as one am, place, J ready threatened by an Americon corps detached from | increasing, an improving, a busy and extravagant nstion. | distant from the sun. Its volume fs about 230 times that | Pt whose qualification ’ i "a | We really should be relieved to be told of any crisis | of the earth. ‘The following is an extract of a letter re- | Which Fence of peineigle, con soavert At as the iter ab- | the debt, such as was set on foot under my ministry, | beiny allowed to euter Vere Cray corinne da mn | within the compass of authentic history, when the agri | ceived by MI, Levernier from NL. Galle, an satronomer at | Mrstof course sence of principle can convert a man into a problem, | would be advantageous to the republic, even although blockade. sed that an understanding exis. | Cultural year commenced with such a prospect, and end- | Berlin, and dated the 25th ult :—‘ The planet whose po- | little credit gained with the publ Santa Anna has, in our eyes, been a Pons lsinorum— | the exchequer did not receive one single dollar ; be- | Picks: the Americans, which might lead | &4,Without falling the gravest anticipations. ‘Here are | sition you have described, replly exists. On the samo | for not unfrequently doing my bea ‘That he would act asa selfish man we knew well. ‘That underthe administration of Senor Herrera, the | to‘peace ; but “his voice ii for war,” and with |@4emand anda deficiency, equally without precedent. | day that | received your letter I discovered a star of the | ter oue could be procured. I he would act according to circumstances was a mere de- } question treated of in the arrangement of this negotia- matchless assurauce he promises to t Congress | And what hope have we of « repetition of those two | eighth magnitude, which is not marked upon the excel- | tions you not only ass guction from this same doctrine of selfishness. That | tion, was not so much that of receiving great sums of | Matchless as iginered on the Danks o fabino, thus | Much maligned, much dreaded millions of quarters’ | lent chart of Dr. Bremiker, and which formepart of the | With my services. but ciroumstances would change with railway-pace | money, as that of preserving the credit of Mexico, himself to the reconquest of all Texas.’ The | Which came eeenere, 80 very seasonably last August? | collection of celestial charts published by the Royal | hosed to have lost by the temporsry cha rapidity we calculated. But that he would appreciate | which, in the succeeding year, was liable to be jaited States brig of war Truxton, has been lost off the | J¥st none at Free trade has but poised its Ithuriel’s | Academy of Berlin. The observations on the following | unfavorable to the interloper ; but som 0 great irregularity shown by the obs ‘er, calculated to excite a suspicion of iny 'e my strength against that of the y your at the time when my appearance foty ate re. t yo him ther 1 could them rightly was doubtful. This last point could cnly | much compromised, and of diminishing the national and the bubble of uni bundance has burst. | night showed that this star is precisely the planet in | uct bring inyselt to fall in with this little plot, it being some- jc energy y Man@uvres. under m: t + : notions of honor. You farther explained, that ¥ Honesty is the best policy— Santa Anna may or may not | paifa millien of taioce ae eect snticipated pay ment isfound that the negotiable surplus of the mcst agricul | hofer’s large telessope, compared it with a star of the fe money, without, asl | ‘The Prospects of Great Britain—The Scarcl- | tural regions, bears but an infinitesimal proportion to the | ninth magnitude. Astronomers will learn with pleasure | IY to the combined influence, aided by the persoual efforts see this. remember, any charge for interest, and without the ad- ty of Food. Honosty is the best policy, but no honest man acts | dition of paper or credit of any 1 will not say (be- From the Londen Times, Oct. 19. that ratio with the area of alluvial upon that principle alone.—Nevertheless, Santa Auna | cause | do not yet know circumstantially the mode in 6 AD * . . 2 lish yeoman can s0 easily be had sent to M. Galle, and which is given in the report of | found it impossible to resi though your positive success does so act. - , J which this negotiation has terminated) what may be the | And what presents itself to our notice, as we survey | U. Siates, with all its rivers, canals, and v the proceedings of the Academy of Sciences of the Ist | with the public, was already Strong enough to whole Now the present confliet of policies lies m tho ques- | sum which, in effective money, the exchequer has yet | the resources and the exigencies of distant and populous | but hear our wants, and flour rises within a fow ult. The diameter, resulting from the observations at | concern with scorn and defiance Now, this ss a complicated tgp mibether it is most sdvantageous for Santa Anna to | to receive.” The amount fixed according to the basis | nations? We heard strange tales of lands rich in the | 60 or73 cents per barrel. ‘Tho stock at New York ‘is | Berlin, is of three aeconds: ee M. Loverticg hed saat Mt pooner ide A Be jagger Si neeng oo 3 sell his country to thé United States, or to uso his gehts | (hich 1 subscribed, exceeded a million aud a half of dol- | prodigal exuberance of spontaneous but useless produce | 20,000, against 150,000 barrels of Inst year. At Montreal | Galle ‘appears disposed to call the new. planet Janus, | '?0 ar Ponutd noe take coy postin 1, ahha lane. sition to that same union means of enlarging his | lars. Tho sun which (according to the same basis) the | “of deprecated cormfields and dreaded harvexs. We they will hard}; with their wheat on any terms. The | from considerations borrowed from the hypothesis that | |y'4 ant of Loder himself, which was brought to yA ood you with h th such: ti }, tem which Leverrier assigned to it in the theory which he | pests, and the etterminating, wiath of the peess, that You aggregate produce, and the produce is by no means in | that the position of the new planet is Lskeges that » ic il which H i ji Fr If, elthough the real actors, I aay. poweras a Mexican Higher grounds then | national debt would be diminished, would reach to eight taught that Providence had laid in st: of ruinous | giants of ic have already dwindled into windmills, | it may be on the confines of our solar system. Lever- | fin ~ thi ake hich trictly honorable ise. thove Involved in this dilemma we have never attributed | or ten millions of dollars, but { enh ‘assert (trusting in | abundance on the banks of the, Onic. abd Misemsippl om | Rulees th abvolate desrth of coca piver « particular ue: | rier 20 whem ee Haht of cenit’ i, dos) aot | waht nee ian aon es deduction to the ae ‘and Napoleon of the West. the probity of Senors Fernandez del Castillo and Paraes, | purpose to overwhelm the trade of British agriculture, | fitness to the allusi a looker-on, as a m was 8 toss-up, In thi from the ft "ally. establ Last he iby wheat is selling at | agree to the too significative name of Janus, but will wg yr oa Fe be “ whe seccoaielimk in the gelnictrg) that ko hae — and swamp the industry of the British farmer. Men panne ae sg meee , for 638 natn At Stettin | consent to any other (Neptune, for instance,) which bd fi d cl es, e amount which the sums upon w! instruct gerd it ith iter hy there has been an im int transaction. of beam Anna himself, jaun- | caletiated may have been diminished, the result of the | were Pa tae aT ae eres eke menae Lae it thousand | would have the assent of astronomers.’ a their reward. ie famine has | quarters of wheat, the annual consumption of one vil- A great portion of the sitting of the of the French Aca: | fear. diced by faction, it wasa complicauen of a more equivo- | arrangement will still be very advantageous for Mexico. | come; but where is antagonist plenty? Famine is on | luge, of one factory, has been sold for 53s. At Hamburg | demy of Sciences, on the Sth ultimo, was occ! with | fending a certain lond-mou cal kind. Which was best for hiin—American traitor “ With regard to the millions which tho editors of the | our shores; but what soil is irrigated by the refreshing | trade is paralysed by the instinct of holding. Mean-| an account by M. Arago of the discovery of jew | once provoked, was falsely supposed to be potent enough to ship, or Mexican patriotism? Which, cslculated upon | Republicane suppose the agents of the nation have | streams of a counteracting abundance? Ales! the laws | while faJian Corn rises in a still greater propertion, in. | planet by M. Leverrier. The most striking fact is the | reduce the amount of receipts, and thereby. to inflict « seri- pure selfish grounds, was the real policy of our own | gained in making this arrangement, much might be said, of man are dependent on those of God. They cannot | asmuch as nocessity is prevailing over luxury, the sto- | very slight difference that exists between the celculation | °Us Lie y eer sted thay — pear og ig neg teria ge hing | oP sve sad but I will limit myself at present tothe declaration that | control, neither can they thwart, the disposition of | mach over the palate, as the eloment of value. Lastly, | as to the position of the new planet by the theory of M. the peblis co know, 1 eke sib fiere ol — | one of . errors into which these gentlemen have | j; 2 rt il be detranded of ‘ights, | we ure actually exporting wheat to France The Mark | Leverrier, and that of the actual observation of M. Galle. wi fallen is that of believing that Senor Don Manuel Es- Boe Ne Tolly bod provoked er, of her sevenae: | Lene Express lefocms er? Semel the shipping ports | M. Leverrier had calculated the heliocentric longitude at is equally a maeiery 7 cundon had been the party entrusted with the con That which existed before the corn law was dreamed of, | on the east coast have been visited by buyers from France | 327 d 24 min; M. Galle’s observations make it 326 rol 0 Doctors disagree as to At this moment Santa A: our obedient servant. MICHELL RAPETTI. MRS, ZEGLIO. Ei and America. We, who never sion of the debt on the behalf of the republic. I will s its extinction. The original conditien of our | and Holland, which has no doubt assisted to give an impe- | deg 32m., being a difference of less than one degree. In ZEC nelereana him, because we never were se more, that if this gentleman had been bo entrusted, fort pe henkey unehanged ‘Gnd unchangeable. The great | tus to prices, and in Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, kc, | anote by M. Leverrier toj the academy on this point, he No. 67 Division Street. to trust him, have @ reason for our obtusenese, would have discharged his duty in accordance with the | struggle is between man and food—betweén life and its | similar qnalities of wheat to those sold two months ago | says:—' My error in calculation will be found excced- iE eesheaes pe gays on A Ame! has a just right to complain of be- | instructions of government, and the some advan-| sustenance. Search the world through and through, | at 44s. to 46s, have this week realized 63s to 60s. per | ingly smali when the slight nature of the perturbations saat 4 pra a ing deceived. She who came in contact with him in | teges which have now been obtained for Meaico. Put! this iron fact stands out in hard prominence to provoke | quarter. upon which I determined the position of the new planet Trom the Isveet arrivals: informa x4 and to defy our energies. From the reat Cingalese, We take the liberty of commending this remarkable | is taken into consideration. This success must inspire a ‘Texas—she who tamperea with him before his Neg) repeat, that Senor Escundon (according to tention of purchasers. she who played with him during his exile the gum tion I have received) has not interfered in this matter in his rice, tothe humblest Celt, starving on | fact t e of a certain quarter, where, if we do | hope after thirty or forty years’ observation of the ers from the opentey wrantmg, materi- Louis XIV. and James 1L.—she who began war with her | any official poe eed ly His Excellency Senor Murphy, hoped ag nultitudes of the humen "yaoe he not meet with the wisdom of experience, we may ‘at | new planet,astronomers may Use it in its turn as @ meaue | als and pattern find it their interest to call belpep own arms, under the full belief that she was to terminate | the Mexican Minister in London, Senor D. Guillermo | scant and rade subsistence. Comfort and competence | least expect the candor of the novice. At the Lynn de. | of discovering the next that follows it in the order of dis- as i fresh, the style the latest; whi it through his negotiativns— she who passed him through | O'Brien, and the Senores Schneider, agents of the re- few; contented indigence for the many. Earth | monstration, the hero of the day related, to the horror of | tance from the sun. They will, unfortunately, soon ar- posed of on reasonable terme. 06 ImoPrre 4 blockade, and passed bim with the eepectal purpose ef | publi Bave Deen the patios officially charged with tis | hus Fis fallos Ub eeUaty the toroinge Or the labors of hen | his attiene Liverpool merchant’ who had been | rive at stars invisible om aecount of their immense dis. DR. FELIX GOURAUD'S finding an agent ior her own especial work—she, after | important operation. With regard to Senor Murphy, I| sone. There are myriads of acre: et untilled, miles | accustomed for many years to buy corn from Lynn, hed | tance from the sun,but whose orbits may be correctly as- ITALIAN MEDICATED SOAP all this, does not know whet to make of him. have al; entertained the most favorable idea of his | of tillage but radely and poorly a to the cravings | lately written to his correspondent that he must close | certained by tl ” : HIS admi emolli i b it She proposes to hina negotiations. Now he, the only | talent and probity, but when I was discharging the | of their occupants. This fact th rage condition of transactions, unless the people of Lynn could re. | ‘The following letter from the Minister of Public In | ['HIS: apirable wromnedy for blavébes, pimples, pemncles: mW, according to his own account, that can save the | duties of Minister of Hacienda, I found in the archiv. the human race might long ago brought hor te him of some of his American flour. ‘That was in | struction to the President of the Academy was read at seurf, tan, freckles, sunburn, fll kinds of eruptions, tea every. cou. Sy, is unequal to the responsibilities of a reply.— | that department so many documents which proved his | the sense of every legislator, even were each leg! August. How are the tables now turned? Not only itting:—'*I think it ght to inform the Acad ies of discoloration of the skin. All competition has He is a #imple citizen, Ho is merely @ member of the | patriotism, his intelligence, and Tealty to the republic, | a land owner. But it requires the present terro: Liverpool, but France, is coming to the ports of our east | Sciences that the King has, in consideration of nt | been completely distanced by this inval: pre} "4 Legislatu "@ of heroic Mexico. He isa man whom the | that I did not hesitate a moment iu the belief that he was | ¢xtraordinary calamity to make men recognize coast for wheat ; and the metropolis finds its wonted | which now interests the scientific world, named M. | mand for which, withia the. last. ary mowthe, haa in: army has fisttered by accrediting with an influence | without doubt the person best adapted for managing the | 49 often illustrated by the recorded sufferings of humani- | supply diverted by a foreign competitor.. For our own | Leverrier officer of the Royal Order of the Legion of | creased more than 900 per cent, and ix still ner we think very much more of the consi- | Honour, He had not arrived at his turn by time, but | Clearmess and fresb Wi ulercrtial , Seance the "ue ogre dace. ho se. Nothing ix more | Ente. nether potwon of lest taleseratie ening | Ty Doe eee eaten enkes eee | Serdar let acnney Te aces cone | Honour, He had not ariel at ie tary Py ine, out eee z or 38 lecide. . Nothi sisted, er persen of tale morab! in rr ined law and struggle of our | derations above mentioned, viz. the unj circum. | science haa its se: of excep ne of ‘raished with « conmmtuttosal, and nothing ‘more to the taste 0 ‘America. | was required to ccoperate in this matter, and after many betta. gene | eo woe talked with fer of the | stances of the poming year, than of the present rise lo | eclet as well as ‘The labors of M. Leverri Seen ey yrsannee S ca America wants a cession of territory; and a vote of ( and most scrupulous a which I received, 1 doter: | bounties of God; and now they are punished by the fear | prices. That rise is, in @ natural reaction from the | the class which honour our age and our country. The | @QURAUD'S ITALIAN MEDICATED SOAP. gress is essential to the validity of the transfe: wiped 10 nonce Senor D. Guillermo 0: an indi- | of their withdrawal. equally natural downfall caused by the sudden precipi- | Academy, as well as M. Leverriar, will be delighted to | jt isalso adelicious com and can be used in hard or tainly itis a Congress that America desiderat vidual well versed in Mexican affairs, int nt in ‘The harvest of this autumn has been prolific of the | tation into the market of those two millions which it was leased at the same time to iter; an ereign and Lye es is nothing less than a C: that conscientious Tex. | banking operations, of entire probity, and who, if my | better sorts of gra Superficial observation would | the will and pleasure of the egriculturists should be ac- ) achevalier of Legion of ites of insects. trenery ve at le, fo severe ie whl ans can sdmit as a party suflicient to make @ conveyance | recollection rightly serves me, has already discharged | have chuckied over the prospect of a more than usual | cumulated. Ne stability of trade could bear up egvinat His Majesty could not, with his sense of jus- tt ore ould be kept in, its present, at of territory. very important commissions entrusted to him by the supply of food. Low prices ruled the market, and were | an avalanche, aggravated as it was by the panic which | tice, separate two names which will remain gloriously ed ht go on amply fying the ofits Santa Anna, however, e: government of our country. expected to rule it for some time. “There is plenty of | had produced it. The avalanche has fallen, and what is | united in the history of the finest discoveries and the but he thinks that the nu; of cor- the model Republic, that the formation of a Congre: “ With respect to the house of Senors Schneider, to | corn at home,” it was said; “and if more is imported it | become of it now? We rest eur apprehensions on data | most rare efforts of the human mind. | was anxious to blished th Union at a slow process. Even so @ cautious money-Jeuder whom I dst of these prophecies a | wholly independent of the humors and terrors of the | announce these “istinctions through the medium trusted the agency of the republic, which was previously conducted by izardi, will be dirt cheap.” In roy: » from emi- plains to a sanguine borrower, that « muitiplicy of d y the Senors Li: i, even m: yr than man’s winete work. The “mildewed | market, or the facts of supply and demand, and, witl»| of the Academy of tones and ander i power greate: are requisite for even the most compendious of loans. enemies have done me the justice to confess that | made bl olesome bi r;” thé humble root, | them so clear, we must coniess to a very serious fore- | the member of the society and the scientic foreigner ‘testis seen Before the negotiations can be completed, Congress | a wise election. A new proof of this is presented to us Seah ite teen tte estsches, yet threw a bare | boding as to the coming prices of food, the prosperity | have merited them, in ordes the better to aj ~ U the Depror tpiabs, mpiuatons co tanh e any must be consulted. in the documents which the editors of the Republicane | ful influence over the nobler and richer food. The poor | of that trade and those undertakings which depend upon eclat of the reward to that of their labours their re: not wilfully blind. If there be any such the Before the negotiation can be completed, Congress | have recently published. At the meeting which the | can nover suffer alone. ‘That which supports them is but | its cheapness. | wala” he apply to them the language of seripture, and say, “Ii ye must be purified. holde Mexican bonds held in London for the pur- | taken from the common stock of human food. And ‘The Royal Marriages in Spain. Simultoneous observations are to be made at all the | 4 the Prophets, aeither would ye believe Before the negotiation can be completed, Congress pose of ve ot Moses an s of the government rela. | when the very poorest are deprived of their usual sub- | Leon European observatories from the 12th instent, | though one ihe 4 y positively extirpates, root and must be reorganiz 4 tive to the com ion of a committee presented | sistence, the privation must spread far beyond even [From Galignani’s Messenger } | Oct it) in order to come to a cision on several - Betore Congress be reorganized, the Constitution | its Teport on these propor nd amongst other things, | their wide circle. jece: then trenches—as it The following detailed account of these august cere- | points relative to the new planet discovered by M. Le ft of 1884 must be ranewed. 4 expressed iteelfas follows + | toabiihdeg beret, 1b ateee eh side witnese:— | Verrier. Atike same time minute sclentihe, details sre impart to the pale cheek and The committee cannot con- sbi jes is from wef ene ‘Till then Santa Apna is but trenching now--on the stores of the effluent and the | monies is pei t as that in the evening of the | seut to the directors of the observatories at Mexico, the a'tar Dye owl change red or oay hair imple citizen; a simple | clade their report without expressing their satistaction | m; . From dearth of potatos to dearnoss of | ‘The first ceremonial took rand’s Gree: izen who eluded the bloc! of Vera Cruz on the | at finding th of the Mexican republic in the | bread, al 10th ult., in the throne room of the palace, which waa | Cape of Good Hopo, and Calcutta, in order that each may | ton beautiful black. oat th of a plenipotentiaryship, but still a simple citi- hands of then 7 respeetable house to'which it has ‘ate ‘London duis tinted of his eta ‘he bligut thus prepared the occasion:—At Neth ‘of the inner | study the new iturin the different lativude in which they |G: Lity White instantly dissipates rednessen, flushes zen. been transferred; in their communication with that house | which x starving the peasant of Limerick and Clare! corners of the throne, wes placed a herald atarms in a | are placed. remember that it is i ble to In be Ua gr ye “nay gp enn a nave coum an anxious desire to fied OE gad oon And where spots hg inexhaustible magazines of oie ceremony apels, an eS [= ep peaater % shew h a te open Siimaaedt preparations of ‘Dr. Goa ai thoogs ot in the hopes o! oom raitor hind intormation which could be useful to them heat and meal wherewith our people were fat | for in, and o! © present distance of the new | atreet, of now beginning to suspect that he iva double traitor, | "It aleo appears te me that ihe editors of the Republi | tiitwastan? alee wees gues ‘ignorance of man! | their M ot common measure, ia about 8,200,000,000 knglish miler | his absatsnne to his country on one side, and to themselves on the | cano have erred in believing that ay ie new arrange. | ‘They are not. Nature will not work miracles to save | pied by ree of the week, and the masters of | froni the sun, and about 3,100,000,000 from the earth. Ite | “Acents—T4 Chestnut street, Philedetphigy other. ‘and intro’ | Ot ment of the debt the tobacco been sold, and \ of ambassador On thi tanee from ‘hose motions it disturbs~# | Jordon, 2 Milk street; Lowell, Carleton ot [From the London Hersld, Oct. 7, that the ponent of anterior ‘charges ‘upon it had aay pera oy heclawn’ theve was iceutommerrbers vere right of | the threne wore five seats for the Infanta Luisa, Soeee 190,000 000 St miles. Ite diameter is estimated at | Green k Co; Pleree, Alba a of ‘The news which arrived from Mexico last night, by | been prov: tobacco revenue nas been ions must bend at last the Infant Don Francisco de Paula Antonio, the Infant | 50,000 miles, Thet of Uranus is about ore 5 er WHEAT Soph hue aanto warm ce ty Weary ter ona ta iagns ait Sis | Helse y Bere Titi | bs hse” Ghent | Biss aed sah a hoe nw | QA TQRNAND Yo nga 8 aa ares 5 uw ol rone, cul ‘ aut %y ot Vera Cruz, yot thegrest mass of the inhabitants | charged upon it, tim eavared ‘by parsons whe bave 6000 ya placed at a convenient distance, was an altar with the , planet isthe largest in our system except Jupiter and | 915 bo

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