The New York Herald Newspaper, December 7, 1846, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. Vol, Aa, Mo. whore Ne, 4879 NEW YORK, MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 7, 1846. Free Two Gent => = ——- = ——————— = — ————— - - an unskilful operati ad must become extremely em- | become to to the nation, in order that | Freneh We not insensible to the want | to invade South America with a fc and mercene: was at length allowed to go off, after a minute ro-ex:mi- AFFAIRS IN EUROPE, tering st'reittntbir counter came turhar | parece ioe alcied when Paine. | of emai netic, hes | retin no Fal curictin sad ett offs Taentpan he gue nen fe en | ive ret on } ‘ature security, honor, a1 * v4 101 joc! 5 evils with whic! ia 5 iplomatic re; ir. THOMA®, . ? hia ; but to recall General jTay lor, at renee ea be +. A congress with this object has been summoned, | 7 % “% Pred ; side ; bi on ne a me chine, bas Je bumane racaee Fee pane. we eg sentatives o! od disres republics = Protested oe pay a ng UE manent I at | toc si es and will o session on ol ece! next, sense of what to 1 inst su w of ssion, proclaimin, e1 on Gen. Van Ne: i > a ADDITIONAL EXTRACTS pol tical adversaries and. fe ate eyes ce of ths: maultiude, | when, weitother grave tatters, the su ect of the war | British What alone reconciles us 40 thede. | twill’ be where ed by force of armm thet called in-duri ickness; related « conver FROM THE | whom they have inspired nha Richpessten doe mies? with Uniti hy pe sabate to its delibera~| nothing in thio regard, is our belief thet in these | under these circumstances we earnestly cell your that occu: nm Mr. Smith (of the bank) { ory. It would be retreat which would be tion. your Excellency’s note will be laid'before it | low acts matic attorneyship which France has Tordahip’e ‘attention—first, to the danger and loss and Gen. Va g his last illness, in which Mr. F re! R 3 I S$ N. P A b=] bf R 8s j 6 cae ia ee would be Pe one ‘that fe Baca pg eg Sat ae nokec conmacie — condescended to practice, che of life which cannot fail to hag oe eae | Smith ees, wi hacannionbesae x oo ae | they beaten Americans, and it would be nolong- | interests 0! nation, ie Fovernment of under- “Does teach bloody instructio: cuwete countrymen as ma; 19 | move himself, and «1 either attended to, RROMEER AD SU: | Saltinet of Wa than tose a Stier estate ‘ ston of fat Which, being ought, return to plague the inventor,” patie SHS ioterean’ agen ic ineactoomenla,| soul ations ee ee ee soe nae ' —_— le! Te) 1e refe! to, wi wi could at Hi ; ; Nevertheless, the havading army cover dreadfully: dear, | the Felations of Wfeico with the United Stator eee oieieg | and: will soon find to her cost that there are uch South America by General Flores’ invasion, if carried , he died on Thursiay. , bane! NEW YORK HERALD. OFFIC’ y. | Wi FICE, | The American democracy when called upomto psy re- | in the interyal ir the position in which they were found | JD po a oes Joss,” EG 1 | into effect. That with no country inthe world is our| By Mr.Coxe.—Witness stated that at that time, Gov. ome | Sirageas emerge enteueetgmair | £2 Great uote nee, Amy when |e amy agen moore | cman of rune lapremee_ ot Saga us| Yer ow Cigar ilu ic al an assum eo eX: wer. | 5 jon, i. 5 5 eo decet ~ pee ey Mie Congreur ithe aia eats them the defi- | While remitting this bawer from: his government, | _ A lesson is being even now taught to ‘nations indeed, | tish mene tures ere almost exclasl ly consumed, | ring his illness at times, from the disturbed state of his STEAM SHIP CALEDONIA. nitive surrender by the Mexicans of California andthe | through the channel indicated by your Excellency, the by which both and may prefit, and | and where there is in circulation an immense amount of | brain, was wandering, and his remarks incoherent ; but J | port of ‘ the orders sent to | undersigned avuils himself of the occasion to assure your | Which may them that in politics as in buccolics | British capital, the punctual payment of which depends | never, either in his incoherent or coherent remarks, did | Gen. Taylor to give notice of eee of the armis- | Excellency of his distinguished consideration. there is such a going in search of wool and com- | on their peace and prosperity. ‘That there have been | Lever hear him say cnythmg about his having a wife ‘The Esfect of the mexican War in Kurope— | tice agreed. to with the Mexican General Ampudis, al MANUEL CRESCENCIO'REJON, | 10g ne bly by thle to disco. | Contested, by, most of these Btater, in, this country, | and child; his conversations and remarks were, alte. Monarehical Sentiment and Opinion. violatio: ‘convention : reside robe time begins discharge a ether upon business affairs; don’ w whether [From the London Times, Nov.9.] leudeuted by ‘ihe Bewiens: The Journal det Dekets care Send taille aun oc te TREC nek | Tate otfuuman widhea.” He bas entered upon | mame he decharwe of which most, be ‘tefersed indely | gether upon pusiness alfars; don't repeated it tome, ‘The war between the United States and Mexico re-| [nc observing that “public opinion aj 7 of @ great crisi® | 9 war in wi victory would be without glory, con- | tests ; and, in fact, that the realization of General Flo- | that he ha: minds us of « strange combat between an eagle and a | us co necheker in tne ented otatene Te teak, | Dut What tho issnie will be itis not easy to divine. ‘The | Gueat without advantage, aot detece ooetd i aac res’ expedition will be the signal of ruiv, lose, and com. | could not li ; pe last news we have from the interior is, that tho Amer. aa which we remember to have readof in some work | nent men are unanimous in blaming the enterprise of icans, with 2000 men, have taken. possession of Santa race, end an ble sere Ambition he will | fusion to all parties, native end foreign, having perso | heardhim mention any thing of a deceased wife and when he seemed to bo aware that he “T have now nothing more to do;” never of ‘The bird of prey struck the back of its do-) President Polk. He is accused of having assumed the | without resistence the ‘Mexican General, Armijo, ha to be a more than profitable sentiment. In | nal, mefcantile, or money interests connected with the | child. ph Grama ny Seep carenartr | oa atalag etna ik ort | ce fee nme | at ne mys and Ye es | a Ro yo an ae | ahh at eat he yy the force or ferocity of the combatants, but by 7" i ral to th a pA re ten yar pore alle poe Sof “The clear spirit doth raiso,” ty’s government to take this subject into its most se | on that day, but heard tha had come there in a car- the weight of the cumbrous booty ; for if we recollect | Fleshitante ch Rew th cie0 OP ao netne’ rivtact, | Monterey, where General Ampudia arrivedon, the 3d Hous consideration; and, whether ithe ty sneons ofthe | 1iy ec : for we much mistake if by this time it has not very much the Jogend rightly. aftr a vast turmoll upon the surface | ynabitants of New Mexico appeared mongtrous, Tp fect, | ina, oh head of an equal force, sad s coatiety depressed bis toasiiee oak opened to him the prospect of Foreign Enlistment Act, or by reference to the predato- _Gramatan, President of the (Washington City) tho water, the fish dived with its winged enemy, and | that they wore unrercd to the Waited States, Are Dot | fured honor of the County, He ia & mote eke acy | compelling his Aletanders st six-pence e dey’ to ry and unlawful nature of the enterprise, or, in fine, by | Patriotic Bank, sworn.—I was acquainted with the late the assailant perished in tho depths ot the lake. those the manners of a pro consul? What! a simple | the same man who at Tabusco took General Sentmanat “Scorn war's delights, and live laberious days.” using its friendly influence with the court of Madrid | Gen. Van Ness for many years; | think I have had op- Nothing canbe more rable and ineffec' than | brigadier general can impose on his fellow citizens the | prisoner, and fried his head in oil. The Americans have ‘Wham have'vie her Ma a ‘Sultaut’ owekde (the pian having originated in that capital) that her Ma- | portunities for forming an opinion of bis rea ny ‘a a for in- the preparations of the M ns for active defence ; but : i to be defended , jesty’s government will use every effort to put a stop to | plaintiff’s record letters exhibited to witnes lism ve predicted, several mouthesiges, Unit this.oam- aes pte epee ee ew bch meine £2 Oe Sted with | *¢clared themselves masters also of California, and are They have seized a territory which they cannot Jesty’s g ¥ effort to pi P to | Pl 3 an expedition from our own, as well as Spanish ports, | spection in detail; thought they were imitations of the Paiga would not end as rapidly or an brilliantly asthe | sSch'a powes and he cannst therefore delegate it” rien DendBoiders have. security en the ‘public lands | S24cHARKOd themselves with the responsibilty ot afc | whl cared into afoct,murt bo alike ata Bata | Gnperabe handwriting” Amoricans had anticipated, we had formed a just esti- oiarthe there, itisa question how far England may hequiesce in | eeoment which can offer them neither profit’ er advan: | life and British interests. Cross examined by Mr. Brent.—Witnoss had his at- Iaate of the passive resistance which Mexico opP0tes 0 | Waen lived under the conliel ondcmtandiog with | thinsitention® thong 1 imams eee ih eed Ao | taRe. They have not aequired a nation by conquering a |" Bering, Brothers, & Co. ‘Thomas Masterman. tention called to the genuine Van Nees paper or the sig. an invading army. In-reality, though all the success en we lived ‘under the a Thy | cbviats GN dibs on that sotto by cenuricmrtee un (in ory. Totake Pompssion of a region inhabited only | Anthony Gibba & Sone. ‘Thomas Lee. nature thereunto “appended, which Mr. Carberry had has been on the side of the United States, they are pro: | £gland, we could account for the attitude assumed by | 0! a Se taiten colar Give tire bed eros, Indians, creoles, and hordes ofthe | N.M. Rothschild & Co. John Rutherford. pronounced to be written by Mrs. Van Ness. the conservative journals (the Journal des Débats in par- | As regards this place, | am-rather surprised th *, z Soke greatest weet xen by the ren hoy sist ae fe tieaamneee cane Ne United States. To insult the ho. | made no atempt. A month or two ogo they would bave oy, i = seareeunaceiciieg Ie vad od Pagina Heath, Furze & Co. ‘William P. Robertson. Mr. Carberry here stepped forward and observed that the centre of their government, cxposed to all the herd- | Dorable Mr. Polk, to calumniate America, was a means | succeeda, ere were oniy 300 or 400 men here; but | of an Indian ‘jungle, or u wilderness of wild bea Cotesworth, Powell & Co. Truman & Cook. os that letter was datedtwo years after'the death of Mrs. hei here t Teast 1500, and if properly defended, 4 Pryor, John Baker & Co. Van Ness, it could not have been writtea by her. ‘ ships of an uncivilized country and a pernicious climate. | f peying their court to England, and our Ministers are | now tl . Properly » | barren deserts. Even in this kind of conquest - | Powles, Brothers & Co. ‘Mildred jeche. With a brief cross-cxamination upon seme peculiari- Thuy have equipped a concilcrable squadron and block: | NOL meu to neglect an opporitaity of pleasing their | would notte an easy matter to take it | gress hus beon questionable; the cost of lie by disease, | Rod trymeneTsg SC —_Alildred & Goyen tics in the plaintiff's letters, moro oF less corresponding thecoss bat the enemy sffords no prizes to en- | friends. — to-day, what can be the object of an ag- Ive masters of It now that the, ey to,make them: | and money, have been much greater thancan be covered | Fini y, Hogson & Co. W. R. Goad & Rigg. with genuine Van Ness papers, Mr. Grammar was dis- * courage the zeal or roward the courage of the American | &Tessive and insultin, Tg ap ge pag a roa pane TE At a OR eto keep | bY the most sanguine calculationsof a per contra profit; | 7.R Templeman &Co. Lovegrove & Leutees, | charged navy, and the interruption of foreign trade secures a | 871 their Government? We do not speak of the tanto. le ot fe ody ‘SP | and the government feels itself about to meet a Congress | GF. Dickson & Co, Sharps & Wilkins. Nicwovas Cartan, sworn.—I was well ecquainted close protection to certain Mexican interests and cuts off | Priety of those accusations incessantly directed by the Mey have’ done in | °¢ Persons vehement in “‘an ignorant impatience of taxa | Montoya, Saentz & Co. James Capel & Co. with the late General Van Ness, particularly for the last the competition of the free American markets. Tne at- | 980 of the French Ministry against an ally. We can- Met With Fepert te foreign inipereah that | 102)” with a demand of large additional supplies, to fol- | Stiebel, Brothers & Co. Mullens, Marshall & Co. | two yei uring which I w agent for the collec- tack upon St. Juan d’Ullos was the qnly severe blow | Bot expect sympathy from the men who gov Pe nly Amoriogt cesta cay cnc ieimpertations, viz. that | ow up what has beon hitherto a mere belligerent futility. | ‘Walter’ Logan & Co. Scott, Corthorn& Scott. | tion of hie rents in my neighborhood ; I visited his house “a which could be be struck upon the o that the | in the absence of impartiality and decorum, should they | only Ametican goods and such other as have paid duty | ‘The olf Rom Napoleon plan of the war | Lucas, Micholls & Co. R.Sutton,Gribble&Sutton. | during hia last,iliness, but did not see him ; after the, Ge- Amerizan Commodore has not attempted. in the present | 20 display a little ability? not remain silent? Why : et es rd je a bt tg a ‘eri | bear its own charges, by plundering the enemy as they Alison, Cumberlege & Co, Cavan, Brothers. neral’s death, on the 231 of May, a gentleman called on state of the defences of thet fortress success is mere than | without reason wound the United States? Is itat amo- | can bottoms only. 1 do not think our Government, | went alouz, was indeed tried; but General Taylor re M’Calmont,Brothers& Co. Russell Ellice me and represented that he wes a friend of her’s—that 3 doubtful ; the fleet would be placed in a situation of ex- | ™ent when the relations of the French Gevernment with | however, is ike ly to acquicse in any Sreingement o zed, to its full extent, the eld Scotch proverb, that itis| Hibbert & Co. was Col. John H. Sherburne, now of the city of Philadel- treme danger, und a check would be diegracofuland dis: | Great Britain are so seriously impaired that we should | this nature. Either it is blockade, or it is mot; if the | “SaGtegsy to steal brocke from a highidader, "A people | fiber CO. Int oie hia Site Contos co tee tat dae at tates astrous tothe American arms, It has therefore been re- | "ener still’more fragile the ties which unite us to North | former, how can treninen veasels be sdmitted Vif the | who have nothing can lose but little; and of such as have ” then went there to distrain for the rent, by request of solved, as we understand, to St. Juan d’Ulloa alone. | America? Your interest, if not your conscience, com- Hatter, D iol = bape pe be excluded 7 a little, it is diticult to levy it, without cont those General Van Ness ; | went with a censtable; at one ‘The progress of the American forces on the ooast of | Manda more reserve, And if nothing can appease your | The intentions of me Americans are not very clear. been i rs of the.war po Says time Mr. Sherbman’ handed me a sealed letter, which he the Pacific, in Upper California, and in the heart of their | hatred of democratic institutions, would it not be a “4 Ube onca elhoneh Bhagat ga het OO rained enemies. Gas ‘an Ness Case, said was from Vice-President Dallas, to deliver to Gov. enormous continent, is no doubt most extensive. But it | visable, before giving free scope to your passion, to vit | pears to be based upon their remaining part resident and his people may mcors Couns, Wasminaron, Dec. 4, 1646. | va jon the lst of July, alter the officers hed levied may be questioned whether the loss of these provinces is | ntil you no longer stand in need of the alliance of the | sll they have acquired, it hes heen rajected, or, what is termination of war—s suc- | ust reassombled of LO Sock Fic eparkling day, | tbe distrain, I walked—i did’not feel well—1 walked out asensibdle blow to Mexico, or a sensible advantage to | American Union prety ergs gees gs ore ong Tino of States is already t00 | eee Ten aera co clock, | Finessparkling dey. | for about twenty minutes; | returned and found Col. the American confedenstion.«Beobebly tor more-than €.1° 74 a to, the English | {tis vary likely toy are only waiting for ‘se reply 9: aaee Baeehie eee Aiearaets sof MONWE gl 20g cochtbaa Bias nuiany Coma ee doy. tie oad’ Sherburne in Mrs, Conner's buck parlor, and he showed centu come ro! e American contine! Mexico, according ws are too diverse, of oO ithetical, } ¥ ‘¢| me the “ Orphans’ Court” letters. will nak cosets eee Se eel epee abent | VerstonaThe Hoply ofthe Mexican to she push mattors with renewed aolivity. Hitherto Taylor | to admit of cordial union, or thot compactness of ne: | did not find in the records, orgooks’ of the Aldermen, of | ™¢ the.) Orphans’ Court Guisioe piven? i i He, th int Ameriean Government. : s been making no particular movement, arising, Pro- | tional spirit, without which there can be uo realstrength; | the forty-one Aldermen, which | examined in Philadel- Hor of Now Holland dose at iis Ung’ te the Brisk ane [Correspondence of the London Times.} bly. from the unprecedented raias which have flooded | still the people speak the same language pen phia, any evidence of the marriage of Gen. Van Ness end | re, The Mexicans possessed it, as Spain had possessed | | Mexico, Sept. 29—The incapacity of this country to | the whole of the country in his vicinity, and must have | the game literature, boast the same blood and ancestry, | Mrs. Conner, in the year 1845; | described the appeat- Xt before them, ia nominal rather than roal sovereignty; | me - a ti ese territor ie bow transferred to the United states, generations must | treatfor peace. Iaimedistely after the departure of the | {rom that quart Dass away, and the st revolations may have | last packet mail, it was known that the American go- | the sim ioe raged ihe. whole aspect of the gaunt; before these | rermment suppoting that of Meco wuiclntly humbled, | i srrvedat cen can reall: sonia t. of hegotiate ; bul 4 5 - aeiereat. Seats sersnitne yf ‘the Basted States that the communication would be Tadd bsfore Congress, } supposed the Mexicans, forgetting their own eternal | into their Union: Califoruia, Santa Fe, ¢ two harbors on the Pacific, and it remains to be seen | to assemble on the 6th of December next. I! is under- | squebblea, will have joined to ae the common enemy | suppose them all over-run, conquore upon what terms they will be allowed to retain them at the | stood that a similar answer has been returned to an offer | Nothing, howover, is further from the fact; the broils of | cannot be kept inastate of enslav Wirni Mr. Bai ‘ot that I recollect. —Oh! well, then, stop there, sir—there Is ing into collateral matters. Mn. Baaoicy pleaded the admissibility of his tet chjected tothe detail of the conversation _ | ‘Ceniticate of Col. Sherburne, showing his agency: at mapury stated that oe was only detailing Philadelphia in May Vast, in ebalf of Mra Conner, inher eed , | search for proot er to the late i Remees insisted that Me. Gilpin was stating a mere | Gon. Van Noss; read, also, from the P ‘s petition | Mr, Giurin observed that he was not. bes er pre of Col. Sterburue; ot the relatiod in treated as | Mr. Baxwr persisted that tho drift. of the testimony | }¥ ich he stood to the plaintiff, and argued therefrom the rn ‘use of intain the wer with the United States is becgming | caused vast hardship, and, nodoubt, great mortality, | have been brought up and fashioned to the same I ance of Gan. Van Ness to them, but did not ascertain | 9°, more apparent, but still no ition is shown . though we rarely fet sitly information of a recent date | any inst Saige) ered ‘Texas ia compored of “vageboud ge ry Nema of them had every married such a person. : ae jargest proportion. of the United new territory ir dominions, without also admitting ite inhabitants 1 also, the desire of obtaining | Britons, or native Americans, in_ ite ion which | But by the very nature of the institutio! ight with ly enough ee. their people cannot long anne: E} it, and legality of the evidence of the witness regarding avy of mediation between the belligerents, the pert of her y,have been incessant. Paredes and his government | conquered inces for . Th at either be left | mounted substantially to as the giving a ithe inordinate spoliation of the Mexican territories | Majesty's pevstunient:” Geintal Gpias-the: cecture “ot | Lava beenoverthrown,as you are aware ; Santa Anna | sotitel peadent, in which case the Americans have | conversation with third ‘as evidence, instead of refer mig may have had upon the sul with * Bndora it dificult or the government of that country to | Sante Ans, continues at thehead of the government, | recalled (vs han saiak sothing more iseesssmary to van") beste fighting for nothing, or they must become. federal what wes done by the witness himself in his researches. | “yi. May contested the point. listen to terms as inconsistent with their national rights | and Gomez Faries, with the title of Minister of Fi- | quish the Americans;) the central system wern- | states. But the districts are various and distinct—they Be LOTR Xi that conversations in such cas: Coxe replied. M i A in | Bance, opparently shared the/supreme pewer until Santa | ment abrogated, and the federal form restored. Now, it | wall each send thelr contingent to Confione ctiow 2, | were not evidence. mt v ‘ Ne Ee ee ee eae ein | Auua, who bed bean ‘watching the coume of events | must be remembered, that this very Santa Anna isthe | truss se ego, ia religion, with noeSaxon sympe- | Me, Grurix.—Before the petition was filed in this case, | MA- Baenr Ueplained fist the fart of Col, Sherburne's yeu done to force them to submission. By the last ac-| from ‘his estate near Jalapa, found it necessary to | man who, eight or ten Paes ago destroyed the federa- | thics, anda Spanish or Indian not a British descent; how | I made an effort to aacertain whether Gen. Van Ness was having Mrs. Conner’s papers in his possession, was evi- counts we are informed that General Taylor had at last | comply with the wishes of his adherents, and present | tion by force of arms (as it incompatible with his | jong'can they be expected to act in harmony with their | Married in panes in 1845, but could find no evi: | dence of his agency in her behalf. s attacked the town of Monterey with success. ‘I'he himself here. fle made his Public entry’ while the re- | Views of supreme command:) it je not. therefore supri- Conquerors, and how certain it is that their votes will | dance of it. He made the search at the instance of Gov. | “Yr. Ru.oiey road. the contesot or lease between Mrv. Mexicans retired, but after threo days’ hard fighting, joicings for the snniversary of the declaration of inde- foderalists, who have | become the centre point of corruption for ell political | Ven Ness. This was in June, 1346, I stated yesterday which cost the little American arm: é gy II the Aldermen had marriage records, either in | CONDeF end Gen. Van Ness, in regard to the rent of her hich cost phe hundred men. | Pendence were in progress, this popular fée being thus Parties? ‘The clements of combustion are powerful | thatal + house, Mr. Callan ty : So little wate: thie fpond a Ssaaace 4 to fol- Logeniowsty made to serve a Fie rent without havi ne that contract enough already to have several times threatened the in- | books, or upon separate pieces of paper filed in their of- | 204th» balance due to Gen. Van Nesss estate jor the t ranci tegri e Union. in- | fices. ‘'wo of the Aldermen, Mr. Galloway, in Spricg , viroel arta ti cis anediately. BTatt"the | House declined to eccutse. tne preaidehoy’of the exer: | the army ; the federalists aro’ resolved to do away with | Sty of the Union. To what an extent will they in. | fen Tho one, Augermen, Mr. Galloway. in Spring Tent, being acknowledged by Mra. Conner under her own, Cabinet of Ws mm seems to have had no srmall diff. | tive, reserving to himself the command of the army, the | it, as it has never seeved avy purpose but to maintain a | of particn aud Mexico becomor the arbiter of Calum, | me their records. They hadw’t them in their offices at the that it was to rebut this contract that Gol. Sherburne ex- culty to force toric t's my to keep the field true source of power in Mexico, and devotes himself to | despotism and t ar, the country to pieces, and is now | big? ‘The native Americans are ‘already separating | time I called, Alderman Galloway lives about a mile end hibited the letter purporting to be from Gens Van Neer Polle is very wellaware that he hue incnered a most for: | military preparstions, nominally to oppose the Ameri- | found quite useless'a defence against an external enemy. | therrecints ans only socially but politically from the | & half ro. Sirs. Mouldar's, ina north-obet direction. Al- | Nad that therefore the vention ei abe so mnidable mount of responsibility, if he hus to meet Con- | cans, but more probebly to consolidate hisown power. | They sivoca'e free oh ‘Usiahs Whet may ‘bo anticipeled whens people ef & pe relent i iis eee Moulder’, Neither | between the witness and Col, Shasburae,wanin evidence. le iso jowever, roceed with caut f h . . | different age, nD, customs, fee! le- : . t Fittle mittens ox: naval gig, bulan orm ‘mount | stacles which he would once have spurned with con. | Lbelieve many ef the thinking pert of the communi | 9 nude tue pivot of gue, ant spdianliohne tha tit ob Jeep cher ie ied for. rt b di Ky os nt, are made the pivot of party intrigue, and the arbi- | them the person and appearance of Ge: ‘Van Nets. he had called on the 1st o! r) “ July last, to the rent i ertainly | tempt are now tormidable. The terror attached.to his | ty begin to see clearly that the Mewicans are | tere of their elections ? Cross-ezamined by Mr. Brent.—Aldermen Smith and | of Mrs. Conner, sh; the t I ae tentieee Ss gee DENY RMR "D 1 noel terinccaer one tes probably te when | self-government, and that the beat thing which ‘Fer the sake of tho Americans we would save them | Cook had married nobody; saw no records of four ofthe {\Gen, Vin Nets ‘hed gina thin Soltek eae President; for, in spite of alt the restrictions of the con- | he sees cause to regret his once ‘ul retreat at the Ha- | bly happen for the country would be to be conquered by themse! Another such a victory, and they are | Aldermen, to wit :—Messrs. Smith, Cook, Galloway and | rent. I asked for a or some evidence of what she : stitutivn, he hae found means to plunge the country into] vane. “The want of money is of course his diffi. Poy fence ceria ml tema pathogen ge et come handsomely out of the mess | Hoffman; six had no bool kept copies of certificates | stated; but she produced me none. She denied ever > war for his own political and™private purposes, and to | Culty ; and, though he hos > pest men, Sod on tr hoad nourlah ie ‘entipal iste the bet: Which is felt | OY *ccepting our offers of mediation. Let them not throw | on file; one had his marriages upon a ot paper, but having signed a paper in the form of a lease. { Bratt ieee eect ead ss’ lili are cok | f tee conned, nad sobetutng hs wa flower, Don | aguitatallreghert My sll of Syunsh deneut. Com, | Smt anes ater nat, Atnrven cri ha more | noiing ole vas en the paper; {uk tat maragy re" | showed We consi tho writen Conract he Went on Test, the democratic party is losing ground in the coun. | Antonio Haro’ y Tamariz, at minister of finance, the | merce is quite susp 3 and, though stocks aro light | cording to the latest intelligence from the seat of war, | they are locked up; most otaer papers-are left omthe ta- By Mr Brent Yes, sir, she then said she hed been ‘an Ness. ~ i d goods getting scarce, from the blockade, our buy- i f t likely to be inter- | ble; do not know that all the Aldermen try; and we are not without hopes that the unscrupulous | sinews of war are not forthcoming.’ The church has | 00: i hepa th their course of present success seems likely le; ; lermes married to Gen. Vi t i been appealed to for aid, and threats ax well as supplica | ert are too muchalarmed atthe ‘prospect before them to | rupted. ita Anna has taken the fleld—Congress has | ful; the certificates referred to were in pigeon h By the —Col. Sherburne: said shown the : etna by which the Fresient has endeavored to extend ton bere been rn ot with nly arta feel te be willing to purchase beyond what thoy Immediately bat aly orered Aaditional loviosto the extent of of 20; | the Alder sched the caro to show them; the dit later Coupes Van Ness letiervin which ta A | elet testing t pro} cann: . A + | 000 men but the men them: ‘are forthcoming, ference between the city sn would net | and lot ven to the widow b: hich tare of a Ficiorigus aay ina veiga countey, which u | alienated witout the express covenct of tke Tope, and [From the Paris Union, Nov. 2] the different departmonts seem vying with each other in | strike astranger; the Aldermen on whom I called, lived | esfollows ee now PY the General, which is i threatening, in their turn, to close the churches if vio-| The last events in that country (Mexico) tend to in- | the prom and zeal with which they furnish their | in the i: pean ent State which it Bay cere coat nae Tenee should be used ‘against them. ‘The opinions of | crease the enberassments of the London Cabinet. It is rearaetive cuetes viene eg seated nr po areal Bo dued. The declaration of hostilities has been followed | Gomez Farias, (an enthusiast of the wildest description,) | now obvious that the American Government is intent on | holds and ‘extends itself, General Taylor and his follow- | phia, G by no considerable change in the habitually disturbed | 8Fe in of such extreme measures as ae aaoaied and insecure condition of Mexico. Ina populous, indus. | during the French revolution ; and an sxtiol sctoally trious, and flourishing community, war is an interruption | *Ppeared in the \ sheer ea pad woes populace ofall the pursuits and pleasures of life; in such a country | 0 the plunderof the wealthy classes ; but govern abited parts; don’t kmow of a privato citiver | LETTER 9. ' @ marriage, or having done so in Philad Wasninoron, February, 1846. ‘an Ness generally called on me when he Many—I tri the c anne of Mexico. The menacing situation of Ire- | ons may find the return more difficult than the advance, | came to Philadelphia; fe'called at my house in July and bunsoulaner masiea nepuaeaeneionaia yaloe budionss seg the misunderstanding ‘botween the Cabinets of | and many wh» wish themselves safe at home again, will | August, 1948. tters_ which i essed and the Tulleries, are civeumatances whichthe | Never live to see it.The nows isexceodingly important. | By Mr. Bravuzy—I did not hear him tall of a private |JaMltere, which occu Rework kt your manta Se that ples ae of Por- | We refer to our compendium for the deteils. marriage; knew he was engaged.with Mr. Longacro in | have told him to clean out the sewer. Send your boy for ment itself is weak, and as yet has not even attempted getting the Van Ness arms engraved for his books. and bid him to do it 5 Tae Be tae earn erm tie thst Of Ged. | TeS expedieat, common st former: periods, of levying & ose difficul The Hesult to England of the Franco-Spa- | “yr, baunt--Ol your personel knowledge? ited Dotter Be tatodlateld dae Wie ta nnd ony When, therefore, the fespective Legislatures of the two | forced loan. ' Overtures of rather a novel kind have | statesmen much less nish Marriage. Mr. Giurix—I cun’t stato particularly; | know that | me about your signing the paper? You kuow it cust cy Republice meet, early in December, we expect to learn foreign merchants. On condition of | France. The occasion is certainl: {From the Paris Mentions.) Gen. Van Ness was engaged with Longacre, the exgra- | won’t injure you. | mean it for your, for that the Americans loudly demand the conclusion of a @ loan of $600,000 to governmént, it | our national interest: rerthe! rea notwithstand: | To-day, the 10th of November, his Excellency the | ver, but I can’t discriminate between thet which I may | ance sake. Lem more careful of you ‘ou are your- treaty of peace. whilst the Mexicans will vote the con- ‘at the conclusion of the blockade the | ing the instructiv. set to us by the Government | Marquis of Normanby, Ambassador of Her Majesty the | have heard from Longacre and Gen. Van Ness. self—common sense tells you. I wish it tor tinuatoe Of the wer, The eras hos indeed trom frst to lasts rybody anxiously inquires if the | Queen of Great Britain, was successively received at Mr. Braptey—What was General Van Nees doing iv | sake. I gave you that house and lots, and other ‘ed appropriation of territory, generally reduced about $0 per cent, | honor and sae tha France are to expiate the suc: the Palace of the Tuileries, by their Royal Highnesses | Philadelphia? now neurly three years since, and you know you w: arm | of our dy nastic . The sti Ur i p the It was begun without a xt by the precipitate occu. | there advantages to limited ria stn facet mei to Pht ts athe inosiomev at is: A aly} ta rons as. Joti the Duke and Duchess de Mon Mr. Gunrin—He came to seo Mr. Longacre about @| have a hendaome fortune from my ‘estate. Now, don't ee ahould be admitted ate low | of the United State: ofa neutral district, and this occupation has now et been presented. book plate, containing a coat of arms. wory $0. I will see you soon, extended over an immense tract of the whole breadth of | burged to become general, the government engaging not | Corea Sriall. | the moment we Label prove to England ‘Aetrange Azam the Paris Sibcle, Nov. 10). Sie eaoanry cate 7s overseen the enat:of arms? | With much regard, your affectionate husband continent. reduced pe hi range piece of news has been cc mmunicated to us; ane me Re . . k ’ M; na Hostile army’ has ‘been ‘really Deaton, no’ condi eheme shows the extreme necessities of the §oy ero eee oma the harshest exigencies | isis go strange that we shotld not hesitate to declare it tered 7 ADttT—Pid he show you how they were quar-| | Col. Sher! urne said he had shown this leter te seve- rae Ete bo overnment hug been | Viction that with the Amoticsne oo the fie Bravo, the | THe experience of Tate years Nay but too. well domon wee arctan Uke be Mr, Grurim was understood to say something about the | but'to be met in the face by this distote, ke teen fo elt politcal effec, "A inave mrareh carese’a wilcer; | reduction of the present Mexican tariff will become iur | strated that'the purchase of tho friendship of England | 12rd Normanby, w Van Ness arms, Save wall emer feneeg wae a weomaton ta own oles huts, in ef evitable. e = ~ Extes fy yy itherto cost us, would compromise it | ¢/ inisteral journals th ~ Mr. Baznt—Not with the arms of Conner, you say ? The controversy between the counsel was ; ploit followed by no results. We havo Jet to learn that wonsout ethos ttn pated Tao thoumand nen seal bah puacharieemiaeins ma ceiasethenal pratl nian aalocalewsMéperttion | MY: Outta oe a the coat of arms in my book— | missed, nod the souatjenned sod til tommuonate au” t ; : ~: : = — y a , i the Americans have done anything to Li nied a ing: England—Lord Normanby is to be presented this ev (thet which-the lak cacveonnd bana aie Cone mis at ten. | bled by Gen. Armijo, for the defence of Santa Fe, the ca- | The Entente Cordiale—The Policy of Eu- dent ti fit lapose? tao forme of pence 0s they sey, think pital of the ee ‘ cept nay emaeednd rope—The Position of the U. States: ning to the Duchess de Montpensier. This unexpec h Oracurr Count, Dee: 6, 1046. t of courtesy, after the hostile demonstrations ma lisle— Robert's on the form of wills.) that the ineffeetive operations directed n. Butler, and the authorities, dnolading. tha clergy, [From the Liverpool Mereury, Nov. 13,] Me ro ent ‘The cont of arms was shown to the Jory, and Mr. May Mr, Bravter, for the defeuce, this moi | ‘hs 2 Madrid, Bayonne. and Paris by the B. itish agent ; ; - ¥ } thomeelves impose most inconrenient, onerous, unt un, | £00k the oath of allegiance to the United without | At this moment a perseverance ia'the upholding of | tebe the revelt of the weal ecesed teanea examined it with apparent satisfaction, Tho device is a | Su tru wosuise toler the Bonk ot tee ete ON these | Hesitation. Chikuahua is the next department menaced | what may be called the diplomatic system, has placed | two Governments me’ krow nor on what ta shield of a dark ground, with a white stripe across it, and i Burdene and inconveniences, Matted to the period ol | 18 thet dircetion, and will probably share the same fate. | Fogland in a somewhat critical state la referenes to her | tee Gonarnments, we, Krow not on what terme: We | ayer atripe fntersectioe thie ee tae nerong teand Van’ Noss to the notes ht in tength, eight; kos batete of actual warfare, If the United States Government ex | | Accounts from Neuvo Leon represent General Taylor | relations with foreign powers. Our position with refe- | Lord Palmerston ond M. Guizot, between whom the | thtco stars in the quartorings, the whole surmounted by the signatures of the letters exuctl bh ects fo lold dial govern any considerable, portion | 4 Pesieming (Monterey, with: six thearand men. That | rence to France is so portentious that we are expending | misunderstanding and irritation were never so flagrant | & Cat of mailand a helmet, the plumes. fowing of on | the tifnatures of the let y that had been discovered i Pf ihe territory pe or wereuding parties have | city le defended by Ampudia, with an equal | large sums, and much attention and time, in the fortifica- | as of late. On no previous occasion did our Govern. | Doth Sides very gracofuliy “underneath the shield in a | UW UECE ts Het vas about to'be called for the de- lately over-raun, ust prepared to in estab. | Umber of soldiers, and about two thousand irregulars. | tion of our line of coast. America is also in such a state ment exhibit more uneasiness respecting the conse. | 1owing ri the motto—'Pro Deo et nobitli «| tence, when. . lishovents ofa ‘and extensive character. Ther ‘Some repor's state Ampudie’s retreat on Saltillo to be | in reference to her relations with Mexico, and her ai quences of the rash act it had committed, not through | Retria batavorum,” and below this the name of J. [. Van | “10” M1 "op iscted, on the ground that Mr. Maguire palation of the woods and prairies, the indians Oa ee Ti eatmaricane having ‘already occupied the | tion in referance to Oregon, that, on the principle of love of glory. The Couct had, placed ts last hope ‘Ness is written. had beon in court repeatediy'during the trial, andthe, Judnchos of the {or west, must be kept down ; the coast | Pues. If Ampudia ghould be obliged to surrender: the | recognition of the necessity of England interfering in | in the negotiation of which King Leopold hes taken | James Lanwen, Clerk In the Treasary Department, | although the counsel had sald they fid not intend to ex, ‘and protected; and the principles of | effect will be nearly fatal, as General Taylor can then foreign polities, it ia not ¢ charg and that hope was but slightly entertained | sworn—Direct examination—I have known Gen. Van | amine him, they now produced him to do 0. self will be found inadequate to maintain | vance to'San Luis Potosi without opposition. ye collision with the United States. We have not yet made | by the Minister for Foreign Alfuis, who bad his | Nessfor mavy years—stated circumstances of business | “Sir Cancisie remarked, that the fact of Mr. Meguire order snd to resist foreign attacks in these infant | Anns hes ordered every disposable eafdier to march on | up ourminds to the wisdom of the policy of Cromwell, | personal rexsons to await with anxiety the issue of | relations, from which lee thought himself enatlon eae having been in court made but little , as the states. We have already seen the defence of the rontiers of | the latter place, for which he left, with about | who withdrew his ambassadors from foreign courts, and | the negotiation. Already even our wretched ministry, | press an opinion upon the hand writing ot General Van | testimony given by witnesses had been published in the Texas draw the whole forces of the Union into the field, | tWo thousand men, yesterday. ther | Contented himself with leaving mere agents to protect | fearful and discouraged, anxiously turned rotind towards | Ness; was shown the letters rporting to be from Gen. | newspapers. and occasion this oo#tly Und inglorious war. Similar diff | , To induce the Mexicans to Meten to reason, another | British subjects apd property, without mixing up this | Austria and Russia, soliciting with humility a patra Van Nesg, filed in the Qrphan's Conrt by the plaintit in | ’Mebele, Braouey and Bi mede a fow remarks, culties and dangers will continually uwait the Ameri- Senet eae ne the seoner they receive it the | country inaay ah ipe with the balance of power, or and sy port in compensation of thoseithad lost. Swit- | this cause, and the other letters Inidy before this | when cam authority im the former provinces of New Spain,and | better. It will bo time for other pawers to lend | relationsof foreign states towards each other. His sys- | zerland, new ogitated by its internal revolations, has | Court, oll ef jave as his opini n, were sp-| The Cova, for reasons stated, decided that Mr. Me- the Union mast be sup parted in the regions, not by the | their friendly medietion to terminate this war, and avert, tem of non intervention in continental politics was prac- | been already morally handed over to M. de Metternich. 0} a genuine letters and receipts of | guire should not testify. z ‘unanimous content people, but by armod force. | | st least for the present, the eanihilation, of ‘Mexico as a | tically so uccoss{al, and in theory appeara so wise and | The latter, impationt to pay his debt, responded to the | Gen. Van News's intermingied in the examination with | “In consequence of th Spani ey ; @ sickness of oue of the jurors, the . the consideration of the | netion. isition of the line of the Bravo with | obvious, especially imtoference to a atrictly commercial marriage, and to the advances of binet of i \ er ’ Lical couseqnenocs. of “Americas opatandisemert, | New Mexioo-and Upper Caliiornia, may well salify the | Coty tetra arent ae see aan oe eer clal | Spe ‘Tuileries, by marrying in his turn the Je Bor. | the witngeses had ec the siptatine te Dae Marines oe, | Cer adleumed ull Mondey neat. 2 conpinced us, that however we may after the lawless om = ee Sy tomes wend and mine fe condiality —_ all apeiree, ae one feels oy ony with a 7 soa Manes # Austri: peey ceipts, admitted to be genuine. 4 unjust spirit of these proceedings of the Uni States | Seesion vaste territory they probab! re mi some #1 Teasons, ct iza- ing waa succee: marvellousy for our enem " tnerde thal teaher netgibonas hore: nothing fn these disposed to pay an indemnity stich as Mexico cannot af- | blo only by persons long exclusively conversant with when a report suddenly got abroad that the. difference Mr. Baxwt waived any partiotlar cross examinetion, — DISSOLUTION. conquests w! i excite our jealoury or sionmants of naasaican, people do indeed. possess | diplomatic affairs,cogent enough to suspend the adop- | with England ,was arranged, that the encen/e cordiale | ,, Gen: THourson, of the the last forty youre y in isit 1 | THE, copartaership be S7sting, des the firm of our el In our own time they can only elements of tical regeneration; their develop. | tion uf so reasonable apolicy. And when we see states | would flourish anew, and thal, ‘ea a proof of that great | Ke faa other under Gon. Vi nf lado of the District ‘Claytom and ¢ 1s vy ‘mutual trast and a severe” incu: | ment may be heped for onthe reoraton of peace A | mon of all party complexions, unanimovs in recognisicg reconciliation, the, Duchess de Montpensier woul re | Ws eld Meer ander Gen, Van, Nols of the Dietiot | consent. New Yor, P EDWIN A, ¢ i ermme | ol u s - s \ Deen hal the colen tion of ons Lom pea ZC ant baat vice Gee, | tacos, te already edmitied vo. be and thia cob | and of am ee ry Fd age named Brad gt aw the Public homages of the represen: | an Alderman; | associated frequently with him in private The anbecribers Neve AuEE, #8 » ae. the American continent wilh conduce-upen the whole, to | Dt, Be shed without thet religious toleration | that condemn public men for the n of | likely, and hi has already produced Mer edect | Me;thought he had formed apretty correct opinion ofthe | , The mubscribers have forme 4 the civtizarion and improvement of the werlé, Certainly | sebich is stil Wey tarde thee matinee mantein | the principle of foreign intervention, we should coneltde | op the Bourse, we should not bo surprised that It con- | Ceneral's hand writing. | Was prosanted, one by one,for | Paina aader the ‘arm, of Cartwi ® e. the conduct of the Mexicans towards, England, since | theit commercial policy towards other mations may also that our own impression is the result of oaly Balt know- | cenled ost Secouttine May we not suppose that the Sud pronoduced against them severally, as net ia’ the fis screst., Banks, insuragee coupe morcan- they were emancipated from the control of the mother . ge, we knew more, wi disapprove | ambassado: r having protes order is BOV- | han t-writing of General Van N. nized the ee ee babe mad ? fi General Paredes has received his passport to leave the | less. ernment ri mn occasion, thought proper, without ing nel jess. Recognized nctuality and neatne: baer ¥: tio 7 gountry, has given ene cause to value thei ind “s intentions | Tot us do Lord Palmerston the bare justice to any chat, | Seument one tolema eecasion, thought proper, without | otha letters of « genuine character, lad betore him for of orders. “I SRT a and superiorito the vulgar corruption of money, bat bis | ia the Cromwellian department, he has shown some- mal courtesy towards the royal family, from whom |? 0Pinion. New Vonx, Dee. 4, 1646, ater {From the Parts Journal dee Débats, Nov. 4} mental capacity proved unequal to the task which he vol- | thing of Cromwell's energy and angacity. It isn fect, of | he has always experienced a Kind reception ? ‘The | M"-Siay waived any lengthened cross-examination. | New Vox, Dec. 4, in — He sient Polk) was persua¢ed that the invasion | untery assumed. He leaves his country a banished | which he is entitled to the benefit, thet under his official | friends of the mini ‘on the con , represent that gary Jounson, a director in the Bank of the Metro- TAYLOw’s U. 8S. MONEY ot Cal ‘would be att with no dificulty, thatthe | man, butwithont amy reasoaable ground of complaint — | reign, British subjects and British pr perty are more | step of Lord Normanby as the proof nce of | Polis, sworn—examined by Mr. Canuiee.—Testimony And Gold and Silver Examiner. first ship which should arrive before Monterey would | His wes founded ona military revolt, and the | safe, and betier respecte. by foreigners, than tinder any | the fortunate arrangement which had term! the quar. | Concurring, in the main, with that of the preceding w it- TT 218 xaluable work wit be delivered to subscribers at 6 < take of it without firing « shot, and that the of which he was guilty towards Herrera met | other diplomatic dynasty. his consuls are well chosen ; | rel between the two cabinets. We will rejoice at that pons, pronouncing pepeetraly. wee. the plaintiff's ‘cence per moath, payable on ry; non-subseribers same consequence would follow at the harbor of Sen | a fitting retribution in the conduct of his own subordi- | he himeelf is alert and vigilant to vindicate ‘he inajenty | great result when it is demonstrated to us that it is not a | — on file, purporting to be those of General Van 2 seh copr, Francisco, which was destitute of fortifications. ‘Those | nates. of the British people whenover it is invaded : and he | mere illusion, and when we are reassured respecting its ye ‘ phy at ee ‘office Habe PA ode phate, two positions being captured, it was spposed that the | DonJose Maria Tornel, who had steered his course | never leaves the wrongs of a British subject to remain | cost to France. | py Lroseesamined by Mr. May—l called at General Van | Ply a the weerenate Mexican government, which is incapable of recepturing | with unerring skill every revolution for a quar- | unrodressed for a single hour. His incessant care in fa- | Ness’ residence to enquire about him during his last ill- | °28°re them, and which, as to its finances, is at the last gasp, | ter of « contury, on the last. He believed | cilitatiog our fo1 commercial transactions, and in | ‘The Franco-Spanish E: tion to Keuador. |" Dever was a witness to will by him’ wos 8 wit. TO THE LabiEs. would yield what consideration of rome | Santa Anna’s return to power impossible, and did not he- | protecting our merchants and their goods fromthe ag- ‘rom the on Times. ness tos deed at one time. LAE If yon will poop into ter million piastres treasury. The suc. to declare himself his foe. In he gression of the subjects of other ki isthe theme | ‘The ox; contemplated by Gen Flores against ie ay allowed to setize a while. Hon. Solomon Foote, Fs Clea ii-trrt re. rom w nee cons considered infallible. hn ee deprived of his office, as director of the Mineria | of the of mercantile men of all shades of politics | the State of the Equator, of the preparations for which | g re vase, ty te Mr. Upham, of the Senate, who YS epbegle cecertenen of tpuay donee honest, f'was even an unjustifiable larceny ; neverthe- and ordered to retire to, Tebuacan, a vil Ofsueh «man all: his official acts ought to be viewed | the parties interested in the welfare of the Soath Ameri. | had honored us for an hour er two with their presence, 12 Very new style of Chimmasetes and 4 Jess it was usoful, not to the prosperity of the United wilderness, wharohe willbe such sts loss | with daferance. If he appears, by the policy of foreign | can republice have for some time been cognizant, har ai far hen Ep oe pm) Mourniig of every descr om ‘with ‘which have no need of an @xtension of territory, nt, unless to pursui' intervi n, to follow a line of action of h we can- | length asrumed a shape which is considered to call for |. Mr. Sweeney wes recalled ave information as to vi piven ‘reach but to thetr influence on the Pacific Ocean, and still more | ‘The conversionof the Mexican not see the propriety, perha itis only fair, as well as interference. The letter has, conse. | f the department in cases of letters . Flowers, ers, Gloves to the popularity of Mr. Polk, for this was a magnificent | don, which in the first instance was whe to coonlahe that the lies in our necessary , been addressed to Lord Palinerston :— mails ; they were |, and too nu reas to meaticn, L-adles we See eer ek err eckson of waeen itr. has been referred to a committee, composed tin | want of knowledge of all the circumstances which sur- | + 7% the Hon. Lord Viscount Palmerston, Her Bistered on the post bills. fos the boli Straoes s variety eS is the her. Untertunately, thie fine plan which, ifit | Gomez Farias, Manuel Gomes Fouud the policy of creat State, rather than in his want | Majesty's Chief Secretary of Sate for Foreign Af |, BY Mr. Barwy—Thero wan & box at Baltimore for | OPPotite, Niblows, where great, varie 43. e" had not justice with it, had the merit of infallible success | Bnatamente, and Frencisco Fayvaga.. II of sagacity or good sense in the course he has seen fit to ire.” ‘way letters”—they were werked after they came to E FAPEM—5000 Kenme Bines Wha; Pan Ver had it been conducted with wisdom, was with two | their (which thie ul pire, ‘My Lord :~We, the undersigned, merchenta and | W: or on the way, (as understood FT BCE TAPER Re Menme Bina, Whue, Fak, Yel h no person knows why Mr. | wiil be to the ratification of the measure. Itiv inthe meanwhile obvious, that our present atth | others, resident in this capital, beg reepectiully to repre- | Gronce Tuomas, sworn—Examined by r. Bradley— | “ds sur” PRRSBE & No. 66 ond 67 Nassan ot. Prine |. Fiest, he The follomige it 0100p of ha.comespeneere tude, of ruptare of the extente cordiale between Evg- | sent to your Lordship—, ) 1 wes acquainted with Gen. Ven Ness; was inthe Bank vishiin ‘aly Sal $ANESE. . jew Mexico, a wide- | the United States and ry Inpdl‘and France, is solely the result of our dipl phat of our body many are largely connected with | of the Metropolis Troma 1814 to 1830 ; of A SANESE- Province. It was thst | clusion of a treaty of peace :— system. While we are not very able to perceive of what | the trade, and all are deoply interested in the ‘and | durin; all of which time Gen. Yam Ness wee president; 100 Sh ob Bi On for 'y, captured Santa | Lerten rao Ma. Buchanan ro tHe Mexican Mixitree | essontial consequence it isto Engl. whether a Co rity of the various independent republics of | I 1 could distinguish the handw; of Gen. Van | “45 xr *N a. after @ march through the ron Forricn Arrains. burg or a Bourbon dynasty ultimately give sovereigns roth Avvicts. That it is, therefore, matter of alarm | Noss ; letters of be Gen. Van 4 Department of State, Washington, July 27. to Spain, it permitted to usto express our sur- | and anxiety to us the fact which has beeome ‘hotorious, | Ness’s, shown to witness, Hgote bis fudguestegelnt | Kk 4 . * . * » ‘ Erie thet se & monerch as the French King should | that the peace of thone countries is threatened with inva. | them, ell and several, STOLEN from tha it Bel Nate Sing. ot hat utility could this region, Anawen or-rae Mexican Muneren. in such « position as heat present | sion by a-hostile expedition, now in active pre Cross-cxamined by Mr. Baexr, with regard to some of |, is feet > ae be to the United National Palace, Mexico, Aug. 31. y people'are not more likely to el- | jn’ &pain, Port and. Great, Britains” that thie | the pectliardies. of toe ‘a lotters, as compared | Coco will retara eaid Bout to '8 Of 27 000,000 acres, more Seay—The undersigned Miniter He Verwee ‘of | ter general ‘by the fact, that they have to is directed by General Fiores, Pro- | with the hand writing of Gen. Van Ness. | amg will receive ore “e the United States possess | the Mexican republic has informed the General in Chief | take kings from tm place ef Germany, We do | sident of the free siate of the Equator, and het although | Mrose phe i ail. “is eer Sreater quantity of exceliout land sull Hot sve what footing is eegutred in vuck-a country othe | his uvowed object i Teatricted to the invasion of the eald| xv; with regaan te the Soediacnp fGen, Wen Rows | WuImOWOUR & DAVIDSON, unet nM tga: AB og aden! ppb A marriage naneant ol 4 mae he rumor ibe ay pe Ce 1eEe ; the examination of many apes 1 have never | " DRATERS AND Polk's great fault, he sent an invading army into til Louie Bulippe is more I to fied the ‘savantage Stach ond. the pes, and erful support of the Gpa- eit ike ee (j Ad Liat ettere. | Firee thoor, Fis.j8, obs streets Now Kerk, Mexico on the side of the Rio Grande. {0 color the to portake more ofthe neture of Algiers tham.of ane | nish Government That the o ie castes © sickle, as those in letters signed ee a9 \more ~ vjolence offered to the tot government of Mexi- dorado. In oui ige ta | “J 00, & grievance wes relative to a strip of “give him } ae teed ie ee ee serves whiel lot lo Texans, fent occesion endeavors which wes false, and which i b pele of extending Me contrary to justice. But once Mi ‘consentrete - moras juered, the Americans were in possession of | With an territory. Why, then, edvence en arm: ions of to and subseque: to Monterey jonte- people, blest - ee pay ag hf soar} worth cum rant ‘rom (wo. steamers ond 4 7 it is se) from countr; means peme ees a ~ “ if a - es. This, therefore, which ppomteninn - arme, if ns rm fo re. | 2020 ame ge converted into ships of war, of the 9” was like Gen, Van Ne | " d for cash or mtisfactory paper on a 1 ia "aot the side at which Mexico. is vulnerable. This | Feria renal offence thie rutin tof palry om chao the whole scheme te hastenine fo mane dinguise hs bund, aod’ thon tigs bie | pina aati ementing he wha nd rol Pers, country, whatever valo miserable intrigue, forms your Lordabip is, doubtless, well aware of bottom. To another | ho said ha | judaceuenss may be displayed. by General Taylor und his troops, ie j ted Chief Viet in the charscter and intellect of the | disastrous consequences likely (o flow from on stlempt shoud have to write two letters.” Mie: Hives / "Adiess'c- kB, ot this oflee, with real mame. &d we

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