The New York Herald Newspaper, May 30, 1850, Page 6

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ow f Washington Correspondence. the audience was @ meagre turnout. Hon. Mrs. nterests of the ‘are cither notte be | but the time has come when the truth must be told to | ‘Phe Meade Claim. must cancel her bond in possession Meade arta AY auinaTo, May 28, 1850, | Webster—s most elegant snd intellectual Indy | frosted of at aller, fat ail an measures ofe secones- | the mation, pe ‘Wasuuwoton. May. 10th, 1860, | fumaly, without which, to tae the lacgurge ef the —was present, accompanied by Mrs. Rdward C of consideration, ‘Who does not romember the Jast Presidential cam- Bu of the losed, * The honor of the Kk, and se} letter from | I hardly know whether you ure serious whea Oi Te gn aul honor and diguityrad ‘The Compromise—The Slave Property Amendment | New Yor veral others, ladies and gentlem Mr. ney, to the tune of nearly a million a year, has and the noise that was meade about Proviso—Comis Vose—Mr. | Lady Bulwer, accompanied by the é Mr. ‘uclawfull: —The Wilmot u ing toa -Mr 5 famony mg . Mo taken by the i ber Pisa nea ata a eas | Cataaaondge face’ gtt | You sah hoow the erignand eat of he Meade Se oar, sania Somemied ton, private of Sir . , Ser Par shout toy tan judg | SAUL SEE ae Pan ea | Seed cel ee eee ee ae | Senmermeieeae = Sion sod hutory of tho Flrday, aud which has 10 ssowa seit che hers have neveF ae y a a 5 v4 le i The Senate, tovdny, were about io uy the idk" | Tece of Mr, Seatou. of the Ineligence, wos also | pendousewiadle, even though the secretaries oxpend | "Who does got remember the mission extraordinary | 02 824 history of the Floridas, aud which bas Cy ihe pcsmeang, have: tec oommtue eee ment of the body on the amendment of Mr. Jeffer- nt, and showed sationticns to the | the balf of thelr gains and their salarios in carrying | of Major Bliss, from Gencral Taylor to Washingtonand | been so often favora bly reporte by its ultimate se t, with renewed hope, every gon Davis to the Compromise bill, providing that the | fair cantatrice—; ee, in ‘the course of the onthe salon iier: Crawford x at ge beak, during soa sempelee! The fast that Mejor of Foreign Relations from one or the other Houses sogeion, that the day was not far distant. 1 4 . with doug a ut é. ma, Baw certal bern states: 4 ‘ territorial legislatures of Utah and New Mexico | °, tain Page, widow of the gullautoflicer whone | white. wash the Cabinet, because Meas and honors | Taylor toe certain course, acceptable to’ them~ thet | Of Congress. The claimis old enough to represent | ‘The Mende claim (large as is ite amount) wilt shall not be restrained from legislating for the pre- ot orgs Palo Alto, and who died while on | have ery s houusiteny bestowed epee its those, Sap General Taylor sanctioned the understanding—that | itself in the Senate. thirty $ Which ie aes a utereet See tection of slave property in said territories. ab erie oe bin co, phos »; fogs mer pgley: rg a4 pon wap peng Cg hang bey her tie va Iw representatives the widow and executrix of | Ifthe United States is sincere, and ood Mr. Clay was for “ hurrying up the cakes,” that . I saw, also, the handsome and comfortable-looki f groat Census job; but unless I greatly err iu my judg- | to it—furnishos @ eufficient explanation, to all con- | the late Richard W. Meade, of Philadelphia. Eve- is not responsible, or liable, for this claim, under is, he thought it was time something was done, | MF. Corcoran, of the firm of Corcoran & Bi ment, its editors will hardly undertako a regular de- | versant with the subject, of the reasau why President | ry year she nts her modest memorial, and the treaty, she ought to say so to the cl: and Sheuanedte teainte vel. ti that understand, presides over ono of the most elegant and | fence of the Galphin allowance, the Chickasaw alle lor. s Southern planter and large slave-holder, is | every year it tome honest and devoted friends to Spain, in the most solemn manner. "Thine the and he : gin to vote. It was time hespitable mansions in the city, ance, the Bwing allowance, the De la Franti all constrained to commit himself to, and to stand by the | to urge it to some action. F Sse paseed the House least measure of j ue om her to some impression was made upon the crust of the | ee constituents of Washington good socie' came — aueaonss, &o., ~ tobe p 9 : fob ae Bree Boll» partion ofthe Ganiech, the dusign of wi is | of Representatives, also the ,yhowever, claimant; let her urge upon that its bill. ‘M. Hulsemann, ef the Austrian embassy, was prosent ; op’ compromise ‘cep the slavery question open for further the same session—the ,two houses of Congress, to ment, or insist upon the demand made in with a num her notabilitios, more or less dis- | mittee of Thirteen, su as it is by Mr. Olay. end another Presidential campaign. Mr. Berrien and Mr. Jefferson Davis thought it Tingulehed Ate however, stald away, and the | In regard to the ria ing of the census, I believe the - receive the action of the Executive, necessary to thi , the Hon. Mr. Nelson, who was sent es- est h raihsp ete rt eobscyucntly was a failure, Whe truth | law of 1842 requires that It shall be lot out t0 the low: Wasuinaron, May 22, 1860, | its final and zeae by the jand _ pecially to Spain fer the authenticated was to postpone this vote for a day or tW0, a8 | fh Tae copie of Washington have so mach music, | est bidder by contract; but seo if Mr Seerstary Hwing | 7, =r ¢ ts Dies of 00 De wonderful to say, this has been effected lyupon , and papers relating to the Meade claim, which it wes a rather important thing, and it was there- | 99 much of comedy, melodrama and farce, with now | does not manage, should ho hold on to his office long Criets ming Review ings the modest and respectful appeal of the executrix | Spain refused at that time to give up, on the fore important to have a full Senate. ‘end then a touch of tho tragic, at the Capitol, that you | enough, to get round the law, and give the fat job to | The Compromise—The Galphins and the Cabynet— of the estate, who will never employ agents or im- | ground that they were not such papers as the Mr. Dayton, aleo, thought this vote should be | cannot coax them into the theatre and concert room. | favorites. ‘Tho Compromise received .s little comfort to-day from | fluences, to further her righteous demand. treaty contemplated to be given up, and that they ee ed at lewst till to-morrow. Inthe mean- ‘When I began my letter it was raining seoaively, I perceive that writer in the Union andalsoia the | ing speech of Mr. Downs. He goos for it anyhow—if it She has left it alone to the justice and virtue of | bel te her archives: he took oecasion to say that at the proper | pitchforks—now, the real, live, actual sunshine, Intelligencer, who signs Truth for his sigi Congress, and it let mee Sameia.yen, pon oe longed ie cl be soe Tame stage of this debate he should be ready to put in | pouring in golden floods at my windows, takes wo defend tho action that has been had by the ested > gg pevalhs ye pabr) Der rap Pha peep “ stantial friemde-the’ leading stateanie ap yg Florida commission. I refer ay yee last = his defence of the President’s plan, as preferable to OL DAN TUCKER. | Sccrctary of tho Department of the Interior, in. the —though they be inthe minority. Its history is | document. printed bi Hon. Mr. pt ‘aor yin 1 Bo that ee gore Lore patage by | Wasuixotos, May 25, 1850. mallen which T'give aoe Lg the Subject will be found “ bead ays ag rH bs sca gaa b cage z to own tg bag 14 eee eek eae of Congres sols from Commie ae Affi, 5 a few days ago, is ‘up, and we must Secret ing—; i to be correct. ye we ir, Downs was re of since . Every mem! fami! I Bt Report No. #4, 30th efor rag ho hy Senate by the wight bP ssa tt gn} re lip A tea “ha a0 priation was made by Congress, for the | ultras tho ringleader of Southern radicaliam on the | silent to their ceapctiveinterets jot one of them mtg 6 ‘2 bs on is a powerful j noe Chiel we ns, mere than four years ago. Colifor: dary although ver interfered wit! control or action and some do say he is to be followed up by Mr. | | Aelreumstance, showing the novelty of administer- | iying unappropriated. not paid out, for two yours, it a aragel wah opr wccrbectoe nay one at theme has pein the lntuemee 00 Central America. ‘Corwin. ing the Home Department, under its present head, has | by law reverted to the surplus fund in the treasury, | fol As An adlvon ¢ Compromise, excepting the | er ibers in its behalf, whatever their tive | ACCOUNT OF THE LATE CRUELTIBS, COMMITTED Om Mr. Chase moved to amend the amendment of | recently come to light. It appears that Mr. Thomas | nd could not be taxen therefrem, xcept FA +d: Buwcrsrsenny tater 2 hard necessity may be to urge their demands upon | DON RAYMONDO SELVA, IN THE PORT OF SAN JW, Mr. Davis, by tacking thereto the Wilmot provisos | pitnam was appointed Warden of the Penitentiary of | Sy presented a power of attorney to the War Depart. | , MARY suppose that other Southern democratic | the government—all powe to deny it, but have | DE NICARAGUA, BY THE AGENTS OF ENGLAND, uty when the South immediately rallied to have a vote Senators will follow in the wake of Mr. Downs; but we it to her ability and f i i " this District, at the commencement of the prosent | ment, from the Indian ehicfs who acted as commission- i con! it ral sense of propriety to THEIR MOTIVES THE at once, aad the motion te postpone the vote was aici teat Gustan iat erie ot tine _ dis- | ers {or the tribe, to enable him to draw the money ap- | are assured thet there are twelve Southern Scnators | presecute it, and es she was so willed to So. otism is being executed in San Juam defeated. sais: Ralaei pe! ie thas sch Seas OG ea ‘i, | Propriated, for them and for himself; they having eo- | who are firmly oppescd to the bill, the phase of the | _ It has been always thus cuted on its own | de Nicaragua, in the most atrocious manner, pria- eee weescle discussion followed between | ebarged the duties of the office, On the evening of the | yenanted to give him one half of all that the govern- | bill, and the compromise of the bill; and when in ad- | merits and justice—left to the honesty, virtue, and | cipally en the Nicaraguans themselves, who are Mr. Hale and Mr. Dodge the younger, in which | 17th inst. ho was called upon by one Williamson, | mont should allow them. At first the sum of six | dition to these, we consider it Jobn Bell is said to | patriotism of Congress—thoughfas n has met | called to the port on business. It does not the good sense, and the sound practical patriotism | jerk or messenger in the Home Department, and in- | thousand dollars was drawn. It then appeared that have over to the Prosident’s plan, the chances of | with a cruel fate. sufficient that the persons and the property Of the latter stood out in beautiful contrast to the | rooneathat it was Mr, Ewing's request that ho should | the one of attorney from the Indian commissioners oh ¢) 28 Compromise sve still exceedingly question- | " Jig through one or the other house, and | lishmen, as well as those of the fo marrow and coniracted fanaticism of the former. | a sgodidhay’ was in part @ forgery. Major William Armstrong, at | able and mighty uncertain. the me po ug been pe ager cae | cae ra pvp ein y cay — Dod; es fo » Clay C ise; anc | resign; at the same time he was told that he would be | the time Indian commissioner, was applied to to ob- Its friends, however, expect considerable reinforco- t, r, & s Cia pee then nga Setihet ie wits bey was tape | einen care of. Mr. Fitnam sent word back, that the | tais a now power of attorney from the aforesaid chiefs | ments from the North in tho Senate, frem the demo- acribaieble to ee leading and upright statesmen | thority of this distinguished ¢ Ry the Engliah s a other billie an bu uae aa ane ane a] ya aa him by the President of the | Of Commissioners. One was obtained, and upon it | cratic side, on the ground that in carrying Clay's of both houses of Congress, who are ever alive to | agents and their dependents, pride themselves in and suc t ner Bille ae it y 1 he sil | office was conferred upon him by the President o! the additional sum of eight thousand dollars;was drawn Compromise, ve break down Taylors administration, | their oaths and their sacred duty. They regard its | exercising over the Central ricans, who tread A lege! bit of argument, direetly upon the amend- | United States, to be confirmed or rejected by the | by Dr. Gwin. A portion of the claim, some $56,000, | just as the British ministry are ruled out by anadverse | non-payment, as a étain upon our “national es- | the soil, a brutal ferocity, of which, perhaps, few ment, come next in order between Mr. Dayton | senate, and that he would hold it watil removed by tho | was sold by Dr. Gwin to Messrs. Corcoran and igs. votein the House of Commons, on a vital cabinet | cutcheon.” Many members have ignorantly voted | examples are to be found, even among savage CNorth,) and Mr. Berrien, (South,) in which the | president or rejected by the Senate; and that, more- | Governor Marey, as Secrotary of War, was applied to, become, and have after reading the reports print- | hordes. measure. necessity of protection to slave property in the ter- | over, ifthe administration wished to disgrace him in | to pay over the money on this second power of attor- But still we consider the chances to be against the | ey by Congress, regretted s0 doing and have Let. it uct be imagined thet eur on ritories, (should it be decided by the Supreme | this office, which it had conferred, he would accept no | ney. But he refused ; first, because he had no money | compromise. Peiakie ie be ani rockin Te ee sie le een Bao phragm ‘at its hands. to meet the claim, the appropriation having been, b; PR 3 — of Hon. John Bell just new is mighty representatives in Con; Whb ‘aeeer Rare » by j sy or malevolence. Court to be admissible.) was shown by Mr. Ber- | oth d. No: thi in rtible in i scuston | e t | law, carried to the surplus fund in the Treasury ; an His sympathies ure with General Tay! LE pe Bae ago gs prone: en, with his accustomed clearness of the Law | eet ran papurtment has baem repeated now od so | secondly, because. the government, 49 the guardian of | but his own plan is the counterpart of Clay's com. | Yate claims; they excuse themselves by. saying | which we will refer to Teeent wets whch will heap The hel et i tn y ned till | many cecasions, that it is time that the President | the In could not in justice, if the money were at | promise. If Mr. Bell goes for the cabinet plan, he | they have no time to read reports, or attend to pri- | eternal opprobrium on their perpetrators. he whole subject was at length postponed ti | should exercise his high office, and extend # hand of | command, pay it to the attdrney. for him to have and | sbandons his own bantling. Still, there is this con- | vate claims. ‘These persons also refuse to vote for El Senor Ramondo Selva, on to-morrow. | justice towards those whom a minister of his cabinet, | to hold at least one half of the whole amount, ass sideration in Mr. Bell's favor—let him support the | a “standing board of Commissioners, which | San Juan, on his way to the United xorox, May 27, 1850, | evidently intoxicated with his authority, is attempting | for his professional services. Another reason why the ase ys ° war Mn becca anid resigns or is | would relieve them of this difficulty. They also | eented himself to the commander of the . 4 yi ty ae | in every way to disgrace and injure. There is no apo- | money ought not to have been paid, is found in the | turned out, he, the veritable, identical John Bell will | refuse to vote, or give countenance or respect to | senting acertain claim on F. A. de Barruel The Compromise—Mi. Mason and Mr. Clay-—The | logy for this reckless treatment of friends, if there 1s | fact that the second power of attorney was got up and | most certainly become the Secretary of War. We | the favorable reports of Congress committees. In | vert, in which the latter was indebted to Sen’ ours Line—vi slight Nidite Sut not a Bite—The Presiden- | excuse for the ruthless proscription of fovs, ' Mr. Seng- | sigued by the Indinas who were commissioners, after | count, Masolare, Spon tis, Bellis destrtion, of Clay * | complying, therefore, with-your request, I can give | Florentino Sonza, and, which Selva Was . €y mived up in it—Mr. Cley and General Taylor, Gen. | sek who peseeded’ he Rivgested ina note adaeess. | city hed run out. And even tis sccond power of at- | and that his challenge the other day ‘fn the Senate | RO better idea of the nature origin of ‘the | ed to collect. ‘The Commander was then pattaie Cass and Mr. Buchanan, all on « Different Tack—Bad | oq to Mr. Ewing, to be retained in the office for one | torney, unofficially signed as it was, was misl whom (dor lost, | was expecially intended for Mr. Bell “Meade ” claim, than by enclosing a copy of a | of Anglo- Mosquito Cousal Green, before Chance for the Clay Compromise month, to enable him to settle up some affairs. The | and has not yet been found. Upon Mr. Corcoran’s cer- On the second Tuesday in June, the Galphin buai- | letter addressed to the eldest son of the estate, by | Barrue! avert declared to have paid the amount, was made under affiicting circumstances, Mr. ™ " tificate that it had had an existence, unofficial as it | ness-comes up. Crawford will be condemned. We | an old and eminent citizen, (a friend of his father, and called on a Mr. Bechor as wit who swore ‘When Mr. Clay, last week, with » degree of energy, | Rediats JF having. but recently lost a wife and daugh- | was, the cum of $60,000 was paid. But from what fund | know it. There is no escape for him. ‘The whigs, In | a distinguished diplomatist, who was intimate | to its having been liquidated. Satis une prot e rH spirit, force and eloquence which in all his long career | 44, "g reply was not a polite refusal, bus an | was it paid? By or under which law did Mr. Ewing | the interval, will probably hold a general caucus on | with all the claims against to be paid under | the commander and his partner the Consu! hhas never been surpassed, demanded in his answer to ine to Pay theclalm?. ‘The whole thing Is culpably loose, it | the subject, The New York delegation aye been con- | the treaty for tha Floridas i=. red oreng x AL ye ma, I Mr. Soulé, to know what the South wanted, and asked messenger, Williamson, was sent with a | not feul and rotten. It cannot be defended. rulting, and bave partially agreed upon a caucus of «Ww. Tune 2, 1813 va’s documents, and handed ‘over to the similar order to Orlando Brown, the Commissioner of | I understand, that the Committeo on Indian Affairs, | their own; and, as @ specimen of what may be ex- asnmveron, Jane 2), : debtor, who immediately tore them to pieces. > them to show their hand, he did not probably suspect d | of the House, has under consideration the charge of ted, we understand that, with one or two excep- | ‘To Ricnanp W. Meapr, m that they had any scbeme to propose, but that their | Ladian Affairs. ‘An answer becoming « gentleman, snd | of i Stor Couper, that Mr. Nwvivg has entered inte m pri- | tions, the whole delegation of the State of New York U.S. Navy, New York— ‘This happened in the morning of the same day. whole object was not to effect, but te defeat a settle- | man Williamson, was the same who acted as an agent | vate contract with a Mr. Pri: elative or favorite, to against the admission of Crawford's legal right to “My Dear Sir—I received your letter of the 1%h In the afternoon, as Selva was walking along Patent | remove the Winnel I two hundred and fifty ‘tain those $115,000 which he has taken out of the et i coast, he was assailed a of ment of this ugly controversy. LO ea ee eee eye aster ‘There | miles et seventy dollars a head. I do not vouch for | public : May ult in due ane, bot have delayed ual now | SOE tanuctren the = polon,""who ‘welsef aie Any doubt, however, which may have existed in the | gre circumstances to be developed in the short and | the charge, or that Senator Cooper bas made it. I only Ng noe = looks equally bad for Crawford— | objeto send. you a copy of your father’s powerful and conducted him to the -house; there mind of Mr. Clay wpon this head, must have been dis- | reckless career of Thomas Bwing here, which, if estab- en the current rumor of the day. The charge looks | Mr. Toom| particular friend of this Korma | and annihilating argument in answer to Mr. Polk’s | they handcufled him, and chai him to’ a post, arloss than he, if not ished by resolute men—-more be too wild for belief. The Indians could be | gentlema: reap at Gage ethos tents. speech in the House of Representatives against the where they left him the whole night. Next morn- sipated to the winds by the speech of Mr. Mason, of | x! d in thei te wrongs perhaps more | removed the distance named for eight dollars a head, | to try the u i 0 rsa in dations cke Suntits, oeretiee aint, desperate, iban be in his ese ects ie ruthicxs—that | and then the contractor cold clear @ profit of fifty | tion which he should ofr to the House. Tn his re- jeade chim. RS ae wet fF coche ater, Marian him, they py ag ay the Comptcmion hill ‘rick | Will send’more terror to his cra heart than ali in the transaction. b neh reer) Mr. Toombs has judiciously jstricken out You ask me to give, in writing, the views I ex- The like bartarity wee sepetrated on. twenty-fi index of his objections to the bill, and ot his own plan | the Richardson committees will over throw upon his wate discussed, to-day. with lively interest, the | that intention. pressed verbally, when I had the pleasure to see | The ive 2 head. nch Mint in New York. Benton mov- | _ The trial of Mr, Crawford comes up on the second | you in New York. I will do so with pleasure; but | Sailors from Granada, who arrived in the of adjustment, will for the present, auswer all the ed an amendment fora Branch at San Francisco, and | Tuesday in June, and when taken up. it is to be con- | they must necessayily be much condensed when re- | Capitana, belonging te Mr. Peter Rowland. An shared the same fate the Senate be. | mained unpaid, and so far as regi ‘ew Mexico, the South pacrifice this amount of terri- a York and Phiadsiphie a0 commercial cities, They ox- Spain, by “ “ Mr. Dickinson gaye the New York Branch Mint « | Yor! pl y jthat there will | very peculiar circumstances in which she stands | shameful chastisement was on a tory to the Northern tree soilers. 2 @ Because the bourdaries of California absorb all | good holst to-day, and at the adjournment it stands | Chanred hot shit in the liveliest kind of style, Novse- | fore the second Tues our coast on the Pacific, and exclude not only the | disencumbered of all amendme: purposes of his argument. Wasiixarow, May 24, 1850. Mr. Butler offered one for a Branch at Charleston, The | tinued till di d of, and when disposed ef, there as Selva—were carried off to He objects to the bill of Mr. Clay, ae , - om ‘Ghennsids waa-enatied mainly by Messrs, Dickin- | willbe aholeim the cabinet. In the mean time, we duced to the form of a letter. " fa 1, Becanse it 125.000 square miles of terri. | The Branch Mint—New York versus Philadelphia—The | Tecusoem wan Geciet om "ring Seward, Pratt and | may have such news from Cubs, and such news trom te | pheetred et Sd of the ereinat of Sleigh beer stripped of their tory to New Mexies. now belonging to Texas, and sub. | Increase of the wIrmy—The South—The Compromise— | Pathe, ‘The main debate was between Mossrs, Dickin- | California, as will materially retard the action upon | both Spain an ai tes, and particularly } cing thape, ‘be i i that the ject to slavery ; and because under this ceasion to | Old Zack and the Galphins. son snd Cooper, as to the relative standing of New | the Compromise, “At all events, wo do not expect'that | Spaiu, was compromitted, se long Se ae viduals FP comatatted ‘some crime, ; Some ee in towards it. The claim did net arise from spoliation, | Way of example. Not so: they had not ll vigorously, satisfied of the | of property on the high seas; Dacenes oF doubt | way tepnagpecend, This a attested by even Col. Benton's Mr. Clay is pushin, Bouth, but the vast territories of the interior east of | pt Wawnixorox, May 23, 1850. breakers ahead, and of the day of delay. But still i who were in San Ji at time of the ¢ M h ith the Pacific. | magnificent California proposition for an sppropria- ei " “ » om, ers ahead, an ngers 'y- whether it was pursuing a lawful commerce; nor uan ime he eccur- beg ie Bey Madcaeaeaa” soeciech at the | tion of $300,000 for » Mint at San Francisco The Age of Committces—The House Investigation—The | the odds locanaad onten coon Pry cigpnor from Spain suflering her territory and tribunals to Heee Then, to what shall we attribute this Bouth there is nothing given in return. | During the day, in the discussionfof therclative pros. | Pickwickian Charges—Grave and Voluminous Report of then P be used and abused by another nation (France) in | brutal procedure? To two Syusea. vis — The plan which Mr. Mason proposes in lieu of this | > Max ¥ the Committee, $e. Per veya: S the unlawful seizure and condemnation of the pro- | _Firet, because Beauvert and Bec! Dill i simpy coarl C ino tine trom its | Retwoen Mr Diekinnon ond Se, Cooper, the fact ug {This era in cur political history will probably be | OPInfons and Events in Washington, | perty of neutrals, It was under both these cizeum- aguinst Selva—the one on account ea claim ‘o run the iss our! compromise line m ite . > er, e fac! as ii cepent termination in Texas, clear through tothe Pa. | Giocioedd, ‘that Philadelphis, after all, iv only a fresh | ¥R0wn to future gonerations as the “ago of commit- ‘Wasuine toy, Saturday, May 25, 1850. | stances that all the claims arose, (except the Meade | made against him—the other from a falling out in tine claim.) which were provided for in the Florida | Granade, informed the commander, and caused 1° To arrange tho Texas dispute and the boundaries | Water seaport; a largo inland village,a hundred miles | tees.” During the present session of Congress there ‘The Horizon, Political and Meteoric—The Progress | treaty of 1819. for the territories accordingly. from the ocean, doing » good business in small manu. | 24ve been appointed no loss than half a dozen “special of the Week—Virginia ww Favor of the Compro- | fair and bona fide conti " i 3. To provide a t government for that por- | factures, and quite a considerable trade with the | Committees of investigation,” to inquire into personal | — »nise—Letter from Mr. Stevenson—Alabama and | recognised authorities in Sain, your father, | Sassina’ pe English, EF t therefore it was tion of tho present unrecognised State of California | conusixin; but standing in the matter of commerce | Cbargesinstituted against various government officials, | Bfussissippi—Mr. Clay atili Sanguine of Success or ees oe the L, Beccles, Sghsing.. ta pene ino: tai —3 ad 4, To make the admission of the State of California | towards New York. just about as acanal boat would | Of different grades, from the cabinet officers down to | = The Cuban Expedition—Bad Wve for Levees | fu) and legitimate monarch, and to drive out an | @'Aflaires, arriving about that time, bo neg Jy y! her en ye of the yo line perme wo ron ye a. Georgia full of passengers | the pages of the House of Representatives. Theso and Music. sor usuper. as her Southern boundar; © accepts It, t he | ani ight and gold dust. « 4 rr . ? into be declared a soveraga State of th Union, bythe |" TheSeuate appear to be convinced that Now York is | Committees ere.ef course gotten up entirely “yretone | The week closes amid a dull and dreary rain- | ‘Your father's and munitions of war were | Hnglish Vice-Coneul, an Presi¢ roclemation; but shall be limited to one | the headquarters of trade, and that Wall street istho | 2 °Hco;” bul as frequently been observed as@sin- | oor which threatena to pay a visit as long as it urnished and used for the sole purpose of presery- uke Oieeieny, the % coats by ne i reprecentative in t oure, till it shall be ascertained | focus of the finances, and that a Mint 01 to be | gular coineidence, that those who are the most active oe ng the throne of Spain for Fei d and his ih y, the absolute inion which is most wanted, where the bullion | in the committee room, in collecting testimony, &o. | i8 disagreeable. The weather, too, is cold and | fendants. They were furnished when that nation | English government holds over the territory of i him to believe that, that very ni and the nig a oes cates | ioe fe tt ce ee eee ne- that she is entitled to m: nm one. where the mot ec ds Mr. Mason was convinced that this plan would be | and the specie are always on hand for coinage. Ke., “all for the public weal,” are ready themselves, or | inhospitable, toa degree never before experienced | was in its darkest days and deepest distress; and I | caragua; and to crown all withan ait of Satisfactory to the South—that it would settle the The New York Mint will succeed this time, The | have friends who are willing, to “fill any vacancies in these latitudes. Once or twice we have had a | £ay that these descendants can never acquit them- | )™portance, the meee ntative of Queen question permanently. All that was required, was | amendments which killed it once before have been roe. | may Occur. een of the obligation thus contracted, and that | Victoria, the femous Chatfield, ted himself fons In which Hon. M. int bl Ps i 1 ee aaah z faint blush of fresh strawberri jc » at the rate Of | the honor of Spain something like a shilling a piece; but they have | ther, or his descenda: that the North should, in good faith, adhere to the | Jected, and the necessities for the mint have increased | Among the many invest}; cape present ©..shave been seriously enga compromitted until your fa- | !¢ Selva, in prison. The latter presuming to find in 8, shall have been renvune- | him a mediator, besought him to intercede for his @ompact of the Missouri compromise line. ‘tenfold. Mr. Cloy, after a cros#-examination of Mr. Mason, We expect an amendment, providing for one or two | Horner, the doorkeeper. is certainly the 7 2 rs : i H sponge that if sil the Southary Sonatore were enrese? | melting and assaying houses’ fu Californie, where the | lous and Pickwickian. The followi disappoared, waiting the bland breath of June | rated for the aid furnished by him, which in this eats te St. milaiater, fisdeiatally Dle to the Missouri compremise, then he might agree | diggers can have their dust melted into bars, which | charges were made against the a again to tempt them forth. case proved invaluable and unappreciable, is an ing ‘ he lay pres ocked the Havana out to ren it till it touched the State of California | will effect to them of their earnings, ~ihat B. X: Horner had m But, although the skies ore so dark and gloomy, | @ Well known historical fact that the ish | of his mouth, and struck him with a sword that Mr. Mason —No torther ? | much safer, and much more id to the manner of Giesharging Bi he political heavens look more cheerful and pro: | armies must have disbanded but for the supplies of | he carried ‘or the purpose. Are these acts lay.— Certa’ pe - 4 the Senate bill f cut conse.” Ba: «That ble % mising than at any time during the present session. | your father. And, if in any negotiation subse- | Of diplomatist! What shall we say to a minister Cass put in» jon or two as to what was to ‘The House, t Bare 5 ¢ Senate bill for oe The course of the debates during the week has | tently had with any other nation, your father, of refined England converting himself into an exe- ‘an addition equal to | offices under government at the same time”—one of Some Tarcher amendments ape | these offices being that of mossanger in the House, and | NOt indicated any important changes in the state of | Without his assent, and contrary to his solema pro- cutioner, and wreaking his spleen on a defe: uri compromise line; but here , increasing th c whole Pacific coast, a Jake the Missouri line her scuthern boundary, and | # great deal better, as if wnder a general impression | sad and aching hearts, It js unnecessary to enter into | formation, yee Se ene tenet cota te tan | Yeuouy, ull the.pevare. tn thie, acadelogen with | may rest essured that their dark deeds will not ia- Tien w ready to answer ¢! th | about 2000 men. noni risoner? These facts are undeniable, and the : nee nereasing the dragoon force, so as to sooure | further that this brother waa absent during a part of | feeling here; but I am well assured that such | test and remorstrance, was turned over to such | 1 ,tte undeniadle, Sor ef calsn ‘ ‘iu of the Mesloun boulary againse the | he recess, and did not deduct this in settling wich | chonges have taken place toan extent | was at first | ther nation for remuneration, and fuiled by no act | only mode of justifying them is to allege that they Beal be tos Gh Aparhes. government, The committee, weighed down as they | scarcely prepared to believe. However, the state- | of his own, but from technicalities, official formali- | Were committed in the name of his Mosquito Ma- tion of California, if ber Wo have ogcasion to remark one good effect of the | tiust have been with the hoary responsibilities esting | ments { eend you are, as usual, accompanied by | ties, casualties, inattention, pride’ or etiquette, or | Jcsty. Ke it eo; and it is unnecessary to udd that, Compromise Legislation upon other subjects goes on | upon them, probably entered’ upon their duties with | my authority, privately enclosed for your own in- | anything else on the part of either of those govern- | ¢!0t hed even in the mantle of that ridiculovs sove- the poil south of it a territory running anda half | that all the real danger of dissolution had passed. and | the details of this long and painful investigation; but d the tine 6! Pirgini ec bligation, i ini i degrees along the P: ac the Mexican lino, | that the governminent and the Union were fixed and | suffice it to say that the proceedings were conducted ent thatas oak ae os weight'ead bene Bak ens —_ ~ e such | cur the less responsibility. and leave it open for all {the United States | permanent things. Bat still, upon the other great | with much solemnity, during which some twenty-four | Te?t “ . eres et mach " a P p A roast MA The ities of whi Pf d every kind cf propert the 8 1b ss of the session, wo can expect nothing till | witnesses were examined, aud the report at length | it was determined to go in a body against the com- | course as will end in rendering justice to Mr. e atrocities of which we have spoken were Sedo ts slah tho centece & whee Soe on the mpromise, one way or the other, ls disposed of. | made up and delivered to the louse up ty promise. I am now informed, however, that what- | Meade, either by Spain paying the claim herself, or | Committed in San Juan at the time that the come Perite | Ecuth appeate to be rallying in opposition to | cf foclscap Tt contained rather the details of the | ever may have been the tendency of the Virginia | Using her good offices in the most formal way of pander 0, Sen Capen Don Trinidad Salazar, and Mr. Clay aid not like the of splitting California compromise, The meeting of the V ang the | evidence, throwing all further responsibil: Tepresentation on this subject, a majority of them oy to induce the other nation to do justice. | bis lady, sister to Selva, were at San Juan. As in half; nor did Gen, Care drantage night was unfavorable to the bill suthern | Congress, Upon tho first two charges, are now in favor of the compromise, and will vote “The honor of Spain'is also bound to see this | £00n &3 the former was informed of the occurrence, of running the Missonr 1; but sti le | Senators bold @ meeting this evening or to-morrow | committee came boldly to the reseue, an forit. Every leading man m Richmond has also | Claim paid, because it was an actual, ascertained | he used every means, and succeeded, through hi was evident that Mr. « suggestions had made | night. onthe pending amendment before the Senate | the doorkoeper's reputation “from that bo declared in its favor. But the most important indi- | and liquidated claim; the accounts examined, au- | intercersion, in freeing the prisoners. But w their Impserate n the Senate, and we expect the | by Mr. Pratt, It prope that while the territ whieh it was evidently tending. It appeared from the cation of ell, in reepect to Virginia, is the reception | dited and settled by the Spanish tribunals, ial. | Would fail to convey an idea of the consternation views of Mr. 1 4 to-n to strengthen it, | (Utah) rhall pase no law excluding or ndimitt evidenee i t of the first charge, that some two 9, ¥ ane. f itute dnp of the lady on wit hi Decauso the Missouri line ie an old proposition of bis | Plavery, that it shall yot protect every kind of different applicants for situations as pages had been | Of @ note, this morning, by General Foote, trom | ly constituted by the king for the purpose, and actu- | & te Inly On Witnessing @ tortures of her bro- own perty cor § territory, which of course” induced to believe, from what the doorkeepor had told | Hon. Andrew Stevenson, declaring himself warm- rd revised by ‘the king in gerne, and with which } ther. | pp Ree oe} e a — her The Presidency is mixed up very thick in tht A ut some-of the Southern me: them, that “their applications would be favorably | ly in favor of the compromise, and saying that he | he was perfectly satisfied; but not having the ag yy he itis not dillicult to im- i ontention betwe free-soil cabinet might appoint suchagorern | considered.” But, lo! they were disappointed—cruel | is preparing an elaborate statement of his views for | money to pay down, the Spanish nation gave | #@ine that such offices, emanating from one who nd between the friends of the said territory, as, under this porviston, | indeed, and so unprecedented in the history of office- | publication, which will be forwarded to General | its bend or obligation for the amount. hat | had co-operated in the sacrifice, were worse than Gon Cass and eading difMeulty. A tthat slaves under the constitution are not | feeking in Washington, 7 d charge carries on oes in a few days, The General is sanguine | bond is actually signed by the king’s own hand. | vain. She gave way to overwhelming grief. In portion of the Sou ate are favorable to the | recogniced as property, are therefore not in- | the face of it such an airof usurpation and presump- | that, with all these elements and indications, the | I say, therefore, again, under this view, that | ber delicate state, what may not be the fatal con- e din the rule of protection. The South are, | tion onthe part of the doorkeeper, that in justice to nemiration of Gen whol signed by the | Sequence of so severe a trial ? ate of Virginia will unite in favor of the | $0 leng as that bond of the nation, , We have traced, without any exaggeration, an tefore, desirous of haviag this amendment in such | him we must quote, veroatin iteratin, from the re- id, is unpaid, I don’t care from what bachanan. sire the nomi ; ‘ 3 np Judge M e of the Senate king’s own . : the Missow promis shape that t * 0 dow ’ ; age estion : om the con. | COMpromise. Judge Mason, one of the Senators " i ‘el mended, while ber ton, the adoption of Ewing. the South would e quite so particular. tentive and troublesome and had given Mr. | it is believed that histone will be much more mode- | personal honor and dignity of the monarch, stands | restinent of the English agents in the colonies, lement 1 Zack and his eat ppear to be in s state of ¥ abundant reason for discharging him." 1a | rate and conciliatory than may have been hereto- | compre mitted. giving us an idea of the fate which awafts us, te, therefore, are divided ty—haif dead and half alive, as a unit— . however, the doorkecper must remember that | fore generally supposed. «There is another view of it, It was a liquidated | should we be base enough to submit to their yoke. ¢ are juite paralyzed. and the head itself ‘a page can be removed so summarily, charges From Alabama the indications are also fayor- | and admitted debt in Spain, the exact amount as- | In recording deeds so atrocious in their nature, with ally affected. Oh, great and glorious Galphin, ferred, and a “Special Committee of nves- | able. Messrs. | illiard, and other members | certeined. Not so with any other debt under the | ftom the pereons who suffered in the scene, and, success of iilustrious be thy nax ong the veadors of pointed by the House . of the House from Alabama, are the avowed | treaty. The American Commissioners, contrary | from the rank of those who instigated their execu- face whisky to the Cher: idence in empy f the third charge. wont to | Finn te of the ‘Compromise ; and the able and judi- | to the wishes of Spain, decided that they would | tion, the pen trembles; but they alone will herald Sedna gr RA pred em et iT cts made Bret Bye oe 8 cramer ge cious editor of the Hunterville Democrat, for twenty | investigate the fact, whether the claim was a bona | themelves, and will stamp with eternal infamy a pollen, Mt adopted Uy this cabinet —tha they ere oh inpliented seme other unimportant off ears the accredited organ of the democracy of | fide one or not, and how it arose, and whether its | their vile perpetrators. ¢ from them befor in this business of paying oat the ‘money on old rot the emoluments of both amo Korih Alabama, expressed the firm belief that twa- | “mount was correctly ascertained; and, to this end We have not the slightest doubt that these atro- of Henry Clay jolms, We unaettahe £0 say that a ese S de- | asm subordinate clerk in the House of Re thirds of the people of Alabama are in favor of it. | de fed of Spain all the papers and Vouchers in | cious acts bave been executed with the double them to ec the President. “If this { outelders, hangers-on of the What a fraud upon government’ But to ¢ : As to Mississippi, Governor Brown has manifest. | the case. ese Spain refused to surrender, (al- ghiest. om. pues. c —~ Desaverts, and Saat, lew the compceenice of Mv. Cong te Suess Sa . poccedens, 5 ie eee tre ache re- | ed a disposition to accept the Compromise, provided | though the treaty said, that all papers touching | Bechor, might be revenged; and principally to anes OUF comprehen nly hope can be in lowed; and that if the truth could be | celves §4.500 as Superintendent of t Survey. and | a clause is inserted, re-aflirming and recogaising | Claims to be settled under the treaty, should be fur attempt, by such irregular proceedings, to excite ortherm democra votes, and how a sufficient known, every member of the cabinet has played the | $1.00 as Inspector of Weights and Measures; and the | tne constitutionality and legality of the Texas reso- | nished by Spain when demanded,) on the ground | the injured parties to commit come indiscretion, number of these are to b i x- | game into the hands of his particular friends, to the | Collectors of New York and Bo $6000 as ~ 7s A i “eectee re ¥ ‘ i and thus fetm a plea fi di d of plained. This discussion will F | abure of hiv official funetions, and the plundet of the | Collectors, and $400 as Superintendents of Light | lutions of adn i their length and breadth. | that the American government had no right in this | m4 (cpm a vies fora demand of Senaaeaes &@ month yet, and i time, if wemletake not, | public trens We have been advised of a couple of | Houres; and many precedents among the clerks in the | A Tesalution 8 very efiect was originally m- = coy case of your father, % = +7, such woes hy on ee wd vor scyerament, and tl the proepect is, thet Webster andCooper will | cases refused at thePortofiice Department. and carried | departments were introduced, which seemed suffictent | troduced in the Committe of Thirteea, by General emand or investigation, as Spain had already a progress ot the North American fall tack upon the Pr nt’s plan, as the last ree | up te Congress ; and whieh, without{any action of Con- | to convince the committees that the messenger ia | Cass, but was laid aside as superfluous. Since, | done it, ond had actually established and settled ompany. of California, At les, in doing #0. they ® epon them, b a by Mr. Colla. | question was not ale at surrounded by many illus- | however, any portion of the South deems it essen- | the amount, and that the vouchers and papers upon Isterestize prom Coiivanva ap Bante Ped 668 . 4 s and (he money p In fact, it appears that this rious examples Ie wer to the additional charge— | tial, it will be re-introduced by General Cass, and | Which thet eettlement had been made, were her respondent of the Bt. Loule Repubiieun, of the 19th 1 will of the Pres t to be * 6 brother ¥: nees for & foreign mission ora ‘net lved to appr at with his family in the | cordially accepted by the committee private property and belonged to her archives, and | writing fr : 4 5 ig from Inepondence, Mo, under date of the Mth ing @ recess, drew bis pay as messenger— Mx Clay covtinues to entertain the most sanguine | Were not such documents as the treaty contemplat- | inet says Yesterday morning, Mr. Simona, in «chor of the de , ‘ . advance sear | % wee ceees Ss tee ges oe oartsin leat ot hopes of the success of the compromise—hopes | ¢d to be given up; and moreover, that to question | of Johneon’s train, arrived from Santa Fo and Chihun + v fi wait to h od y fat enough to | give per n i - t t to be “4 ~ % Gar he guinmer ; and th which are shared by the great body of its friends | the amount, or to look behind the King’s bond or | bus. They left Senta Fe sbout the 9th of last and to ado . ib ton ee sh inthe pote a setae yy he drew hi Jap the eunou antl tay in and out of Congrese—whether well or ill | obligation, to ascertain how and for what it had sad wae Bae eee yg yh B eet stand in t ate, They if they wish. iay - oficial duties were actually performed by him. It | founded, you and the public may judge from my | been given, wasto impeech the honor and good | We Se Scam et —y a the Compromise bili on the t to-morrow, eom- | sneton, May 24, 1850, farther appeared that the brother was detained at | disclosures. {n addition, there are reasons for be- | faith of Spain and her King, under the supposition stock or impede their pri st 4 pees Sin So Sere seven te Cobinet ing's Smirke ond | bome from sickness, during almost his entire absence. | lieving that several of the more ultra Southern | that she either did not know how to settle het | and command, consisting of about Phan . South will hold on to it make something . ee Now, seriously, this is the sum and substance of this | members will, finally, not oppose the passage of | eccounts, or that ehe had given a fraudulent bond, | were left at the Point of Rocks, getting along SU hate scmatnnh da tiicma in alee one ne Signe of | whole investigation; and that Congress should take | the bill, and ai all events, will set their faces rego- | @nd that iherefore she would not give up the pac | pretty well. Thos. Floarnoy and mail onrricrs wore = i coon — w ative, te “7 zt that Whet the | cognisnnce of euch Linen Manerd — st = lately against any attempt to lay it upon the table, | pers. met on the irone, neat to Brown's w: Something may tura Ub. God only keows, Men are | wp apes en t Stagger: | ety see ans Cavalalye mode (eee dtingeruce, | or defeat it by parliamentary maneuvres. | Severa “Now, as the claim was not adjudicated upon by pe Pe Dut ehuttlecocks, after all. Look at the case of Downs, | (& wider the Galphin sen | OS? SPECTATOR, — | Whig votes, too, not heretofore eet down for it, are | the commissioners under the treaty, by reason of | sents ¥ ben shes 00d bi’ Pao ane But from the present { things, we eannot divine sua Printing — Chick _ confidently calculated upon for the bill, on the ques- | these technical pleadings and national punctillios, coming ‘ond trouble ovary ox ba how the Clay Compromise is to pass without material | tego Contract—New York Mint Bill, $< Waswivcros, May 23, 1950. tion of its final passoge. I say that Spain is stil! more bound in honor to take vegas’ Aisa wee secontiy cdbschedoe Gcttes acme Modifications, nor how it can be modified #0 as to pase. Two members of the cabinet, Ewing and Johneon, | {Pri 4f the Washington Press and the Herald—@aiphin | The news of the landing of a portion of the Cu. | Ste course that will ensure justice to you. These | the wagons killed, and wagon robbed of contents. Waswrsorox, Sunday, May 26,1850, | Were at the Capitol to-day, and In the Sonate ch Report too Lote, by a Week, to Save General Te ben expedition, and the capture of Cardenas, have | and a hundred ctherreasons might be adduced why qette a company © Chih isting of Dra, * pet ter beget | any * ; ¥ y he Senate chamber. | Higorence between the President's Four Year's Sulary | Ot Created anything like the excitement here | the Spanish nation, if it will not actually shell out | Bast, Hereford, Douginss ai Tent but Lethe t ia Waskineton—The Beroness de | Mr. Ewing had all the smiles, emirks and bows at com- and Crewford's Piel One Ye 4inba which one would have supposed. An expedition | ite silver, and pey the claim itse! and {ought to | while for California, The ranche of Kit Carsonand ttes and her fir The Weathe | mand, which characterised the same individual while | "4 Crew/ord's Pickings in One Year—finbassader | of tive hundred men, to revolutionise and cxpture | do it,) is bound in honor to use offices Beggs, between Tacs and the Moro, was thrown into Bliss the Cause of the President's Free Soit I on. | an island of the size and strength of Cubs, defended | cially, to procure its payment: indeed, to demand | consternation recently. by eight Indians entering uriration ia behalf of | he was hanging about during the Inet session of Con. ‘ ia army of thirty or forty thousand regular | it in the strongest and plainest terms, of the United | foggs, and two others, soon started in pursuit, and You remember Mr. Will OU Bnobdom, (a8 he himer ald write it.) over the | gress, the first office-beggar in Washington. He ts enree thin manatil iataitiaon ter ¢ rete, tea and governed by an arietocracy well seated | States. ths arrival of Mad: he Baroness de M x identiy alarmed, The Richardson Commit aw! h ee eee oe | ah o took the party of Indians, “ Hick e Sesh, ond ro — - wens eng 9 in na prec d Peres 2001 rin hin n a ery me eT the Republic is ae dull a8 & hoe, and the Intelligencer | in their places, and holding all sources of tevenue Ti onght not to be left to poor defenceless and killed five a the party, seeneonk tetany ponepmaieenag mony a ny eta . ee to the counter | 1, os mum and damb as en oyster and power in their own hands, is not looked on as | powerless individuals , who are without remedy, | and fifty adaitional head @nobe and rnobbesses cot up to give her audionces, at | for bis loosenees, his blunders, his nepotism, and his Hed the Galps ob be do very formidable. However, should other bands | ¢xcept the grace of rulers, leg tog year, — two dollars « ticket, and sil her aristocratic purse, 14 | totel undtmess for the place he holds. The committer | Hed the Galphin report boon made one wook earlier | cfieet similar landings, dnd their force be increased | for the whole of their lives, by humble and beg: | Fines 1» Cixcrevars—The Cincinnatl Ruguiver, of was understood in New York, that the lady was alto. | will report m resolution, no doubt, censuring him in | ‘*” !t was made, Colonel Bullitt sa oral Taylor | by anything like a general rising of the Creoles, | ging memorinis, seeking for their just rights from he 24th inal given 4 following particulate of the gether too aristocratic to appear in public, and could | the strong terms his conduct deserves, The Mouse could have beensaved. Had the old hero Iaid his eyes | the contest will aseume an attitude of more seriot mighty and powerful nations, when a mere word ! ay : {he morning ot the 2d ina upon the enormous sum of one hundred and fifteen | import. When we shall have received intelligence | from ene nation to the other would cause it to be thousand dollars pocketed by Mr. Crawford out of the | Of the result of the battle, which has probably ere | rendered. No, ‘The “Meade” claim ought to be people's treasury, and foflected that it was fifteen | "OW, taken place in the vicinity of Matanzas, we | settled by negotiation between the two nations. uml Decal canpagall i shall begin to be able to form some reliable judg- | These views are necessarily very imperfectly ex- hard'to save thefr valuables, but they eue- whom she had brought letters of introduetion. She isa partment of the Interior, I did not notice, while ho vrand dollars more than the salary of the Presideat | ment of the further progress of this wild, romantic, | pressed; the limits of a letter do not allow of their covering but few. A report cireulated that Jump, well formed ledy, and dr wots chasber~qhich was not long—thes | ®t the ful of fout yeats,he never would have | Quixotic, and eminently Anglo-Yankee entetprise, bring set forth with all the force I could give them. | considerable money was stolen, thas wns contained im d in the true Parisian at courage, or the brass, even, to approach | @nctioned, but would have indignantly denounced, | ‘The storm last evening threw its chilling effects | Indeed, ag I have already observed, there are many | ® trusk, and It Is supposed that the thief who took it | cemenvern ist his hand to a venerable momber of the | the stopendons swindle, At the matter now stands, | OVeT the (opateats rocptien, which was by no = At g haw Lhave + nage yest what set fire to the building in order to tecute his sovane, ~ e ” means so brilliant ai bl . ave sai worth anythi nd should ever ” ing to her beautiful the cabinet have committed Old Burns V = “ be nog By weer in ne | have oneal tendensy, will be a scutes of to get to their homes, when, when they wore did contours were yer ot | To thowe who know his propensity to change bi the mest rerupulonsly honest men in the tothe | President's grounds, this afternoon, Will also he | heppiness that Ihave given them; for, independent py ty pg Seon y Fs pee the pellticn fons of the day, as he ely: cvure of justifying not only the Galphin allowance, | quite spoilt by the naughty weather. Cosmos. of the interest I feel for his widow and children, it befor threat and faultless neck, Her features are caudid, | changed two er thres times cc the Honieane but the De In Francia allowanes, the Chickasaw allow. - was my to have the friendship and kind | cobdued, and In dexpite of the great eifortrof the ares freak and pleasing, ond she opens het mouth prettily | ticn, Ne terme pretty comeianins (rat he ik roeenatee, | gree: the Rwi the Barron allowance, the | Tue Froarps Teoiaee.—We have conversed with « | feeling of your father, and I did, im his lifetime, | men, eight d contumed. Two of them fn singing, like a finnet. Mer voice tea full mento so- | going another change. deacrting the cavtoct's niet, Benson a. lawful ailowances ntlemen just from Tampa. who informaus that there | With sure, and will still do all that is within my | were brick, situated on Franklin etrect, bel to im the cabine' ate What amclaneholy state of thi Th i it Prospect Of the removal of the Indians, Gen. | power, to procure that which has been so long and | Heury Lewis, the ‘k merchant, and the ping BY 0 of good compass, but shaky and screaming in | form, and going o ¢ re ; J [ns'epper register, and ‘cecastonally Koen | teem, ns SUine over to that of the Commlttes of Thit- | ion folt and expressed for the ho Fotggs bes reecnlly had an inteeview with Billy Bow. | socruelly withheld (rom himeelf anv his children— | om the eastside of Ayeamore, and Bouth of Frankils f wer She sings with little expression; al- The Repudlic—which may be sald ite duped old hero, is very tnt er who told him positively that he would not justice! I send you herewit copy street, In one of houses I) from fifteen thin audience and the unaccountable sold. | in the Treacury Department comes oot thie’ cuca S 20 God he could shake hia eabinet off hisn, and himself | amd that if it was not ftatietactory to the fopert and dpcumtate on the sabjocr Gate het Sweaty families sed fm ment of the sihan wim aera the swamps,and Everret’s) which have been ‘ fire each, chiefly Germans. It is diffeult bo determine ‘ only be heard by the favored few. Last night she gave | wil unquestionably adopt it. Tf he does not then her first public concert, in the United States, at Cara. | travel—and he will not, unlers the President orders 4’, toa small but di ished audience, to mostof him to do so—Congress, rely upon it, will abolish the and were coon communicated to several ot! tenements, Tho sufferers, Mesers. Mahoney, Hughes, men Perry, 1 hen with the aid of their neigh- 4 hold ow enote, named Henry Clay Mr Johneon remained ip the chamber for so one of and interest: with further dull sud labored wtiempts to bolster. a wash the ‘Gal iim evtene That bwsinees, Put there is another matter, of 4 gray to i rendered ber incapable of doing herself | and whit Ple ed the amownt of foes, but we should think it would mot Gut » ‘ase acknowledge the receipt of this, and aay ‘ a sogtecndetier fecatersnec, "mS soee tn, | ghia Legon cr sanding hy frat of Grama | Ese heme eta em the seinarer at ee | theaeh Gheeectaz orn, Aemepensagemeie “| bow fr accord Sth your sews ead anceps | Bom 6b had frou wera to several of the leading fa. | enpross the time of the Treevary eeiter af wang sarees eee I wow ae not ex) went gation of Arkaneae Indians bave, gone down seqarence Ps! my friendl regard." = he setter: of fee bes de "i olie, whe w le roper fora warm jon, but ie ne ow. rea hereafter with 8 7 milie trop ote present, Otherwise | rublic, ahile the groat measures oftas country, and the | Eechery Toplor to speak oat Om the delicate suljects grate, Sevenneh Georgian, Mey 43.” remind the United States of the Disede dette Seu | stnetecc meres ieee

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