The New York Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1850, Page 2

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Cur Maryland Correspondence. AFFAIRS Com, Mi aga Of gee the Fe hac the Gone gets | EASTERN SIDE OF THE ATLANTIC. Chagres Gavectieneenes, Cuacres, N. G., August 3, 5 Wax om Americans— Steam wigation oj Chagres River—The Kiver Koute, &c. iipee of these Pave been gathered fer many a punts fi most unsatisfactory and al:rming state of the coming tie. 4 slong, the oats, grase and oaks be- , . en ater and more luxuriant every mile you lar feeling existing, particularly in the southern dis- | make, Pp recedes: goPlow gene Maaeifiosst you ‘proposed innit fore- «ne. It was insane love of England killed fe ascendan of Hamilton, as it peace A ticte. Our cc , nearer the spot than | extep/’ FE ao hy ‘ hd there. hy " ittle of has trans| About the people are “state sion to her stem which made Jefferson, J pig Bors ~ aed park, interrupted here abil there by a Since my last, very little of interest has : , ie Ds ssannennenanane sat crrselves, uuribute the, oulgages which have been | jinn) ee ith ‘avery deseriprion of the nigent ves } viredhere. The Americans haves] believe,conelud- | excite wut the political of re fa UR BUROPEAN CORRESPONDENC, Wrtih s line for ip newopaper,) the = ee er mostly Chilenics and Mexicans, end aga cayse, | Fetubles ver to be found i oi ane a eneune | ed topay a part ofthe tax impoged upon them by | ‘This has always been one of the strongest whig the Fevolution, amd the father of the ‘policy of his give, the conte ives ree, ie ri Wes | Behe ord melons. Thus you arrive at the old Mis | the law which took effect the first of the present | holds’bf the State, but the question of reform bas dic. de. Se. OOF a cogoae imedinakemaabel ie ave always neasure of 4 be *) or ‘no y . i i e bs € Gucediine ‘unduly pi | hagad Ee rey cian che tote nat dae year. You Gan fudge of its enormity when I tell | so distracted that party, that their success is very renged without threats or war. It is now in the doubtful at the approaching election. The demo- Our London Correspoadence. crats have been very shrewd, and have taken upon Loxpon, August 9, 1859. you that hotels are taxed $1,440 per annum, be- sides two reals per mouth foreach door and win- we have and do recognise the right of | gyenue of lofy willows, planted by the care of the hands of Congress ond the cobinete-auttitis to be the And we believe this vie'y has been ly fathers along the aqueduat-whence was irri- ; t hoped that the grand confederacy will not to ea fathers along the ac ’ a 7 r :. li the route should change, it Pope pe i " ‘i taken ax : <4 by the: preae of owe the extensine pottions of the plain cultivated ant a —— some pore 1 dango haus "ane their ticket several of the most prominent whigs in | Individuals and Nations—The United States—Our pr prdiny mes the feoblert depe wna very general The agents for ‘ne collection of oly novitiates. ban giead dt fav - Bits ¥ : P 4 Foreii ers. ted measu: tye tax have found it inoperative, and ‘bee a unable | i Pease poy poy sere theeetiany, chetsl ee a bonllition the POET: WRIEH denne J4il iopénd Yory mech errant pp arin ns *8" | arms with a state less strong than ima, and try will be reduced to the s: to collevt yu meuy inctun: of Individuals. against the party with which they have heretofore Policy~ Rrougham and Webster—The Portuguese thatptoo, when she asks to pay 4 part claim: » the foreiga miners i ey we ; e emigration. The govern- ; ; le prekimpg to abandon ths diggings rather than pay Tnor Shannon, of Odio. be located in San | They WE New Cinuudiy uctauted by a micerable | acted. The whigs, asa party, are opposed to a| Question—The Citres of the Baltic, of Piedmont Under pretest, val objects (oe ataag tae is i be € can recognise the stubbora aud indepen- lowing were the passengers in the steamship | jealousy, characteristic of the Spanish race, of | general reform in the constitution. They favorthe | and Turkey, &e,. Se. be, paiey ane tad hore rit redone d pl le rbd on oath Carolina, fom Oregon, at Bau ¥ranciseo, on the lst | Americans, hes placed every possible obstacle in | election of county clerk and registers by the peo- ‘That man alone is truly great, who is eapable ae et tae eB Fayer-bed no Ty inculcetee a spirit of resistence to anything e0- | “Gov. “Abernathy and lady; Miss Aune “Abernethy: ee eee ee esecn said, pro and com about | Ple, but utterly reprobate the election of the judi. | of muking sacrifices of the present to the future. | means of keeping off the Paps ste, som Yorng of oj he breasts of ull who ” Mrs. White; Miss White; ‘Mise Hull; Mrs. Holmes; | 1.0 Nicaragua route. The statements are so con- | ciary. The course of Senator Pearce with regard to | Ever since the ¢lown who slew the golden goose; bpp all hands to pore vce Ms — pla Ray Fee ee eee Aen Tietnteclman cdces Ave: Wenulizr quad cervact: | tradietory, even from men of character who have | the late Compromise, before the Senate, met with | the scrubs have shown an utter inability to pat pede ag tent easter tb | oe. The policy, acces ther excep: | O. 8. Lovell.do; @. P. Andrews, do; if. M Halteck, | tavelled the route, that it is very difficult to arrive | general disapprobution, and notwithstanding the | offtheir desire for immediate gratification. No day | ¢%, egerpeeme ne senha e Agha of this ¢ < then the taxon | 00.; BD. Keyes, do ; G. C. Wesoott, do; Van Burem, | at any conclusion. My own opiaon is—and I have ay . h b hi bly sugg faldiensatt auditeaaabenls lionsble and equ { h. Even the tax, on- | § eLane. do.; Hateh, do.; Lieut. Humptrey, U. | been diligent in my inquiies—that some time must resent democratic Governor would appoint one of | pagses over our heads that we do not see other | ga!, within her powesfof fulfilment; ary erous us it muy seem, leaves the industrious | @ m B Stark and ervant; Col. W. W. Chap- | elapse before the route will be travelled to any ex. own purty to supply the eur the people, | clownsasineupable of forgivinginjuries, as Esop’s the shape of permission to construct at t o his expense unless the 10 istend of Madeira a depot for ey Powe: rom miner . Hi map; 8. Coflin; Capt Long; W. Irving; B. Jeoning: tent, if it is travelled at all. without regard to) party, talk strongly of demanding foregoing the temptation of money. But to | ! F ‘ “ae Siri yi a krossly exager ated, which | Ty Bendeuball; A’ dacksch; Dr. Tyson; A, It Wile Meny suppose that because a steamboat has | his resignation. ‘The parties on this shore are con- gag + Be ‘ied in can abuive ps ad withaviney tie New ap atanreeds fs arleaton we do Lot 9 The worthless, idle vaga- | son; Col. Bell; R. P. Bailey; A. P. Abrams; Picket been built w run on the Sun Juan river, that she | SerVative and eppose ultraisin of every character, u f abe and Norfolk touching there. Another arrange! Bond who ex to work but a small portion of | 8, Lenaes; Hoeman; Goldatein; Goldemidt; Wm. Aber | riot necessarily acceui it, This is quite a mistake, | though their preferences are ull for the South, and | hatred into the region of justice towards all, | should also be made for entering g tha harbor of his tine, ond dissipates even What he doesearmat | nathy; K. Watts; D. Simmons; H. Caylor; Pomroy; | pel neccesary acento i Me tn lad Ratael Ric | the ewuse of the South. Mr, Pearce is a native of | tempered with mercy for the feeble, is not often | Lisbon. By such skiltu! propositio passions the whiskey beard and the monte table, may feel | Hackett; | D. Stewart; H. C | Bucking: | ‘on this tiver, should sutisfy people that succega | the Eastern shore, and has been a man in whom P y " a a of the moment may be appeased, and money and sore that he compelled to work a lidle harder; | bem; 2 Sones E rk 3 i sy fo mB: Den doves not insanetis follow eadeavor. the people huve heretofore placed implicit conti- | the lot of mortals. Aud yet, it is precisely this | anger » in the sense of the this but we nnceive how men who can make | W2. Hightaw; SamI Ruth; Sem’ frwin, dence, but now'should his name come up for re- | control of the passions, which forms the criterion | letter, for the sake of a far better and su 1 Speaking of steamboats, Mr. Matthews, the re- sident Engineer of Law, & Co's line, is now en- result’ Sucha convention with Port would if it vel i 1 = i | f f- i clecudn, itis very doubtfl lhe could obtain a sin- | of virwe. It is that great quality of self denial, | eeult Such a couveution, wit wiceP ae tg gle vote from his own section of the State, which separates the wise and good from the stupid ten, und more frequently twenty times as much Office Holders in Califor: rda they cow , ftom whence they came, | STATEMENT OF TH sTATE, COUNTY, AND UNTER AL in repw: he boilers and machinery of the " i vd fer to abandon their employment and is aed te Repelting t i suena The wheat crop, just harvested, is very poor in Why, it will not be tive years till the Mediterra- make nothing. If the view of our cotemporarien sony Sugg * res they Sage Kesinet Brak Rah aee pkey a pactesaas ean Worst inawin ed data ete oe tone and insignificant. ‘The same remarks are appliea- | nean becomes an American lake, and all ite steam- ie right, that this law has induced many of the gig SIORO’| ipa quite regularly to F 1, 14 miles below | has been made, in consequence of the rust and tly. | ble to nations, and in the same tanner are they to | er® Will be owned in the United States, as are lazier und most worthless of the foreign | $7 that place. Adamson & sof New Orleans,have | The corn crop is in excellent condition, and should be distinguished for praise or blame. Meaness or every one of the packet ships now trading to Eng- Te to tke to the road, and rob and murder, | brought « suiuil steamboat they callthe “HLarvey | it not be cut off by drought, a very large yield will land tiis bigh time that ev icherd Reman, be had. Fruit is abundant, aad of fine quality. magnanimity becomes the type of different socie- | Elsewhere in Europe the United States should 'y man in the dis- | ~ Gleason,” atier t rican Consul of this place; 4 Bieh uiiected Ticts should eatry ‘Colt’s common | F, 3.0; Reuse. Attrne voor et beam, 12 horse power. |. This section of the State of Maryland is at this | ties, as of inidvidual men. Of course,the vast ma- | confront the tyrants, by showing herself the fast law’? and ** Bowie’s practice” at his girdle, that he | $'winesrun stave Printer Sie hee ones culty, iis thoughts invag: | time full of interest, The town in which 1 ain so- | jority of both succumb to the supposed infirmities | friend of the free cities of the Baltic, of Piedmont, € unquestioned authorities at a mo- | Jo State Translator, y> : journing is the most beautiful on the Eastern shore, and of Turkey, and Switzerland and Italy. She is ©. Our Stocktoa cotemporary hears | bstariuaeniain Coa A ot ee ore, to sey | und there is spirit of improvement to an extent | Of Rature, which are oftencr the fruits of educa | emphatically the only power which eda insure ¢ organization of a guerilla band ; and | g. waikine of the eg eats fitted up New York | Lever before known. Ivis situated on the Chap- | tion; butthe few remain to teach the lessons of | their political enisteace Gen. ‘Taylor took that OTN ie ne han tute that thece| a fashion, which have driven the execrable native | ‘uk rivetebout twenty miles from the Chesapeake, | virtue by example, zeocemaibility It bo ble: ttle Iva sos ble, us the American feeling will be exe | 1t-0. 8 Wither Ne tion a Capital uc,uisition to our society here, Capt | €4cel his neighbor in,the production of those articles | evated rank of a wise and just people. They have | cuated despotisms of the continent. The tyrants C a deg . ” “ “ as to render the security of vubtful. The guerrillas ud perkaps many in- n suffer. The feeling d Sonorians, of last ewed strength, and then made be carried © trust that some of the | nt outrages will be detected, pt them; and that a more ling may be brought about. toekten Journal.) | tote of things exists in a pore | heard it with alarm; the people with joy. ho- ever comes after Gen. Taylor must come up to hie very emphatic reprobatioa of oppreasen and the oppressors. Already the masses look for their de- liverance from the old world to the new. ‘Phe despotic conferences held ut Warsaw, and propos. at don by Englind and the other ners in the Thieves’ Aliiance, to thrust man back see to night, know that they are confronted by the American_people, and that the denouncer of the doings of a and Verona has been by Providence suddenly catied to speak with their authority, in the voice of their many races. The commen to the soil. The pleasant location of the | the prayers of all reformers that they may not a | ee Cree reons Tent Ie Weekly tt, iid wou | forfeit that rank. But they must show themselves fitted up in the most comforteble manner, and is } Sénds of perso tsi ver . imore 3 doing en excellent busivess. Lis boat, with those | CY upon excursions of pleasure.” There ar- two | Sflirmatively on the stage of the world as the cham- of Dr. Gould, our physician, and those of the Irving | (cellent hotels, but the pable buildings, except a | pions of their political principles,and especially avoid Houre, torm the largest and best line on the river. | EW market, nna has just been erected, are of a | oppressing the weak,while they are bound torestrain Thinking it would amuse your readers, I give | Yety ordinary character, There is a beautiful park | the strong. It is impossible for the United States youthe names of the different hotels here, pre- | 19 # central location, in which is a spring of water dwell 1 f E pea mising, hewever, that many of them are hotels | *vfficient to supply the whole town. There are | to dwell any longer apart from Europe, or to per only in name, being sadly deficient in the requisites. | BOW four churches, the Presbyterians having just | mit Europe to withdraw from her. The intercourse Irving House, Little Pelican, North American | rected one. There is no interior trade, for the | petween the hemispheres is already immense, but Hotel, Orleans House, New York Exchange Ho- benefit of Cambridge, from the fact that humerous | sane |b i devery he tel, Howard House, Empire City Hotel, Crescent | Tivers are coursing through the country, which | It 18 constantly increasing, and every hour proves me Joba. W Abraham Bancker, formerly your ship news col- lector. He has brought outa number of boats, Major General, Brigadier Goners v=. J. Gre 1, Bastian and examples 1m quiet and peace {from the tic bern mines. Around Sonora searce- Major Gi 4 “ | ? “ : Unit render the market easily accessible to every sec- | how much America has to gain by its continuance. | friends and the enemies of mankind are in pre- ly « nigh without a murder, und when the |; H. Bowie, BrigadverGencral, “ peo F ee eee, Ag ern ee tion, without the necersity of bringing theie pro- | In the days of Washington, even the great Sec- | *¢2Ce, and there is not an inch of neutral ground. Eghtdibatae pied yy ne gy bit oredr od PRR nena et “ «| Merchants’ Hotel, and Union Hotel. Of these OY eediateer merle S peo retary of the Treasury, and the greater Seeretary ——— oT: he morrow’s sun wil und im the victim of ni a li A t Ger bed Z i i rT i arsnrtin’s Knife. It is thought, that within the two Jéxeph C. Morehead, Ge ice Gaara” * + i gD geese merge Baurimore, Aug. 20, 1850 of State, did not dream of the physical and scien- Our arte Correspondence. jest weeks, twenty men have been murdered in | COUNTY OF BAN FRAN admirably managed by ‘Miller, the jolliest Boniface | Political Excftement—Arrivals— Fighting Fire- | tific changes which have brought France and POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. that nighborhood, : | ane if 960% | of the whole Isthmus. men, §c. England nearer to Washington than was the mouth Pants, August 8, 1850. We are conpetled to. listen to tales of murder | Tae je: feo. The class of diseases here are intermittent fevers, z . of the Ohio. Far less had these statesmen a con- | The Session of the National Assembly—Railway and of crime, at which humanity shudders; and | Attorney, 3 4 diarthava, and dysentery—the two latter in their | _ 4 Portion of the democrats of the Fifteenth ward, | ception of that Sublime discovery which has anni- | project — Financial Laws — The Budget —En- k is enjoined on us, of dwelling on | ¢ | “ « | milder forms. They are ill susceptible of eure, and | dissatisfied with the nomination of J. Maybury pilasee tase ty Ee Byer bog ae crt of Versailles— President's auee- picture, und portraying its loathsome ade, . Gemntgtosesten, “ 4 pose, of a malignant character, t i letters to lightning. ey not the hope o} campment pias Towr— M Endicott, rescerer, ” pe pel ang a Ine pat ‘ey ‘are the ro Tumer for Mayor, met last night and formed a pro- the growth in sige wealth and population, dote—Emeute—French Fleet—The Monks of St. jain M. Kddy, penned the above, a meeting of the , cession. There was about five hundred persons in | which in 1860 has ultea ly made the United States as th ito, &e. as the diseases which prevail in our Western Bernard — Guizot —Rome — Naples— Madrid— ¢iuzens of Stockionhas been held, the object of ailaper, « * country—and nothing more. Nine out of ten of | ll, the greater portion, however, actuated oaly by | of America the first political power, as well as the 2 which was to po eee Deng ged pets : those who are tick, may ascribe it to fright, ram, | @ desire to see the fun. ‘There were two mounted | first commercial nation in the world. If they had | Germany—Denmark and the Duchves—Bank- ovtroges comm ted Ee - dba ae — ee 1% = “ or exposure, or a delectable combination of all | marshals and a bard of music in the crowd; and ‘anticipated the material union of the most distant ruptcy of Hesse Cassel—Russia— Peace Congress— three. . " ? mations, and the immediate ascendancy of the The British steamer Avon brought word from | about midway of the procession, was carried a | confederation, they would have taken a bolder po- Nicaragua that the Orus was hard aground on the | large transparency, having painted on one side a | sition in the external relations of the then new and Thiers—Death of General Taylor, §e., §c. In three days from date, our National Assembly of things. The moeting, owing to | the notice, was not largely at- and Court of Sessions. Prot 1 Ex-otficie Pate and Sessions Court. ) : - si i whey Moody wilt fener ta | " CITY OF Bam FRANEIOCO. bored the an eeietaemaealanetes her | Janus face, with the words “Tom Lloyd, alias pig! eng tarp yo bee fore’ nome bent. ana vig ese ano gpm a . ry mold.” the other side was paint reid i ah Wi Gibesid bibs on | Fran Wait, The British steamer Ecuador arrived at Panama | Ben). Amold.”” On the other ted a | vising tha their countrymen should keep their | Prance for silliness and imbecility. Never hasan on the 20th, from Valparaiso and the coast, with | sorrel horse, with the words “‘Tom Lioyd, the | eyes on the ground, they would have bade them some $1,400,000. She has been bought by ea | track’s breke.” On reaching Mr. Lioyd’s hotel, | S¥tvey With hope and confidence, the whole American, and put on the line to San Francisco. corner of Pratt and Charles streets, the band “laid | 20*20m- Of the unspeakable benefits they have The following are the names of the steamers req a4 " conferred on their descendants, it was not one to now running between Panama and San Francisco: | themselved out” on the dead march, whilst the | teach them that they had upon their heads the —Howland & Aspinwall’e-~Tennessee, California: | Persons in the line made the neighborhood resound responsibility of universal freedom for mankind. Oregon, Panama, Carolina, and Unicorn. George | With groans, bistes, and other noises of like cha- Aad they did not teach, only because it was im- Law’s—Isthmus, Republic, Columbue, andthe Aa- | racter. Fortunately | for the peace of the city, no | possible io anticipate the distant future, that the telope, which is expected on the 10th inst. John | inmate of Mr. Lloyd’s house ofered a word in re- | mission of scam om was American. If their Howard & Son’s—Sarah Sands, New Orleans, | Ply. After ning Mr. Lloyd, the procession | venerated lives austere virtues could have been Northerner, and the English steamer Ecuador. | moved to Federal Hill, and there, amid thundersor | continued to the middle of the nineteenth century, The Republic and Northerner sailed on the 27th sogianes, burnt the transparency. Mr. Lloyd was | they would have led on their countrymen to ult., and cleared Panama of the red and blue-shirt- | @ delegate to the late Democratic Convention from ay ome conquest of the earth, as they led them to gentry. There are fewer people on the Isthmus | 8&2 anti-Turner ward, but voted, mer pene lependence. And that conquest will be imme- now, than I have known since the emigration com- for that person, and the above was the rather diate, if not pacific; it will be, too, by American menced; and these the California, which sails to- | Manner in which & portion of his constituents chose | aid and counrel, without great losses ‘OF sorrows; day, will take. Passengers arriving on the Isthmas | t©,«xprees their disapprobation of his course. but upon a firm and heroic assertion of free prin- in future, need not apprehend the delay which | The hero of the hour, Tom Lloyd, you may re- | ciples in Euroye, wherever the oppressor sets his heretofore has caused #0 much inconvenience and | Member, figured pretty extensively during the pre- | foot. . suffering. The trouble has been a scarcity of agen John Tyler. He presented his Excel- ‘What the course of nature adopt such measures as the iemands. 1% greatly oa the increase through- hern miniog regions. So great e villians that wage i ind Stockton, go in We hope the mmnunity | ¢ efficient measures to give which can only be doae by phers. ta most mtense excitement prevails ur Mexicans were arrested ander | Pt stances a came to a tent near Sonora, and informed the owner that a murder had been com- | ¥ itted ata lone tent, a few miles distant. The y was not credited, and next day a Mexican came end told the same story, upon which a party went to the piece, and found four Mexicans example been given to Europe, and to the workd at large, so poor and so shameful. Only look at the Momiteur for the sitting of Monday last, and you will see the details of the despicable conduct of Mr. Miot, one of the mountaineers, and the “ black- guard” language used by that individual with the President and his colleagues at the Assembly. lz not that disgraceful for such a polite nation as France? Well, fortunately, the prorogation of the National Assembly takes place in two days; and | hope, with all my reasonable countrymen, that, whilst visiting their departments, the members of the Legislature will find some paysans du Danube, who will give them a lecture & la Caudle, and make them blush for all the bad behaviour which three and four ‘o around Sonora w prevented Wi wood end brush on the tent, ia which steamners—new i pasee! ir of fine sorrel and was | ton from deing, General Taylor executed they have exhibited since the ils were two bodies partially d—a white man | is now a re, ae weebie uaa Soeeetiedae: aining on the office Ot Naval Otcer for Be political eiemscs toH ‘f A i pacilin the walls of doh tee bens anda negro. The Mexica at the bodies | with California, to say nothing of the sail vessels | the port of Baltimore, when the letter writerscame | and Turkey. honest heart recei " wid had become offensive, and wecording to the custom | whieh are duily de fortes place. out with a description of the #foresnid sorrel the impuise from within and without. He felt the | be, if happier we are not, by witnessing eome over- of their cour ty, oa Sar og SM bi } sep renels 2 om The American Hotel. Cruces, under the ma- [ #0 ac was ie ny oot os Tom — 4 duty of (eoteting to the oppressed his hrowing of any kind, to see these gentlemen return- » and tw b 3 bol .f ‘ment i ‘om political life, mot are since unti menace: iu suppoit Octo! cooler, they were in the court-room, various rumors hav- Assgciate Justion, © 5-4 yoy nt i Pelgee nae A. See, nay turned in the n Meeosttie Mayoral ieavene ponte by becaptadeaiene to do ‘hie doy vee rsa alist haat ing been circulated, a large crowd thronged the Cn, ae i ~4 —______ tion. We believe he was Naval Officer for at least | The present Secretary of State is his actual suc. | Wittier, to resume their duty. stieets end sined 10 ewing them ute the Deputy Sherig, — indep’t ¥ Interesting from Texas. ope month. cessor, and will, by all intelligent men, be held | The project of law on the railway frory Orleane first tree Marvin, with some difficulty, . ws o MORE INDIAM DEPRKEDATIONS—DEATM OF LIEUT. The Bremen ship Bremerhaven, Capt. Sammi, | accountable for the continnance of the government | to Bordeaux, and from Tours to Nantes, was voted prevailed om ed populace te give them a ” * 1 arrived, yesterday, in 58 days (to the Capes), ha- | upon its onward march abroad, as well as, and | yesterday by a majority of 298 votes against 22%. were selected as 4 jury. ° nite the New Orleans Pi ving on board 8 cabin and 240 steerage ‘ngers; | more than, athome. What is important, Mr tas of the incidents of that sitting was the tur-) that hey Cor] Rot eon wih « we Western Texan brin, aleo the ship Hurvest, from Newport, Wales, with | Webster cannot hopejto weur the title as well as | moil occasioned by the speech of Mr. Schoelcher, ne testimony of “ Indian depredations. On the afternoon.of the 22d i . i} formation in regard to the bodies, alt. - tuilroad iron to B. & O. R. KR ag 7 wield the power of the Presideut of the United | in which he termed the events of the 2ith of Feb- party of fifteen or twenty Indians were seen | Harvest enw, July 12th, lat. 47 30, lon 34 ~ 7 States, in any other manner than by a most per- ruary, 1848, the holy Revoluttion. This was cer- end the prisoners w ordered to be remanded to ‘Twe vacensioe im this Roard on the Cibolo, about twenty-five miles from 310 | Moslem, k. ring ing i should | tainly’ the ipod y * catastrophe’ Mi Jail to ‘wait forther trial. ‘The crowd resisted this ‘The California Market. Antonio, on their way up, having a drove of horses eat He yb distrieted the "Watehman relax in lave tovunt pect Geseell Tevion: the, masees | Ki. “i erscgeah fonts vdeo decision, and determined that the trial should pro- (Prom the Pacific News, July 17.) and mules in their porseasion. the same night | fire company, their president has closed the doors | will treat him worse than Massachusetts. He will ouher. left the bench, pre Bae comers ase* ered; the judg they stole some sixty head of mules from the ran- | of the engine house, and the company will expe- away like his giguntic predecessor, Joha C. ng against Since our review for the steamer, we ha’ hich will be o the C 7 their courre, end smother person was elected judge change to notice in t cho of Mr. J S. McLellan, about eighteen miles rience @ vacation for a time, until, we hope, they | Calhoun, after having governed the country, itis os \- ve Aari- % i culture, was also voted by the Asse '. wre tim , who reteatd to cit Ia the Oost House pang See ieen aed ae $14, caanbioe fgere te. distant from that place. So soon as information | jeara to abstain from fighting.” ‘ true, bat always in the name of another. Solutions | “The vote Telative to te beeen the cours ed to preside in the woods, and to was received by . Brooke, a scout of fifteen or they went. Here the trial was very sum- fosed for another lot. Provisions georraily are fair at of slavery questions =~ be multiplied without aum- twenty men were despatched, under the command Battimore, August 21, 1950. ber, and wi it or foreé (the obit, t pt in place ot coat ‘Dank bills of the Bangue de manly concluded, the men were found guilty, and guelsiiens, although the arrivals Rave beom Reavy. | of Lieut. Street, in pursuit. : 5 : pete and itisa compara- | ‘money) of the France, “pe . S| Re ‘The last mail from Laredo ht from | School Examimation—Amother Shooting Affair— | tively small aflair. The Union will always stand, | was voted without eny difficulty. j aan eeaee eee cee eee eta Clit ang faterable, and lead es to look for « resumption of trade Gane Ford ofan attack made on ia eam Sin| The Weather—-Shrewsbury Camp—Thriking | Whether they are adopted or rejected, vand the neo; | | Tesday the National Anse is busily engaged ho had held inquest ea tome Vie) about two hundred [nadians. Seenes. % forgotte ensem ] the bodies wroner stated that the verdict of ea ee Ea Jaly a Lieut. Ham that en the morning of ws Congressmen, who were the only real parties te | known the departure of the courier I will wu the 26th ult, he ly found hi uf One hundred and seventy-eight young ladies have | the controversy. The sovereign people have got ed by at least two antes d ladians, | they having been found worthy, at the late examinations of the | far beyond their representatives, the most recently approached within one hundred and fifty yards ef | the most f distrier | Clected, for even the last of these retrogrades, as the camp, under cever of the timber. ‘On Soeen . peehancnsieege ing rian 3 son ug he is eeated in his place, and has caught schools, of promotion to the High School. that official squint which is worse than opthalm pie Soap a md peree Neate cima toa Two boys had an altercation in one of the mar- | OF total loss of an eye, The people of the United before the men eould yet to them, the Indians had | kets, a few days since, when one of them wan shot | States fvel, in their heurts, the love of their fellow cut them loose ead were taking them off They by a pistol in the hands of the ether. The pistol ares les otek pray My ioe aire ly tear! pa) pasreves ae | ro 1 mo. iene | was loaded with gun shot, and the entire load passe Tives the cry—"* Realstance to tyrants is obedience ia peavey | eee ti om ‘wae ot | ed into the arm of the , who, at the moment, to God,” (ihat proclamation which is as old as hrs jury wes, that the deceased persons had died rates quoted in our Inst steamer paper market by violence, committed by persons unknown, and | beseahibited « medium activity, and the prospect is thal the appearance of the ——— oa tthe = bod wh Wi wigan ao — ta raphe murder bed been committed ot least ten days pre- ¢ time, w one wi vious. The gentleman entreated the peuple wat to beer inflated prices Flour is somewhat higher; holders be hasty, avd commit an wet which they might Ore erking $1 Lee ae ot 200 tg — realy always regret, He thought that persons more | Win, uncete >uy sparingly. and seem detorm guilty than thoee under arrest would be fet | the asking pri ff rey Pred out; and begged that the trial might be sliowed to ed according to law, and that the evide on both sides of the question write it in a postscript. General - be yg ene poner La whic opt Gone by 10 have the government and N. t Assembly transferred to Versailles, His amend- ment was written in the following words:—Ac- cording to the acticles thirty-two and three | of the constitution, the sittings of the National Assembly and the residence of the President of the French republic will be established at Versuiliew on the first of May, 1861.” I do not ate ler iw night be heard His remarks produced some im- ing Oregon at $15 60. another is telling the Huxall | the opinion that th eral more, had raised it to protect his face. Zeflerse, and the ovpressed of 1776); and another | think it will be aceeyied. Versailles is, for man; pression on the crowd, and, taking advantage of | brand. perttety nest, and equally 0a geod. tor $t% | cattied off by the Indice, Nensof the racers |. We have hed most. disagreeable weather the cry, M Assistance to the martyrs of Europe,” is but | ambitious men, too far from Paris. * A the momentary lull, the Sheriff and posse threw a Coflee ix declining. and there is « di tosellon | were wither killed or wounded. After annoying | last three days—foggy, damp, and cheeriess; and | Shother form of the same obedience. I: will always | ‘The news I gave you that the encampment at the part of the b In sugars ¢! bas been but at about the rates of our pre- ith one exception, the aales have ¢ wround Uke necks of the prisoners, and, set them for a few days, the ns went below, | #t times copious showers of rain. It has well aigh | S€ & Question how and to what extent that whence they were followed by ptain he broken up the great Shrewsbury camp meeting ance shall be aflorded; but that it must be sub- fifty men, who saye he will follow their trail, lead | | There were yet 2,000 rersons encamped yester- | Stentiully offered is undeaiuble. And it will Where it inay, until he overtakesthem. Lieut Col. | day, and prayer and exhortation meetings were | Po imreseible for any man to think of the Hardee, with force of three hundred and. thirty | belly held im each of the large station tate, with Chief Magictracy hereatter, ut the hands of SSbechsepeceis sir maken ares | Baa ctias kt erm Mgsaras ht | ini ttede of al Satis cca | forth over the cor in different direc- n gal within the pale o! ti a . ‘ tions, above Laredo, and i “y iis which’ wilt | May indicate that the ‘new administration expects Versailles would not take place, though it was still announced in the newspapers, was confirmed yes- terday; and it was posiuvely affirmed by the organs ot the government, that no uel would be given to that project. A credit of 12,557,840 francs was demanded, but it was proved that e sum of money would not be sufficient to the of the expense. Therefore the project wa ting off at a gallop, told them to run for their lives. A few men were placed in the rear to keep off the people, in case they rere retake the prison ere, wod the party eet off at fall speed, the prisoners in the wan at the Hength of the lanats, with which pac Sperm candies be queted they were held, aed the crowd following after, infae | #60 cents per Jb.. in usual size boxes; in 12 lb. boxes nated et the prospect of the prisoners geting beyond , they will bring a few cents advance. i 3 searcely ble for | Many more will be during the re’ b b. And our inf t states that if the nnn t fellow at all the charches oa the breaki of | to Take the tariff the rallying cry of the whi the ministry, and if our Presiden! pen By nn overtshen thems ‘the, gibbet. ‘eau Invuuerie raom Tux Vawazvetan Goin Ra- intercepted by aaah tee wea. + bolas the camp. We learn from a friend whe wiaited the But that is folly. The rally is to be on the chi the Camp de ‘Versailles to try an attempt against speedily have been-called in requisition. But ter- @!0% —We bave been shown some very fine speci- | ‘The Western Texan learns from the Laredo mail | camp, that men and women might he observed in | cient wen policy of pA age egy UI and the Tor gave wings to the prisoners, aed in the race for MEPs of gold ore—auriferous quarta—from the life they distanced their pursuers; end were safely "ner of Yupata, recently discovered on the lodged w jail, where they mew lie, closely guarded, | "Vet Yorvery, « branch of the Orinoco, about 170 aworting their trial miles from Angoetura, or Ciuded Botwar. The We regret to learn that another foul attempt to Specimen of x nchness, and promice California. The tide of tion ‘onger te Rad Gat what to dlic opinion abou to out what in the departments, ovr President will leav: on on Monday next, 12th Tonnerre, Dijon, Chaloos, Macon, band i constitution, he will be forced to invegs another rider, that the India eded, of | the station or er tents, on the earth | Cabivet whic! — Capt’ Ford, to Davis'ofanche, und nuscted a rary | with all. the rigid iy of Gealh® whilst their | BAYE the tevernion of w very few of the in — with a — 4 moles loaded with salt. poe 9 were at oars calm | disinterested advocates of Mr. Clay; escaped, but the mul * 4 rerene, joyous. rs mi be seen | Sidential office rt hed been por dow uD oi opt. wrestling ‘se themeelves, rolling about, General Cass into the hands of some real demo- e = le- destroy ine has been perpetrated in our immediate all the people at the Salt Lake hee , | and calling om God in most pieremg accents for | Ts! Sauluier, Besancon, Bedfort, Colinar, vicinity. On 'Wedaceduy, on the rod to the i® repidly fowing thitherward. A letier dated at | except one German, Who was in se meh al too merey; and'above all could be heard the deep basso | _ It bo the goed fortune of the E jues | (the eity whee he made his tet es Double vt, near the Calaveras Lanch House, . Guirm, i Momitor,” published im Cumana, | Since then they hed attachrda party of twenty-hve | Of the groans and wails of the penitenta. Owing | Som aie ae nized, and to keep them bourg, Nancy. Mets, Verdun, » # young.mon wae fired at from the brushwood; the | S#¥@:—" As soon discovery of the more of | mustangers, uear the corrals of Leona Banco, and | 10 the raiv, all idle and pleasure seeking persons | POt only disorganized, but for « time literally ex- | thence to Paria. ‘The journey was hell paesed through his bat. [tus believed thatthe | Upata was made known, companies of adventurers | Killed even and Wounded mor men had departed, and a solemn stillness in ali ex tinct, watil ae lace of the world und all ite tela | nounced this morning in the French papers; and f cowardly axrassin was lying in wcnbush for a well from the town of Trinidad and from Ciudad Boli- |" ‘The Weatern Tezan, speaking of Wild Cat, the | the above mentioned places, reigned throughout the | Thee nance ly chenged. Mr. Webster has hed | understand from a good source, that hare known storekeeper, Mr ScCleaa, who was on hia Y8l procerded to the gold regions. Senor Dela | Seminole chief, eays'—We lear from reliable | Camp. It wasaday calculated to unpress relic | the chance to be first in the field; and he ix more | been rut to the preiects nnd. bul to or- way to Stockton, and was, at the time of the oe in Gve days, gathered two hundred ounces, | guthority that this celebrated chief has removed, | giously, the most superficial observer. The per- than becomes Ganize everything to eee the President well re- enrrence, at the Luneh House Senor Sarmiento one hundred and fifty ounces | with six or seven hundred of his people, to the | vices ai the eamp will be brought to @ close to- ceived, und io let len be ender the lenesoesion tira: The eine nighy ‘ir. Hebert Collie, who cen | ix three cue, Rovernmeat of Venezuela, in other side of the Kio Grande, about fory'or fity | Merrow. Siions ann general, . Despleable Suserers! Am- ranehe five miles froan Woods and Harti “J . PAY | miles aheve Eagie Pose, and there formed a co- PL FIR Hous men! wi on! ive do LOO Ingold dose. “It arpeets | the Euglich debe ta one yest. The mews hve ‘ect Teng” Wie te urs for Et Paso wo encamped Our Florida Correspondence, Beiore eavieg Paris, «large review of ali the nd ens wefe kept atvank which stood ph a TY and TS “|e ayery they wise alarmed by a sentinel Fort Atari, East ‘Sateen poked tri tm this + Fm _ was r of the ore; during the wight the produced muching in informin, jajor Sprague, who w August 50. ejecte mignone uwee poved Co about GO yards fom the discovery of he. placers of the Californias.” — bmg =! ~ sty thevghe prudent not to have it; and, in order to that there were Indians ia the vice The Army in Florida, and the Seminole Indians. e will make sivene to Brougham, on hie in hower, and there pillaged. ‘The robber did nottake Phila. North American, 200 pity. About the same time a white flag was die obtai the favor of the chiefs of be (ret.coin, which wee teh on th. ‘4, but : whey ort ‘ . | | have been in this country for the last ten | arrival, though cut by him in London when Ame- © ed himeelf arith the duet Prem eo ® of recareres Lav gnome ™. sfauarenes —We pan ee fo months, on an expedition sent out by the gevern- geet boomy Hf lately to defend Mr. Web- theckecomstences connected woth the case, it is id eats rehael Sareiens, his warriors, who said he “ wanted to talk” with | ment te drive the Seminole tribe of Indians from | oe gy arge of servility, frome cous. poy nen : the robbery hae veg pong ty come re a living ye a yee the conmnanting etiese bag ee On learning | here. Up to this time we have not advanced a leat appointment wes hacwn here T weoted epon ar to id ad th the pre- “4 , oa a od whee, ik “rd forthe lat we ver yeaa wading | of Wid oat lings the last sive hey. met, | SPGle atep mm furthering this ebject, tough 2,000 | S&e hie mmortal divcoure Wo” the ehikren of dead to dee apprehension of the offender soslibnte ene at bistantiog exe knocked off the chwine in which he was to be taken | troops were sent here, with General Twiggs at | N° ire, in November 1849. It is as fol- to Atkaneas from Florida, went out to see who it | their head, to force ont the sara, id nam eratiemen, let us do our part wae and What he wauted, Assiay be supposed, Wild | that thie idea has beem abandoned, Jet us understand 1 fan Jone California. fen i 3 a i B » Saw Jose, Jaly 6, 1860 Cat,was very glad to meet hie ietned Major as the great republic of the as consi- m Gea 3 t took . nd | the Bumber of troops have left within the last few | der the mission and the destiny which Providence | pees to vbtain on interview "fate covered with the snod, Hee rat iat he riahed! to go te Eagle Paes, and | montha to other parts north of Florida, and the | seems to have desigued for any and levus take | wee et fan Fefueed} bot alter The fret duy On the arrival there, | residue expect to leave every day. This part of | care of our own cond th: irreproac| at with fi hable af the road i = reve he told the commanding officer tit he wished to | Fiorda ie on the fo over = = = at J 6 Set, “ settle ate omicn south of Rea Ws, ci tates ere with bis tribe. officer refoved to give | of Gulf of Mexico wide of the peninsula. Th f * hie permission ; notwithstanding which , he crossed cowntry i a light sandy soil, covered ‘with pine for netbe Sonnet tame, eae ork ttre: ever end soon afer returned and sta’ed that he | at least 200 or 900 miles over the country, with | times three cheers were called for by Mr. had been over end teen the Mesiean aithoritie some cedars, cypress, and live oak, the most valu. n ey having been interrogsted by % de-canyp, the new "Matha a wR. eer wi told thie gentiermwm that he re tions Maske to,Louis Napoleon, 3. ban to presence of the nephew of the Emperor. Teporte are mede abot the conversation ' ) with the woman, who he saye is very fair, and of y, asthey | COMmely oppeerance, he learned that ehe is the and sleng | “ter Of Lieut. Love or Lovett, who commanded a c he drodynamic caase for train which left Independence’ abowt three yeard responded to heartily and unanimously.j | took place between ty wet ants boos but throagho ta Fr, nod that she was in i te and got permission from them to come over and | able production of the country. The setilemer that Mr. Websters whole speech prov te be inentioned, but tht ieee Wonks aa settle on a piece of land forty miles above Engle | are very eparse. ‘They raise cotton, tebaceo, tchol: Pars, on condition that he would protect the Mexi- Todiew oon rice, coffee, and fraite in. \ihedon® crit Rcates wo “as ban cone wane cans from the Camanches, which he agreed tt’ do | The people are ignorant, and, | might add, cow. My friend replied that when Mr. Webster made He bas sinee been on the other side of the rh.tets | ardly, from their avowed fear of the Indians. The that dinner speech, he thought ‘ned was in a i was attacked by the et her brother wae i negoder of the men were hilled, number ere cartied off i Inciane. tates that her hus. treat ber very well, but the woe are the phenomena ¥ garty w od, Extensive pla Comanches, « wae of high hills o1 nd in the vicinity of th eoks out at of gear President, when he wos ace i visiter to the door of hie parlor nS, you, deat man; I will not forget what you told me. assured that you, your foends and relations, will aiwaye he remembered by me.” The of this riddle hes not yet Leen explained, for ie with the whole of his tribe, and is very peaceal,'* mate in berntiful for about nime monthe of the Lieut. Thomas Meson, of the 8d talery, whik* | years the other three i* all rain, Lis considered cSacon ve Hew Homans a) ‘ eackouns ; on hie way from El Paso to Socorro, was drowned | sickly. Ague and chill the princi . i i . Spon he? ols ve heme aae cage | Maa attempt v0. amin he Tn Grande Tew. Fee om 5'C. 8, Co. Ble Ral ten 1 peek ae ee St thiags, Tam nite wat | Kereleou has made the greatest secret of the wab- the g that four ¢ a0 wilh an, eeon Was u native of Virginia, a nephew of John — ‘ ‘The triamph i ania Ciara, in whieh it San Joge. After | Tans four See re peat srocure het | 'Y. Mason, of that State, formerly Secrrtary ofthe | Anotwrm Narrux 1m Cononass, ny Teuaonarn. | Sarat, io give oe oneal his fates donot | tatincrans Ceule took place nt Marseilies on the slong dividing ride wl Fn aces perfect coutentmeet | N&¥Y: He wae a pro- mising young oilicet. —? sve Dengee (Me.) fae of the En Ty hint | feet wpe any logical’ fort he may have attempted | the Boar tt {Heaths “Toman wure tee taveics ‘ é ——- f wing startling news, w' wi in the Senate, suppesed impradent friends to | by the mites from the Mission Do Krewe Ieerenretic A =A jetter ftom | tine mein We - . 1. is to | by the mob, and the voice of the authorities was in to find yourself b bly ea» | the band of Pieacout Hill, Alabams. under date of the Sih inst, | strange Bewe it Washi oe sat give him the proud name of expounder of the com | nisunderstord by the populace. Generald’ Aasitt, ed from | ®t the peat tr neise » he @ b mise raile life she ia ne ‘esion of | MAtelligenser, dvly 25 a basin more and more the ltr north-wess blast of San nearer the bay. Fine rao. You reach end pase the old W Live end other oak and forest trees ‘The U. & Mote who was on the spot, ‘uttered afew words which chreged the moh, und the row commenced. When = ayor ertived, he called upon the erowd to “perce and io display moderation, promising all legal arana jo defend the interes of the slop The news which hes See laa is of a very pacific order. Board of Will be reumstaied, and everything is mow quset ba fol rome” last even to the effect that a tele- vitution, bi his zeal in othe: | Soe TGs ae nabemapesd teneerteetne eas seerat St Pre. | graphic dexvaich ied Geen feseived at Acguste trade, apd for the assertion of there’ fundasoontel shout % miles distant, We learn | from Weaeht aton, the . Horeee Mann bh trorhs fixing the coodition of mankind, expreicily meetings have been beld. nnd that there | been shot wh'€ making a rprech on the of | in Europe. It hee been out of the Senate that Mr «Cape May. Lorry tolears faribue has he lenses have bres | shies mmigheeiy eteed «ever und shor'ite | uit te'heammtcmren sen seoee Suman L ’ ‘ape May. was ert ve § 5 begin to appear and thickes! Wild oats and itan: 18th inet. whieh mad the thane item pa te Pure teat chen Ce "y Ohe Regro ebiot, badly wounded, and ex- | aseaiinnt. Weed nos thigh the ramos entitled to ttle to ioeeribe Blawelt ow hve tne ot residency ‘t mant grace cover the plain and hillsides, Hyg ponse within o few weeke pooled te die, the slightest eredit.” he hove any idea in his forthcoming history of Gen.

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