The New York Herald Newspaper, June 13, 1850, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a “BILL, | ence and relief, is her ery! And for these she ean | book—this Virginia edition of ap English work—I | for ahing ior cagching. ve, be_comevessioed mpc | Ger wm, <Geetenet” wih Ole ete THE COMPROMISE BUDD. | coder comtera thy lume create: | fund my wiaciaoy twist ve of | Entsand hy teed, Compomurs ads uso | Ns setver al gu" chant, em et Pe ween oe eh te keen we - i of that kind; and they | that seemed to say, “the Lord have mercy on you \ ¢ he appendix to the first volume, se- | and entered on record, are bh t coL. BENTON'S SPEECH. reed heyy ihe eement of Sueatons in which pon Bp wish teas ‘on the subject of African | stand. Compromises made by individ onclaims | all, for ] am dene with vou! But the Senator aa of ¢om- , and the ye Cee ey eee ec Ss 10 property are likewise rt . . . . . sceannaewenden toad new quarrels in aseuming to | nation of the institution, and a plan for its extine- | stand. I respect all euch compromises. But where hed ‘ d—Comun"ee of Thirteen lan | he said, and all | le old tion in Virginia. In that work—in that echool— | there happens to be n to be compromised, nd | —he bip:s- tis chairman—all power pat into thelr Allthe labor of the committee, he said, | settic of6 ones. seni i shat. old Virginia school which | was taught to. tomake a , no power to énforee | te-ouen beni ‘and the hands of the emedis hy Aer eed ees aren | a Rite gamsetwalane Si pa regs | taesenset ound ty’ paces on saverfy bade agent for ig blzion on way [the Senpte edeend he paris Jon tay be ion tthe sumption that ihe Fered condition; that it is theit | the lie of mother! Am S reig upon the aims | aber fothem. 1 concur in the whole emg oh 19 melee to obwerve it, and bound iageherfor ever, Wewaaan cestatic momeat | une recently Milvecred colina uae dn oon miseion to relieve this nationalid ety 4 a6 oa of Colitomas given bee at dy upageely phy See gn a ee, buman beings cam agree about it n ng, fort ator, comeing that of the harele Vi to ab Wg epee edn se ¢ f - *h the Ranch * He oe ae eee this is a mistake, legislation. The reasons givedl it bythe commit. of Virginia-then saw and ded, but resolved |’rous. I have no respect for it, and pet velly 9 It | the nuptial feast—saw the company all present, | known firm of“Slamm, Bang, & Co ,” of your city, th a6 » condit f the country, the mis- | grave errors in law, both constitutional | to encounter, becuuse it was to become wore | ¢-anot stand, and will fall, and in its full will raise} the lapithe on couches, the centaurs on their | was one of our company. We took with us, in ad Opp Ae ef PP Fg and manieipal, and of geography and history. ‘They | with time-—the danger to both races from so latge | up more ils than twas iniended to cure. And of | huunches heard the fo hymen beginning t0 Te} dion va mule tocach mis, a Wagon, drawn by uedy. [do not believe in this misery, distraction, | gesume a controversy between New Mexico and | an emancipation. The men of that day were not | this character I deem this ae of incongruous | sound, and saw the beauteous Hip; podami, i at a8 | Five yoke of oxen, with a blacksinith’s forge, and « a ingnn, andetofne pon, tno | Heaaey ho tuch tong New, Bevin longs | enthuse, Manse) "tk Naas | maar which ba era ruber word unio. | eashnueLupyee te Calle, come seltorng | 52 uock f echo Oar pan gaeee 7 ~ ¢ 2 eat Tnited State: i nd my ’ yr non re ie a. 7 7) vette = oP tem who. do not ae oaial Weaeeh Thee concn teee ie | ui “ Ayre facta ie | hes wont of the requisites of | It was a happy moment for Pirithous! and inthe ful- | Weeks in getting to the ground. the United States.’ They assume there is no | tion of the black-slave was not» There question tending to their crops, suc : S i ings he might have gi nt +=" "1 hewever, that it would require a good deal of la- to feed out of the public erib, and that they | way to settle this controversy but by a compact | tween master and slave, tion of property | a compromise, and the name cannot make it so. ness of his feelings he might have given ven! * nig tiveness of ns ts feetly hoppy if the politicians would | evs “Texas. ‘This is another great mistake. | merely—but @ aver’, fA maser bfptvarttd In ws firet place, there are no parties to make @ joy ineopgramianees toall the cor ny present, to hor was. reas onpenee boloce the Heodoes ee only permit them to think so. I know of no dis- | ‘There are three ways to seitle it: first, and best, pier? "cen, and what was to be the consequence | compromise. We are not in convention, as in | al end: wen ne" aut the centaurs, to all inan- | ee two other foe carnal uph dani abet ya's- tress iu the country, no misery, no stiife, no dis- | by a compact; secondly, by a suit inthe Supreme }'t6 each race from a large emancipation. And | Congress; and T do not admit a yhieal divi- | kind, #1 “« norselkind, on the auspicious event. | 10°)" COncaitations, we all concluded to vamase traction, none of those five gaping wounds of which | Court the United Sites; thirdly, by give | there the wisdom, not the philanthropy, of Vir- | sion of parties in» this chamber, although the Com- | But, oh! the deceitfulness of human felicity ! In SST erchakls ta cnmied easanieer ton the Senator from Kentucky made enumeration on | ing . De eeencat to New Mexic Be nm ginia balked fifty years ago; There the wisdom of | mittee of Thirteen was formed upon dhatering shore an instant the scene was changed! the feast a fight Faery? by a pet By and at atime wher. the five fingers of his left hand, and for the healing | to her aetual extent when the United States ac- | America balks now. And here I find the largest | six fromthe South, balf adozen from the North, | —the wedding festival a mortal combat—the table labor is cheap. ° of which, all together, and all at once, aud not one quired her, and holdiag on to that until the question | objection tothe extension of slavery—to planting it | and one from the borders of both. I recognise ng {tcelf supplying th implements of war ! The Homey from here, through the “Cohootue ata time, like the little dector Taylor, he has pro- | of qitle is decided, amicably by contract, or | in new regions where it does not now exist— such parties. I know no North, anJ 1 know no «At fh medley Might Pass.” This is one of the main into the vided this copasious plaster “in the shape | Jegally by the Supreme Court. ¢ fundamental | stowing it on those who have it not. wi South; and ! repulse and repudizie, as a thing to Ba mpi) 2 upply Reet ie dite i desert, through the coat. seage Piper ar scoarg Tt of five old bills tacked together. f know | error of the coumittee is in supposing that New | rabilily of the evil is the greatest objection to the | be forevercendenmed, this first attenipt to eatabl Yan te er niagara hh me ae ee es ee nothing of all this, nor of any distress ia the coun | Mexico is party to this controversy with Texas. | extension of slavery, It is wrong for the legislator | ‘geographicel parties in this chamber, by creating a ; bi Rom hos gieaded-.. ¢ fig! Lor bisa, tong tpt yet = oe eee on Wi prin ince we got rid of Bank of the United | No such thing. New Mexico is only the John | to inflict an evil which can be cured; how much } committee formed upon that prineyple. Lathe next fetes eae ding SD eee: Totes Utne Senta Foto loe ‘Angaies.. sit ia, alan, armagios oa oe ee Beh gp oeeaslon | of | the | Tice of the concern. That error corrected, and all | more to inilict one that is incurable, and against | pluce, there is no sanction for any such compro- | it be with this artempied conjunction of California | fom Santa Fe to Tos Angeles. ft is, aloo, throug ‘ urreney. Since that time, I have | ;he reasoning of the committee falls to the ground; | the will of the people who are to endure it for ever! | mise—no authority to enforce it—noue to punish ite P hicoatdtehaecishues ecemteltee the ranceasieed theifhebck. many ap olen Series came or business distress, no rott for the judicial power of the United States ex- | I quarrel with no one for supposing slavery a bless-{ violation. In the third place, there is nothing to st Preside gm pe ne. be done’ With*thie-f-bave been tum off at bae time.” After yam get i tends to all controversies to which the United | ing; I deem it an evil, and Would neither adopt it | be compromised. A compromise is a concession, ve f nt, Californ iiering for waut | through the mountains, you come upon the valle States are a party, and the original jurisdiction of | ner impose it on others. Yet [ am a slaveholder a mutual concession, of contested rights between pepe: he ore as Mexico © tee ate | Ee eat taf te nape tao ciunrent ebeus teniann ahead the Supreme Court sateade to a cases 16 which ae amon; arth members of Congress who hold two pene Fave nh, re ss St prhiecdi The dee Vistenas 2 aabedig for | Fremont. struck the Spanish trail ta April, IStt. a State is a party, his brings the case bang up | slaves in this District. ie part o| slave! ig. f a . 5 yer ve ‘ a at once within the jv ition of the Su; Tae In refusing to extend slavery into these seventy | their slave property» ‘Their rights are independent | Waut of attention. The character of Congress is | The road then strikes the Mohode river, and goe' Court, without waiting for the consent of ‘Texas, | thousand square miles, L uct in eontormity not caly | of the federal government, and admitted in the | suflering for want of progress in business. {It is time | down ‘thirty days. rave eea ten fais Yoo = s, no decline of public stox g employment, no pro hends of the farmer, ne pperty sacrificed at forced sales, no loss of confidence, no three per cent a month interest, no call for a b va h do- ptact. Never were the peop cr waiting for New Mexico to grow up into a State, | to my own Jong establibsed principles, but also in | constitution--a right to hold their slaves as pro- | to put an end to so muny evil ; S haan ae yan g and the working fey they | so as to have a suit between aon States; and 0 confoftuity tot 6 long-established practice of Con- | perty, a right to pursue and recover them as oe hep pe rea arart Sdarwwrgir er bag Wi lace Pay & Ce a Ly ae reales eee As for political distress, in my | there is no danger of col as the committee | grecs. Five times in four years did Congress re- | property, w right to it as a political element. in | the indefinite po ae titers en eeuieeey asi ehont fty miles of a complete sand desert, and Lamong the politician er were uinent for their bill in | fuse the prayer of Indiana for a temporary suspen- | the weight of these States, by making five | Mess 0! pat tine Me me we ten by one, | without a drop of water. The whole row! is lined blessings of the country ter than 3 to New Mexico from this ap- | sion of ther uniaevers clause of the ordinance of | count three in the national representation. ‘These | the other, that they may be taken up 'y one, atry the dap there i M ni igi i C1 s i the er debri ai present: civil and relizions hberty eminently en- | Iaehended collicicn. If any take place, it willbe | 's7. On the 2d of Murch, 1503, Mr. Randolph, of | are cur righie by an instrument which we are | and in their proper order, to reeeive the decision | with dead oxen, wagons, and all the other. debris St * hi ir re ive i igration. We met many emigrants: joyed ; life, liberty verty protected; the | a collision with the United States, to whom the | Roanoke, as chairman of the coumittee to which | bound to respect, and I will concede none of them, | Which their respective merits require. pia argrned pee ey i meng ce Sa North and’ the ang to the old veliel, | territory of New Mexico belongs; and she will | the memorial praying the suspeusion was referred, | nor purchase any of them. Tnever purchase as a ryanth paca women and children—on raw hide. Among these hatthey w tu h other; and peace | know how to prevent this collision—first, by of- | made « report against it, which was concurred in | concession what I hold to be right, nor ae an Our California Correspondence, was én old man seventv-nine’ years of age, With ph ithe land. ‘This ts the | fering what is not ouly just, but generous toTexas; | by the Honee, |! the report :— inferior title when | already hold the highest Sax Fuancisco, May 1—P. M. | his wife; whois but ten years hisjanior, ‘The einie and next, in defending her territory from in- “That the rapid popuistion of the State of Ohio | Even if this congeries of bills was a compromise, r ote “ . n vasion; an hee phepio fukn vitlenses © suMeiontly evinces, in the ep inion of your committee, | jn tuet, L should. te opposed to it for the reasons | Politics in California—San Francisco Charter Bra of lant ‘adam aioe ie this route, have There are the reasons for thrusting Texas, With i eee tee eee ere iat roplon Phat | Siated. But the fuct itself is to me apocryphal. | Election—California Society and Morals—Sucra- | tll got émipintioa’ from Sohota’ Wale Sidi bedidey all her multifarions questions, into the California | from{® nde mtrabiy the dearest of anye can, only | Lhis is the case of five old bille introduced by | mento City—Business—The Newspaper Press, §c. | pce ce cmieration from Sonor passed this rancho bill; and, reduced to their essence, they argue thus: | he employed to advantage in the cultivation of pro- Fae ie eagdecpeside eb sey S le net Hh ea age sad The election for charter officers of the city go- | has been perfeetly lined with emigrants from that Utah must go in because she binds upon California; | gucts more valuable than ‘any known to that quarter | these five are caught up by the Sen: vernment was held yesterday, the result of which | State, and. there are countless mulutudes now on f New Mexico must go in because she binds upon | of the United States; that the committee deem it high- | tucky, and his committee, and bundied together, a y> the Way. I found a letter on my retura from Aqua, formerly delivered us many such re- | Utah: and Texas must goin because she bihdsupon | ly cengerons and inexpedient to impair a provision | and then called a compromise! Now, this mys- | throws the balance of power into the hands of the in Sonora, which informs me that nearly the entire the times that the tarifi was to be im- | New Mexico. And thus poor Califoraia is cram- | wisely esleulated to promote the happiness and pros- | tifies me. The same bills were ordinary legisla~ | gemocratic party. Col. J. N. Geary, the present | male adult pulation of Sonora is en route for sed, the National Ke cha to be renewed, | med and gorged until she is about in the condition | perity of the northwestern country, and to give} tion in the hands of the authors; they become a | « bint; has been ve-claéied antanyer,’ Ths ax ['Eldaamto. fr ahead minatemdbactao-ataad the deposites to akrujt act to be | that Jonah would have been in ifhe had swallowed | *trength and security to that extensive frontier. In | sacred compromise in the hands of their new pos- | imeumbent, hi ‘ steel PO ge mind ey cng pasted. He has been absent for some years; and | the whale instead of le swallowing him. | the salutary operation of this sagactous and benevo- | coseors, They seemed to be of no account as laws; | citement during the day was intense; but no de- | With this people, the ensuing season ; but I sy; rn! a 4 - Petr Be he inhabitants of i i . i . they will tuke the mines nearest, and eéndea- on returping among us, seems to begin where he | ‘This opens a new ter in legislative ratiocina- | Bt restraint, it is believed that ~ | they become a national panacea as a compromise. | jonstration of violence or ill-feeling Was made. 8 , 7 left off. He treats us to the old dish of ! | tion. It substitu ntiguity of territory for con- Tadiana will, at no very distant day, find ample remu- vor to retain therm, which probably they may, do if é fe mm s from Kentucky, (Mr. Olay,) chairman of the com- ri , and reporter of the bill, and its pathetic The difierence seems to be in the change of name. The Trini oa aa ‘, 4 > 7 it is a mistal There is none of i giuity of matter, and makes geographical affinities pes ag eT erreeen ot eres poet tells us that the rose will smell as sweet f SRT One Eeenien § eh ee ie bye a apregecnn pare oa by the lower a wph the rule of legislative conjunctions. The report of Mr. Randolph was in 1803; the | by any other name. That may be true of roses, but | [0 gar o g tonter This a ihe Tat artical Wot ie cee Upon that principle the committee might have | next year, March, 104, « diflerent report, on the | not of compromi: s. In the case of the compromise, | street and bar-room controversy. The precise os igen with Soaorinte: A fe gone on, cramming other bills into the California pam ee, was made by a committee, of which the wie smell is % the panes wi eee fa the state of things there cannot be got at. Interested to saa eutshliahegh aihG Soosoine ‘of the Cony. pole all over the v ited States; forall hep! hat tf Mr. Rodney, of Delaware, was chairman. It re- om Ra Taser, ‘hey siaied pansies) parties report brilliant success of the first adven- | tado by some Americans, who are rapidly making that aailatha 1 Netrice of ps xe is ‘tute cameo = me ow reales: ghey re The & ener from Virginia (Mr. Mason’ brought | turers, while another set denounce the whole thing | ® coy out of it. Some days they iake as muc! ainginasinn bill might have been interjected; for, | Mouse no youre afterwards, February, 1506, a | to another of them—no noe in that. ‘The Sena- | asa humbug. ‘The accounts in favor of the place ba estic det neceiethenmaptiiaie lade siéxt though not actually binding upon Texas, yet it ailar yeport, recommeuding suspension for ten | tor from Missouri, who now speaks to the Senate, | and the country, counterbalance, by great odds, the Monday. Amon Pert, + aremcgag Blodgett binds upon land that binds upon land, that does bind eare, was winde a omntites of which Mr. | brought in the fifth—ditto, no smell about it. The | reverse. These is great danger, and no little dif- formed a Neve York ae unaeeer to. upon her. So of the fugitive slave bill. For, let re rrett, of Vir inte was chairman; it met the | olfactory nerve of the nation never scented their | ficulty, in finding the harbor. ¢ number of ves- | © ae Dr. Stephen C. Foster, formerly of East tie fugatious slave Tun as far ashe may, he must | same fute—nonconcurrence,. The next year, 1907, | existence. But no sooner are they jumbled to- | sels und persons leaving for the new diggings is Machias, Muine ; Dr. Chas. Rtv Cullen, “of Rich. still be on lund, und, that being the case, the ter- | both Houses were tried, In February of that year, | gether, and called a compromise, than the nation | immense. A city, or three of four, have bem laid sad; Wai, neh Ge Ationecie® Wiinamaed 2 a 71 V riterial contiguity be’establiched which justilies the | a'committce of the Llouse, ol which Mr. Parke | is filled with their p rtume.” People smell itall | out, and lots ane gelling here at high prices. “The | "Ke \ieoue, which I informed you in my last And as for the Senator himselt bairinen of the lees ative conjunetion, was chairman, reported in favor of the indefinite | over the land, ana, :k# the. i wont Sonat fate ae erat tine Cog fama has deterred | were coming’ to this ranch, have been counter- committee, the perfect ar iy wi aw hich he rn. President, tne moralist informs us that there suspension of the clause; the re “pi was not con- | drugs, become frantic the ing. , bop heey kg Jong ping pie: Soe te litigation here manded, and others, lately arrived from the States, vrovént forward his son ee ne billa and. the | are some subjects too light for reason—too grave | curred in And in November of that year, Mr. | fies me, and the nearest t a can ak ae ere il on atitiot an the sites the Dee LEE expected in their place. ‘The main building on report—the pathos wit a. which aaaprge ve hem, | for ridicule; and in such cases the mere moralist | Franklin, of North Carolina, as chairman of a | tion Sf the maesty H in cae S be Ag coven © And mend og ten the om ager Ge. this ranch is now in possession of the officers of and the. hearty congratul at Hes hich he addressed | Pay dane or cry, as he deems best. But not so | committee of the Senate, made a report against the Townsend's and 1 Lacigeeoeys > yy: ; gh na cape Coxe c ety shvemnd io nies FB ssa the | government, and they have had several teams, for to the Senate, to the United States, and all man- | with the legisla His business is not laughing | suspension, which was concurred in by the Senate, catinot forge the ae nn a - te ae anh ne rae | adnan ware Gavet ty ao | St than a month, engaged in hauling paving Kind, on the eppointinent of his committee, preclude | or erying.—Whimpering, or simpering, is not his | and unanimously, as it would seem from the | tally a dil woe Ye ig gy een tga g iin eti’a issued from one the courte ot the fate | tones from Sun Pedro to this place. Mor- the idea of an intentional joke oa his part. | mission. Work is his vocation, and gravity his | journal, there being no division called for. Thus | tors: produce: (Aimee: + ay vi iS what the nie f a number of merchants and tax-payers. eee ny pe maha Traps Song Mr. Bexvon then proceeds to comment upon the vein; and in that vein | proceed to consider t five times in four years, the respective houses of | other, little less 1 - poison. ane vate are of an porated par saa Mob ballon Williams, of the main portion of this valley. He manner in Which the bill eame before the Senate, | interjection of ‘Texas, with all her multifario Congress refused to admit even a temporary ex- | Old Doctor says of this strange differ oe absolute | 41 ee gt) fe gp neni nace eae has reserved to himself his house and about 150 saying it was the work of but ser ‘astors, and | questions, into the bewels of the California bill. tension, or rather re-extension’ of slavery into . z= Pi, : Bagg peieheng tng ed gpd plage ie 7 aa m8 een Pit sapreas of | acres of land, 500 cows, a flock of horses, and his asking for the parlismentary law w enables & | in the first place, this Texas bill is a Compact, | Indiana territory, which had been, before the Seeaet sareaparilla are heaven-wide apart, ‘i in, reigtivy. Washington” act uewebes no erble rly, the whole estimated as being co mittee to conside r bil Is not referred to it, to | depending for its Validity on the conseat of Texas, | ordinance of ‘oi, a slave territory, holding finitely dissimilar; that they are unlike in every par- | } 4 and bitterly denounced, as you will perceive worth $100,000, He is to ie com the Mor- alter bill ot ecg Jeg) po er OF poses ssion, to | and is put into the C mia bill as a partof & | many at Vincennes. ‘These five refusuls to sus | joules. having not one single thing in common.” a iis reschneicne"Stepaok: *Darng the (primary | MOBS for the talence. $n ie . rd regard as tack bills together which the Seaate ae separate compromise and general settlement of all the pend the ordinance of °S7 were so many confirma- ‘And accounts for the differenee thus:— meeting, the conduct of the officers of the Unite! | 20st important move. There is little reason to its calendar, to reverse the order of bills on tha | slavery questions ; and, of course, the whole must | tions of it. All the rest of the action of Congress | “The sersaparilla root, it Is well known to medical States yp arecticwsneo ‘here, was publicly leds doubt that in a few years, if nothing should befail ce oat the hindmost before and on fore- | etand together, or fall together. ‘This gives Texas upon the subject, Was to the came eflect, or stronger. | men, contains many medicinal peopertiog, axe some | tory wate between poreias th tie nicly. somiies: tha | them, but that they will possess ares niost behin« ek * ry ngruities —_ to con- upon the admission of Ca 18 | "The Missouri compromise line was a curtailment proverties which are inert or nscloss, ene ocneee weNee, Reatanatieg that Sete MEKEE, deme, Cok, of this section of Califorita, | They 7 7 plat ong able rt wi ehh el sdb ong ponstitutional, as well as unjust; for, by the | of slave territory: the ‘Texas annexation resolutions | 1 Bp a Prien is fajurion as tothe system. Some | Collier, the Collector, came in for the test pore | 200m and. verge ei the ben ¢ seal Hye ae he said, ws 4 mittee has done. | constitution, new States are to be admitted by | Were the same; the ordinance of °S7 itself, so bay Lae Fong parilla are fo volatile that | tion ofthe abuse. He goton the Prva boldly the finest of climates. If they have suce * e then went onto the ** destruc of this mon- | Congress, and not by another State; and, there- | often confirmed by Congress, was a curtailment of ben btgesd ae pe and are 100k in tae, prepare: | nied re eee Maton the stand, and boldly well in che comparatively eae clime o! ster.” The California bill, he said, is made the | fore, Texas should ‘not have @ veio upon the | clave territory—in fact its actu abolition ; for itis thee, it they Sanat preserved Ly a scientific process, | OOP or nrutice rges, y Sait Lake Valley, there is hardly assignable scape-goat of all the fina slavery in the United | admission of California. In the next place, Texas | Certain that slavery existed in fact in the French set- known only to the experienced in its manufacture. The little ‘steamer Gold Hunter arrived oa the | limit to be put to Shalt prognpep hese. th States. As in the old Je wish ec “omy, & goat | presents a great many eeriovs questions of her oWn, | tlemente of the Illinois ut that tune: and’that the ie ‘those Volatile principles, whieb fly off in va- i rage on Gi i e r Du my absence, Lothian, the leader of the an inpocent and helpless auinial—was loaded with | some of them cocci x upon a compact already | ordinance terminated it. I ac:,then, in conformity | por, or as an exhalation. under heat. are the very es- | CVening o! st, ina 4Y8 | famous brass band in your city, passed here ; also fine which were not his own, and made to die for ing with the United States—many of them eon- | to the long, uniformly established policy of Con- | sential medical properties of the root, which give to it | from Panama. Her running time was little less | coyeral members of the Fremont Overland Associ- their country, « in the contrive own for their co «. [tis all a mistake. [t looks to me like But when I recollect the imposing number the commitiee, and bow “distinguished” they all were, and how they voted themselves free from instructions, and allowed the Senate to tuk but not to vote while they were out, and how long they were ‘deliberat- ing; when I recollect all these things, I am con- strained to believe the committee are in earnest. offences which he had never committed—so of United States—one concerning New formity to my own princi- | all ite value,? than nineteen days. She stoppsd at Raelijo, cight.| ation. There are few emigrants now in this Califormia. She is innocent of all the evils. of nt no ‘one reuchinge to Califerais. Sbe | Fron ta refuting to vote the extensin of skavery, | "Now allthis in perfectly intelligible to me,1 un- | hundred. miles to. the norts ‘and westwant of Ba- | ation. Then [Los Angeles. *All here moved on to slavery in the United yet they are all to | a inally with New | which the committee’s line would involve. derstand it exactly. It shows me precisely how.| nama, where she obseyved the steamer Isthmus | t},e north. ; % ae vit WF vgs. mek, a sare sacri: | Mexico, dl States, asthe | Mr. Benton then proceeded to show that in this | the same root is either to be a poison or a medi- | making in. The crops look very well. Wheat is heading Oe" e€ he heavy load. arst, t and owner o t r A might be a reason prtion of territory proposed to be transferred to | cine, as it happens to be in the hand of the old or The Sarah Sands is hourly looked for, as also | out, Potatoes are several inches in height. Mea, | for joing ex f in @ bill, so far as that boundary is i “4 be re on to exclude | the young doctor. This may be the case with | he Carolina and the Isthmus. ._ | however, are just planting their crops. These dame of the. Wilsace | conéarned, with New ‘Mexico; but itcan be no | cicver?, “Thee cree clined ete one Tne | these DINE, “Ko ane It looks like, a elue tothe | tent Hers, who leaves in the Pasar, this Rees eeu eda. iF in itself, and enough, with reason for joining her to California. The western | tile to slavery und the other not. In the southern | mystery : but I decide nothing, and wait patiently | afternoon, has been making @ tour throug! . a t vn California. Utah and | boundary ‘of Texas is the point of collision with | hott, ciimate can be no bat to the introdaction of | fora eclution Which the Senator from Kentucky | cheotic region, He gave a number of concerts at | Cpovox Watenoit will have been observed, on; and the reason given | New Mexico; and this plan of the commiltee, in- slavery; and thus its actual extension inte that | may give when he comes to answer this part of my | Sacramento oe ai by young Massett, and on | pat for three weeks past the surly of water in their report to | stead of proposing a suitable boundary between | quarter becomes the question which the conumit- | speech. Old Doetor winds ve ia requiring | (he 2h appeared in this city to an elegant ussem- | the upper stories of buildings has been’ deficient. nt of agovern- | them, ada calities, or leaving each its | tee's bill forces us to fwee—and whieh I have | particular attention to his name labelled on the | blage of the tom of San Francisco; 1 counted forty | ‘hig will continue to be the case for at least three ment forthe terri although Mr. Clay, in his | aetu disturbing a0 interest, until the | faced. ttlespto wit, * OIA Doctor Jucob Townsend,” | ladies among the audience, many of whom might | weeks longer, or till the twe lines of 36 inch maine had declared it to be a wish to secure the | decisi je upon the universal principle of wey ‘The committee's line has the further ill conse- | not young Doctor Semuel Townsend. This shows | bear the palin of beauty and grace from the most | ot Murray Hill are lowered dowa ten. feet to the admivson of California. This is a change of posi- | possidetis; insteed of these obvious and natural | quence of raising the question of the existence of | that there is virtue in a name when applied to the | fascinating’of the Broadway promenaders. tn point | new grade of the Fifth avenue at that point. We tiem, with “a corresponding change of reasons. | remedies, plan of the committee cuts deep into | stavery by law in the Santa Fe part even of New | extract of sarsaparilla root, and there may be equal | of costume and the costliness of texture, they cer- | ore informed at the Croton Aqueduct Department, Doubtless the Senator from Kentucky has a right | the actual possessions of the United States in New | Mexico. If their line is a compromise of the Texas | virtue in it when applied to a compromise bill. If | tainly surpassed the most extravagant ‘heiress of | that every possible exertion is being made to to change his own position, and to change his rea- | Mexico, rousing the question which the commit- | ejaym, it admits right and sovereignty of Texas | s0, it may show how these self same bills are of no | Union Ploce. The Celestial Empire is only distaut complete the work in the shortest practicable time ; sors at the came time; but he hes no right to ask | tee professes to avoid—the question of extending | both above and below, and will involve members | force or virtue in the hands of the young Senator | about forty days, and the communication tween | as many men ere employed as can be placed on the other Senators to change with him, ef to require | slavery, end disturbing the whole United ~:ates; | iq an inconvenient vole—the consequence of which | from Illinois, (Mr, Douglas.) and become omnipo- | its greatest. manufacturing towns and San Fran- | {0 ‘and often kept pag mae « through the night. them to believe in two sets of reasons, each con- Mr. Benton then goes on to show, at length, and | jg readily seen. tently efficacious in the hands of the old Senator | cisco, has become almost daily ; silk peng 1} inthe mean time, it is the duty of every water tradictory to the other. It is my fortune to believe @ copious quotation ef authorities, that the This is a consequence which the committee's | from Kentucky. x the most gaudy and costly ornaments, are ofier to economise the consumption and prevent waste ; in neither. Ldid not believe in the tirst set when sy upon the houndary question 1s bet bill involves, and from which there is no escape | — This is the end of the grand commuttee’s work— | for sule, and are as common as Lowell goods in | the nse of street-washere on side-walke should bo y were delivered, snd time has #hown that | was d that the judicial | jutin the total rejection of their plan, and the | five old bills tacked together, and presented as a Maseachusetts. Svirées, balls, and every other ia- | coenended, and every faucet and opening kept Time has disposed of the argmment of 8 jurisdiction of it. | adoption of the line which [ propose—the longitu- | remedy for evils which have no existence, and re- | centive to social intercourse, are attended and en- closed, when not absolutely required . ‘some ne-. t renson hus expired under the layse of until the right ist dinal line ef 182—whieh corresponding with encient | quierd to be accepted under penaliv—the penalty | couraged with the createst possible relish ; agree- | Cesary purpose. If, durime the day, no supply be ad of more speedy, We ow know i ctual possession, avoids the question of | of being gazetied as eneinies of compromise, and | able ¢ete-a-detes, fushionable elopements crim. cous., found for wash basins, bathing tubs, &e., in the has hee h months, | a governr in either country ; h, leaving the po- ? played at by the organs! The old one, to be sure, | snd conjugal differences, and all the little delighi- upper parts of houses, be careful not to leave any instead of defeat if and then wait the decision of title. H polation of each untouched, disturbs no interest ; | 18 dreadfully out of tune—the strings all broken | ful bits of scandal appertaining thereto, are as | orifice epen, as during’ the night, when the con- Ii know now th New Me rather the United & I end which in splitting the Ifgh sterile tuble land of | and the screws all loose, and discoursing most wo- | common here as elsewhere, not excepting the upper sumption ly ceases, the water rises to its ex- ly heiore the eon taal possess: 1 that it hes. right to ituntil the | the Staked Plains, conforms to the natural division | fel music, and still requiring us to dance it! And | portion of New York, where that species of amuse- treme height, and an overflow is sure to h: 4 or = hentuck AR vag Ff i decided. This possession, he | of the country, and leaves to each a natural fron- | such dancing it would be! Nothing but turn round, | ment ebsorbs the sitention of so many amiable Several houses have in this way been aged and, on my and | insists, has beer Y 1 eo ar d upon her, each pr with all the t 2s title ding to th é she rer might have tee war raised, if remained on his «¢ invous from the conquest of | tier, and a extent of compact and home; cross over, fet-to, and back ont! .Sir, there was | persons, of both sexes. every one knows t y danger to California | the country, in 1595, to the present time, and he Secas TEE % . si re once a mus e have all read of him—who The improvements going forward throughout Spe a the wits pe te NOW comes trom the & anionship into which she | shows it by re » mapsand histories! records. (Mr. B. is warmly in favor of giving territorial | hod power with his lyre-—(but instrument was | the city are extensive. acts of land on the slope be completed, and # ful ou sly of water thereafter. hos been foreed, J lo vet believe in either setof ‘To show, he saya, that the committee ere totally governments to New Mexico and Utah, believing | spelt lyre)—not only over men, but over wild beasts | of the neighboring hills, which a few months since furnished —Pribune. er ‘; reaeons nistoken in law, in assuming the consent of | that they need them, and. are eeble to fori theo, aud even over stones, Which he could make | were unoceupied, and thought unfit for useful pur- ice ar The Senator from Kentucky hne done me the | ‘Texas to be indispensable to the settlement of the | Sixte constitutions for themsel dance into their places when the walls of [lion | pow now inco’ ted and built upon by ‘Theatrical and Musieal, favor to blame mu me again when he behol attempted cop junction that the delay is ther f his ment of the position which he orig deloy. tle may blame | tile, J eny there are thiee ways to settle it—t rophe of his | first’ and best, by compact, as I proposed before hind will see ‘Texas woe annexed, and again by « bill of this wn abandon- yeer: nest, by « suit in the Supreme ¢ t ook with lanve in the constitution whi J power of the UnitedjStates to all the United tes is a party other clause which gives the Supreme € nal jurisdiction of ail cases to which a State is a Hie has not re- | part way je for the United States to vorteatously give a nt to New Mexico according to y be supposed — the territory sed when she wns ceded to t Congress the United States. These are the three ways to d by it, | settle the enestion to her on the will of T: ‘They need protection. But this bill is not the | were to be built. But our old organist was none } reme of our firet merchants. ‘T! way to give it. These governments are balked by | of that sort, even in his best day: and since the | in four months, at least double i F beibg put into this bill. they not ouly impede Cafe | injury to his instrument in playing the grand na- | lest. Fine brick edifiees are voiog up in various | this even’: under | ifornia but themselves. The conjunction isan in- | tena! air of the four f'r—theyfifty-four forty or fight— | ports, streets are laid out, graded and paved, and 4 ds the | jury to both. They mutually delay and endanger | tiis so cut of tune that its music will be much more | many other evidences of the spirit of improvement whew port be - fine scope for his splen- trover- | each other. And it isno argument in favor of t apt to scare off tame men than to charm wild | are going forward tp ss ro poo agen allack, | ls. Ottbert, and and that | conjunction, to ay that the establishment of a go- | beasts or stones. " : The State Senate and legislature have adjourned | charssters very creditably, ” The plese to geen veriment for New Mexico requires the previous No, sir! no more slavery compromises. Stick to | afer a seesion of four or five months: many of the scenery beautiful, and the di pH gra | quill to ectiiement of her Eastern boun with Texas. | thore we have in the constitution, and they will be | laws enacted are of the most liberal and beneficial | the time of action. ‘The That is no argument for tacking xas, with all | stuck to! Look at the four votes-those four on | character, while a few-bave been passed that may Mr. J. Winans her multifarious questions, even to New Mexico, | the prepositions which I submitied. No abolition | not be classed as appropriate—the most obaoxi much less to C it is, indeed, very desira- | of #lavery in the States: none inthe forts. arsenals, | to the people generally, and to the commerce’ avway THratne —! ng tragedian, Mr. ble to settle that boundary, and to settle it at once, rds and dock yards: none inthe rict of | tererest in particular, ix the “quarantine law, nan, ry ithe evening es Macbeth, D as ne of them tetally dependent | ond for ever: but it i an indispensabilit A no interference with the slave trade | or regulation.” It met with so much determine ‘iss KM. Duret as Lady Macbeth. Fhe as—one totally in acpendent of | creation of a govermment in New Mexi We en the States. These are the votes given on | opposition, that it will inall probability be repealed. st the Broad arly proves that the city has grown, Howrny Thraran.—The new tragedy of * Mareo Box: wets November | taris, or the Greelan Hero.” ie auncuneed in for ig. Mr. J. Walinck. as Marco, is ¢: eut. inay say, be is in every character he und: exhibited three that that dan, is pow free but worsted has jaseed by, « ¢ California salvation thet ehe should be jo Territo- her will--and one independent of her will until she have a ri vernment a: “ling to her pos floor, and Which are above all Congress com- | Another, equally unpopular, is the wage of an are duly sppreci- the speech. No joined to chooses to go into court. As to anything that Tex- ps hy = the Wve can give her, to sentiannn sil promises, because they abide the wompromises of | act re quiring every wh sician before being admitted jed every The ml must be danined, if not strong | ns or New Blexico muy do in prking cr relinauish- | the question of title is decided. ‘The wts posidetts | the constitution. 5. °4he 1] 2.te 8 member of the faculty, and allowed to ~~! with the sew force of © nd Uieh, and New Mexico, ing possession, it is all moonshine. w Mexico |. y poll inciple t “ The committee, besides the ordinary purposes o! pactive in Sen Francieco, to be examined by the " and herself into the bargain! iv & territory ‘of the United Siates, She is the | ci, Qcnorsets—is the principle to govern, or le making inwo. for tke govers- | 7 benefit when, it is slation—the principle which gives the possessor a | Iegielation, that o vard of Health, and receive irom thei the sanction | wilt exert thelr toft “ i n—the prineiple _ me os Hoo of tte 'o mest of the pe + prapose another object of @ | and thecredentialsasa bona-fide son of Esculapins, | seleted "Othello decided. ‘This priney is the same both inna- | dMerent kind, thet of giving peace and happiness | The authorities have appointed certain persons to tional and municip law—both in the case of | to 0 miserabic and distracted 670° the | fill these responsible offices. citizens or communi of the same govern- | prople of the United States. They propose this Commercial matters, and trade generally, are in a ment, and between independent nations.— | ebject as the grand result and crowaing mercy of | flourishing condition be — Pihout | The mode of decision only is different. Be- their multifarious labors. cig ‘ rats OF actual exten | tween independent nations it is done by negotiath The gravity with which the cly ; i madly, of the present legal | or ty atm, Dateien elibaee pg Be. ony | committer Had brought forward thi eet in his | culetion in four bas been rife daring the past few bg and Carling. The wext in stesession will be ry in all New Mexico east of the | the same government it is do report, and the pathetic manner in which he has | days, and a great advange iees has been the | [h* Wughable sketeh called the = tefah in 5 . . 2 , hich Mr. ead Mrs, B a yatt of Texas. These are the | lat mete ‘end fighi cach ot d it in his epeech, the exact enumera- | consequence. The stock on hand, however, isnot | {ye Inea wm oon mate pe mo h the prope line of the commnttee bounden y) cltsee Scquspunatiee’ ar the he has made of the’ p ic calamities upon his | large. A complete digest of the market, and an wih (bene Reece settan in Lieto. Baty great ruise, and foree us to fice. They are not qnes- governnent cann And the fingers’ ends, preclade the idea, a ave before | able review of matiers and things, has beem pub- | sucess called - out ouaLark.” tions of my seeking, but | shall not avoid them. It f law and order; inthe ed, of any intentional joke to be I | lished by the proprietor of the California, to w Rick % Mr. Bexvos went on toshow that it was un liamentary and wnyjuet thus te foree one m parry others throvgh, it was Compulsory legislation, to the Senate. Atl preperty of the United States; and she ¢ perpore of herself, or any part of herselt Texas te h any part of her. ay the Unite right to the possession he apathy noticed a few 4 weeks since has disappeared, and things have again ‘Thi Wh rman of the | assumed the activity so peculiar to California. Spe- tghland posseesion 6 © double 9 testion involves co not, One i t attempt it commits a violation o “ ‘ “ Festing upon the constitut is net anew question with me, thie extension of | bo tle goverment which permits such violation | Upon v8 by that distinguished Senator ; I refer you. / ae pe Ls Siete compe wie ee slavery in that quarter. T met it in 1844, before the | j derelict of ite dat T might have been tempted to believe that the em The mining operations, so far, have been very The pieces select “ XI” One is the case of a St of Texas. On the With day of Fane, of |" T have now ri #0 far as | propose to do it | nent Senator, mbending from his serious oceupa- ge Sy bat as yet we have not heard of | * Napoleon's Old Guard,” and “Mysterioas Knock e ‘ : rights with the © & part of a bill for a t wit! . i ite post, ment, t tions, had condescended to amuse himself at our | many, as feason of returns has not arrived, | ings lacide nj niestion ond to settle all « emthe | $n. ence Oe eee aera nen logether: | expehee,, Certain iti, that the conception of this | All the machines and” petent Held diggers, wash: | Im love with Buhiga. Mr. Jordan; Adam Beoek. ine p States. One very ones which now perpl yre she wae | the California, Utah, New Mexico, aud Texas bills. | 1¢stotation of peace and happiness is most jocose. | ers, &e., sent cut from the United States, have Burton; Colonel Vauberg, Mr. Clarke, and i 0 feovereignty—ih SS NUS Mimexed, L proposed, x article V. in the projected | ‘There ure two othe? bills which | lave aot men: | In the first place, there is no contention to be re- | been found to be entirely impracticable and yrholly tan, by Rize COngman.. Tdie vill, be fi r eigen at ail » ond wmder every wet, the | clan ioned, because they are not tacked, bat only om 4 conciled, no distraction to be composed, no misery | worthless. Tell the emigrants not to trouble thei LF Pineide, Saetee be tauel te th S aieee sulject huowa that ther Ant. V. “The existence of « “ - ~ lored, heads ab of th re om; but which belong to the system, as it is calle to be aemaged, no lost harmony to be rest no is about any the new-fangled bum! of | ter. conelade with the bh are Senators in * rote | ever prohibited in thet part of ¢ anne ond: WHMOUE “pene Mamaien ef Which injustice | lost happinces to be recovered’ And if there were, | Lorton or New York. For a more dat aoe iysterlous Rnoekings "A full rowse this for the ad 4% — tory whieh lies wes © hundreth degree ‘ TW | pitnde West from the meridian of Grcenwiel Se ee ek, eae fe tien of their scheme. The fugitive slave recow blessings. Their example and precept do he entertaimments th . consist hin and the District of Columbia tlave-trade yan ae e. Tey preach concord, and practise di respondence of the daily Alta California. You will ani id Guard, lech” ant’ Meme pression bill ere parts of the eystem of measures hey recemmend harmony to others, and id in it matters of the utmost interest to the This five n which the committee propose, and which, taken cpren noes pawns pm on Bape hy oy ef the orell x ate: Ereane of erodip ie 5 ettonal. It somiy to. some together, are to constitate a ¢ wromise, and | ternal kiss to us, give themee: rude be ¢ nilairs of Sacramento City, which wore on oe to terminnte for ever and most (reternally all the | Searcely is the healin i y fu'en well paternined; bat when it is cousidered. that refer you to the ce i i 4 ats in This is what 1 proposed six years ago, y pmprehensive soe melieent cor: rar Ji which the | one ina series of propositions to be offered t on Which | ond Mexico for settling all questions growing out ay the power |.of the projected annexation beforehand. They of Congress fn foto over the subject of slavery in | were not adopted. linmediate annexation, without would be done to the committee in the presenta- | the committer is not the party to give w eo count of the various digmngs, I may respectfully dis- report read, and the ano- | the « ig of the last steamer a very sombre aspect, Lp erritories shal as they can suprot no bill Which | regard to eoneeduences, wee the ery: and all tem- | ' fist ret he United | dyne bills, oF pills, lak on our tables, than fieree | ure how desummye hcan ad rosperous = Setter sad tha peter el een, ee touches that question one way of the othe. Others | perate counsels were set down to Dritish. traitors, | tisrensions of the slavery agitation in the Unite OF Pi ee arsuining a bright and y appear: | Y and tho price of admisyinn soeheay fonahes that question one way of t win athe | prrare cuaneans 5 me hs setae woregud States, ahey apvty to two out of the five gaping | Contention breaks out in the ranks of the commit- | ence. The anticipated inundation of the town | the wonder must erase, There seems to be goed tact wounde whic! ‘enator from Kentucky eaume- | te, itself, They attack each other. They give | did much to depress and cripple the business | iu the management of this theatre, Others aa lithe power and | consequences now—several consequences ; one of 1 he five fi of his Jef hand, and for | snd take fierce licks. The great peace T | operations. A ‘of the ch ind im= ‘ Cxetelic, (thers again let legislative | which is thie extension of slavery, whieh the re. | Tted on the five fingers of his left hand, an ; oy of tut slaeere vere inert caninadaeen Tuctions—some to vote one way, come the | port cad conglomernte tulle of the Committee of ee wr Hh iam cogace He bed. provided ae’) ee the suc om ihe Wass Tool ad toe aieaeas’ | (recrmente.or tase yh a ended tal ag other. Tin plaster, big enough to cover il, and eflica- | like the man on the first leaf of the almanac. | than the great progress and extendes ious enough to eure all; while the President only | Here, in our presence, in the very net of consum- | the press. I notice that the enterprising proposed to cure one, and that with a little plaster, gues the marrige of California with Utah, New | of the Plecer Times, (1. Gilbert & Co,) have en- and it of no etheney.” 1 do not propose to examine | Mexico, Texas, the fugacions slaves of the States, | larged their establishment, and have merged. the theee two attendant of requacicus bills, which | ond the marketable slaves of this District~in this | former weekly paper into the treweekly Placer | Ocysrec— Pierce's Minstrels are singing eemibers dangle at the tail of the other three. Iwill not go | very net of conenmmation, as in a eertain wed- | Times. We are here not backward on that poiut, | into the old Olymple. The performan vs eousist of inte them, nor mention them further then to say, | ding feast of oll, the feast becomes a fight—the | for there are now three daily journals in fall blast; | tones duets. :crios, inetrumental perfucmences, end that the slernative in the report to pay the owner | festivel a combat—end the amiable guests pummel | emong the most prominent—indecd, [nmy say, the | denein ¢ oat of the federal treasury for the loss of irrecov- | ¢# oh other. ; _ | first paper—in California is the Alta, to which is at- erable slaves, might admit, in practice, of abolition | When his committee was formed, and himself | teched two of the old & ees of the New York tions at 63 Bowery. es by the legislation of Congress end | S#fely instelled #t the heed of it, conqueror and | Jerald. Of course, you 61 ny of the reade: Caette Gar Loder's exceliont Land wilt diapiay and to suppress the slave- | pacificator, the Senetor from Kentucky appeared | of the Herald, eee the pane of Juba Ee. | their great muses! sbilities, thie evening at thve concess: ind. We all remember | Durivage. Le has an interest in the establisiment, | Hheatre of besith end pleasure. We sionid net be toed to ser [ eremded. every evening, 7 being 80 ne opposed to giving hirteen force we to face. 1 did #0 © any gore t at afl to th 7 tories, and ia) wed heard no entbreak against my opini Savor of leaving them to wre of themselves Hut my opposition to the extension uate fature Ste) ‘ow, whet ere the Senators, ther beck tb 9 ciscumetances, to slo ¥ bills conjoined 1 Vote for all—and coil it a con ' ; daty, eonetitutionn! 0! structions, were salijec jection of the whole begin anew, each bill by t rt. Clay had aaid that Californ i I 'y my opporition to it dates from 184, whea 1 te wer a student at law in the State of Tennessee, se; and 16 and studied the subject of African slavery in aa H © Ay ope 2 Apverienp bouk, # vu nia Loake—-Tweher's 0 jon | in the & pid that Callorniashould becou- of Blucketone’s Commenta i here it 4 4) ee of the nation Poatrinated. ty it to’the steldity ofthe’ tetad | it, (holdiog op ae ee fare ‘hie District, as a on for abstaining | to be the happiest of 1 : Whether California Will. consider these enticine, |e, pone s) Blac! > on 8 omg | from the abolition of slavery in this District, asex- | that figure. Jt seeme ache with pleasure. It | which is now in a prosperous condition, und bids tions ample compensation for all the injuries of | junk wea, c/preferanee, to the constitution ie | Erested in the report, page to make & conces ioete ce his jon nence. Ht burst forth, La | fair to rival, at least in point of Wealth, most of the ats eontunsaen ae delay, the evencucl | “WS, 0f the Federal Governmen he Uni- | ciew of something valuable for bstinence which | the fulness ef his joy, and the overflowing of his | ¢ per-crust journals of the Uaited States, , co jens io - e ne elag, the eventual | ted States of the Commonwealth of Virginia, | yh, ve hed lor ‘sixty years without concession, | heart, he entered a that series of cougratula- he stesmer is about to sail, and IT heve do tine pr Fe PRceetege| Fg FP bY me cragoaeed iw oF 60 jaws Py a ies tiered epheewont table, tacked r, soutes by oo never to had-too tilt he isout Printing presses are Vegomning @ drog; we hear yi mn for ‘ j er |. nion. woods. ¥ ions. of tich compensation; and suet, 1 think, will be ecker, Professor a law in the ‘oa ty oie os of it on ie a Rea eg lg A POL Telia te tae x. White's Serenaders continue thelr nagro be Tialian Opeta ene give a grand concert at the Taberu ity. on evening meat, The programme contsine ton of from ¥ operes which w Jed by the revpective bers Of Wie ex vedemt ey Connex Mreveot— Barnum still continae te exh es n Jost, when { saw that | money-mneking enterprises, will soo be run in the | pit je Chiness beauty. Me eae oh. be os oF California herself. Life, and pecsen, | William J Prony pl Renator, after @ vain efor to vse hie und. + 7, sa i, wae belief from veto ls, ts what ae wanis. Laie’ | General Court io Virginia.” iy thie Amerignn | 18) ay id friends,’ sku even reviindiog ‘shen ef what | "For the ab'p news, ind seatnien, nd ld’ \ Notore she leeres fot London, Ihe in.an em

Other pages from this issue: