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THE NEW _ YORK HERALD. ns NO. 5927. a. SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 1, 1850. “ee TWO CENTS. PROFESSOR JOHN W. WEBSTER 24 very siagalasiy written letter from the Pro- | that of Italy, The young King of Sardinia and Pied- | due Marinari,? writh great spirit by Bellttt, and Interesting from Mi: G jexico, feasor, before death, and several other clergy- | mont is, Unecheatelos ee badly surrounded as Louis prey mat Tbely batlaa’ joenes ft ide CON@RESS—THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN—THE TE. TELEGRAPHIC INTELLIGE:" TO THE ° men received similar letters. N ty ‘and he ought to remember, in bis ”) which was ni HAUNTEPEC TREA : REV. DR. FRANCIS PARKMAN Our Chaaniiga Giciitoames,:.. »-| VR ee pense fone ce terete, tatined te scnome | (Prom the Mole Tribune Aug.) : ” s ’ Mdile. Lind to A: ‘the queen of the even- Great Western brought ug. 21.) CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS. Te Cammainar, Mass., Aug. 25, 1850. wer upon the bodies—-you ore appeared, and in the comlc duet, Per | nals from the republic of Mencia oe jonk The Tomb of Pro Webster— College— affair wi ele ee. tg ed all the py | her rif'ert — with most interesting information, from which we Brother of Doctor George Parkman, | some of tne Boog mee Boor 8S; able termination. . humor of her comedy, whieh evenaway | ®¢lect a few items. , . Fighly Important from T ie tec'ee some lines, oui to be pee nave been publishing | ‘There is no important news from Rome ; but at Na- stage cannot be oo calcd” At the end of | , The extraordinary session of Congress, which om texas, ‘ g om aid upon the monument ow! ples, the discontent has grown on the population, to ind introduced acadenza, which was | has been awaiting the departure of the cholera, &c., &., & - Professor Webster, at Mount Aubarn. 1ex- | whom the maintainment of the constitution had been | almoat Jerague i originality; but, dashed off with | was finally opened on the Sth instant. : soictientgaaad The following letter, written on the 6th ult., by amimed the monument the other ofermoet ond promised, and who saw that King Ferdinand was sort | the ease a! energy that make every thing pass nrus- Don is Conto was elected President, and Professor Webster to the Rev Dr. Francis Park. | iene nothing but the name of John White Web- Seem, F miaiog, bets pot) Pomrenewnt, During ba ad Lage ed pleased (dpc enone Dom Joss Maria Blanco, Vice President. ° The 8 enate Bills in the House=Oceurrenees man, the brother of Dr. George Parkman, was | The vacation of the University at this town | Which cries of Vivala Constitution were’ uttered, and | baletta were aa elegent as were wonderfully exe- hart te he the address of in Washington, dc. " created much trouble. | and fol the Republic, to OUR SPECIAL TELEG! 5 ‘published yesterday, in Boston, by authority. We | Closessometime this week, and the younggentlemen | srresteq, and no douvt will ba put todeathr or et least | the aut, throughout the whole Of which sigees ber, | the senators and deputies assembled. Its amodel eames teak Tie: had it telegraphed in full for the New York Herald. tau the oie wen’ Glaus rill x weeks relaxe- | in carcere duro for life. "he olaims of England for *he coonded the efforts of Mdlio Lind withixusiotam. | Message (if that term may be applied to it ) dt is | The touse is tied up, and cannot budge ; : I pl ly of Mount Etna were nearly settled at the fect: wonderfully short, dignified, and graceful in com- P, b j expect to BY HOUSE’S PRINTING TELEGRAPH. quite so large as his year. last We cannot enter Into minute detaile about tho | Position, and prescntg forcibly the true slate of the | PC8k tbe shackiet nex: week, and get under way. Bowron, August 81, 1850, The following comparison between the expendi- | In Port though Mr. Clay has retired from Lis- | whole ot Mall performances, which were more | country. Moderate men say that the Senate bills shall pass, and i Selling Weiter was ovtaniunicated to’ tho ture of the city of Cambridge, for common school | bon, it appears that the government desire to enter | tha: d were increased ‘All the journals unite in saying that the war of | they can command sti " re py Tran- | education, and the amount ‘derived from the Col- | into arran, t with him, and j@ the affair ofthe | by the encores. the Presidential canvass wages with fiercer f Tea neorryhorte sdbebees a) ee ap ae iad a oa po = orice to the purpose of instruction, | “General Armstrong.” It is to be hoped that no war | ¢! than was ever known before. oil Fa autently asserted that Charles J. Jenkins, og ‘having been authorized to make it public by the late brit act ae Everett, in a speech before gg —— Fado ight misunderstanding between vielonosllo}) from “Der Freise! igh fjoeriaiehave aslied in: @ protest (ane sie Sues “3 me been tendered Mr. McKennan’s place. uit 4 versiot . é Tbs 7 of y Pa ee Mr. t:verett aaidthat the annualexpenditure of News received from Madrid. giveséwo different facts | “Zauberfiotte,” “Won paventare,” which, having beon | {¢#4) against the election of General Mariano | cg west of the weer ee aa MF, Cooper com PROFEAQOK WEBSTER TO REY, DR, PARKMAN, } ; pel he | which will be interesting for the Uni expressly composed tor a dowed with Arista, as dangerous, unpatriotic, and even crimi. | "are most of the session egainst him Boston, August 6, 1850, | ‘ity of Cambridge, for the support of its achools, | Count of Alcoy ls to be Seealled and replaced by ence, | compasty ie heyond the reach of the majority of ive, | nal. Many of them publish incidents concern Mr. Maxwell is untouched; only a te ! ” exclusive of the building and repair of its school f = Be se | Se “these Malle rio. “T Uuion ahi ee replaced \ ui Rev, Da. Panxstan— ther Governor. Don Joré de Ia Coucha is about being | dern singers. In both of these Mdile, Lind created a | the private life of Arista. The Zvait d’Umion, | mations were made— wae eis houses, exceeds $20,000. The whole annual in- | sent in the place of the Duke of Mirabal, and will ‘ae furore, and was pnanimously recalled. The last, an | which may be considered neutral, says the pro- | Morrisburg. Be eae Sea I 4 come of the fund of the college, licable to the | the shores of Spain ina short time, accompanied by | astonishing display of flexibility and , was en- | test of ei; x independent journals against thd elec- b cannot leave this worldin the | business of instruction, not including the profes- | several men of wat carrying more troops; ‘The discus. d in an uproar of applause. Bo delighted were the | tion of Arista, and the contra protest of the liberal | _72¢ S™thern mail having failed three mornings im Peace of mind for which I pray, without addressing | sional and scientific schools connected with the | tion between France and #pain, relative to the nomi- Hence that they became selfishly exactin, papers, have both appeared. Never have we seen | *¢cetsion, Fitz Henry Warren has gone to investigate you asthe head of that family which I have so deeply University, #. less than this sum. In this com- grado general fa Uevane, Bas bow a alee tecek teat tae ne ae the press of the country in such a state of agita- | ‘be difficulty, No mail agent arrived with last snjured and afflicted, to make known to you and them rison ildings, cabinets, and libraries of the tation, consented, and repeated the jay tion. There is a perfect fire of aecusations, of re- | night's train. The Southern mail is in » wretched ison ¢ neral in that part of Cubs, but ‘the bitter anguish of soul. the sincere contrition ana | University, as well as the cost of school houses, SMten thas tks eohies ton Dvd with ti criminations—not to mention charges of falsehood, | condition. i alt) with the clearness of a bell, | and threats of violence and of vengeance. They Seenteene om en ners comminnan® | saemeinn on libraries ‘of the ‘schools, are ex: | {ition that this public, tanctlonary will never inter. the aria with augmented power, taking the extreme penitence cluded. othi point and certainty, will easily | Weuld amuse us, were not the:position of aflairs Important and Interesting from Texas, &8 soon as the | high not of Europe shall have settled the question, | and wit! afiliction under which you and they have boen called | A new hotel, called the Brattle House, which | and seat thither o commercial rai i | be credited by t ho have hi - i to mourn. does great credit to its proprietor, Lyman Willard, | withdraw from Leresarel the site at Rp rer tamhe mdibaee ee fer perv pode tata myles ey pho New Oneans, Aug. 27, 1850. T oan offer no excuseifor my wicked and fatal ebuiti- | E89, has been erected this summer, near the col: | will no more authorize him to take it omny oscasion, | | We miust not pass over another encore, and one not | pression of public opinion, but were we necece eeea | The Texa# Governor's message was referred to w ice of jabiten, but what you siready kaow ; notiwould | leges. It is beautifully situated on Brattle square. | | The question of the Germanic confederation, in spite | #© arduous to comply with, which Mademoiselle Lind itsuch, we should sy fearful and awaited us.— | 0mittee of both houres—13 in the Senateand 21 iw ; a : ' . ~t of all the“ babbling” of the new: 1 obtained. We mean a very beautiful ballad by Mr. Xsompt topline had neve, uth oot | handed rom andi felly Whit i cated, | ema ta wcmlaaion. Anat r ncaresmet | Rede, Rube teak” compre parent for | AH Putas role fo mare no eof | ‘he Mowe The tat rtlton. aed vnanimouly Oy ‘three last interviews with your brother, f | was In project for the re-establishment of the old diet | the accomplished songstress, and sung by her withim. | fect their object, and these violent commotions | the committer, was as follows :—“That Texas wi per rh aah eR baa op Some Hed fabs Sret-clase hotels of Frankfort. A ‘ol will be presented from the | Mente approbation at the London concerts.” Malle, | may end in civil war. 3 maintain the integrity of her territories at all haearg = anything but grati ‘ins tein Cea Ist to the 16th of December, by the cabinet of Vienna, onunctation of the English tongue 1s exceed- he Notocioso del Panuco, of Tampico, has @ | on the 16th, « bill was introduced into the 8 ness and friendship. That I should have allowed my if pat and will successively b: pted by Bavaria, Wur- | ingly pure and articulate, with just so much of accent | long article on the subject of the treaty between ws te au ‘feclinge, excited on the occasion, to have overpowered The National Assembly—Commission of the Prorogation— | temburg, Saxony, e after w! it will be submit- sages it a special and fascinating quaintness. Inthe | Mr. Letcherand Senor Gomez Pedraza,which the thorizing the Governor to raise five regiments of 1 000 me 80 a8 to involve the iife of your brother and my Louis Napoleon end his Journey—Banguets—Plots— fof 23 ‘ruseia and the German Union, by which a sem- iad style—which can be said of very few dramatic | say was written by Clayton and sent out. It isevi- | men ¢ach—the pay same as the United States troope own: temporal. and eternal welhasn, I. cam, oven nev, Kings with and withayt Crowns—Affairs in Piedmont— | Mant tas einen mate at psnls peeeaes mo! at, Boon fo ethan ———- by fea sede Haye? yee dent the Mexicans fear the power the Yankees will | of the same class; each volunteer furnishing his own “ at Tseng het tooth a ae ve, | Rome—Naples— Portugal—Spain and Cuba—The (er- | sia will sign it, In order tu prevent a division ta ‘an snestness in her. manner that hes pe obtain in their country, if once they, Archimides- | horse and arms. The bounty, half a section of land for hardly realiz receive forgl man Union—Denmark and the Duchies—The Turkish | od thus will end the comedy. You will see if | Culiar charm, while the few eadences and ts like, obtain a space whereupon to rest their fulcrum. | three monthsservice; whole section for six: ness in this world, yet I cannot but hope and bulieve 7 oe Sh SEP ait dated re ty ‘Sesonohea tae toskel tions for twelve months, ‘The Governor is authorized iu. | steamer on the eve of her departure, and was for- | t° command personally, t right in my prophecies. mo I Ambassader to the United Steter—Political Gossip, $¢ | * ‘The question of the Dughice will find, also, I hope, a | and character to the m you will think of me with compassion, and remember mete to Him that wi Panis, August 15, 1850. fatisfactory solution. The “question, by itself.” had | 600d ballad singing, by 10 are exe! Ghee kan oaedleen earn bitag The National Assembly have separated, after a sos- | been spoiled by the spirit of proj dism and revo- | st¥ely devoted to that style of art would dowell to | warded immediately to the eity. It was only eight | Captain Love has returned from an exploring expe trom . iy ) | sion of fourteen months and six days; andif you eal- lution ; but now, when diplomacy interfered, the | *tudy and profit. Nothing could be more hearty and | days enroute, having travelled more than 1, dition up the RioGrande. He ascended 1,400 miles with what joy would I lay themall down could Tin the | 00 tne 10 2 re i question will certainly be cut in two parts. They will | fPontaneous than the encore awarded to this ballad, | jeagues. h a keel boat, and : east atone for the injury I have done, or alleviate the | thine the prc boa eh bp arin cy til | proclaim the suseralnty of Denmark according to the | pblch was accompanied on the piauotorte by Mr. | “jon Louis dela Rosa has demanded permission wit * Seaterleet cpl apittom ane pee te whiner a0 2 rogation, you will see e “ reatier o: and. at the same time, the historical | Btnedict himrelf. ‘ i i practicable miles, aftiction I have caused; but I can now only pray for | itary of Fremee have, but: clghieee, wecehe se ee pationality of the Duchics. I am under theimpres- | ,,The last effort of Mdlle. Jenny Lind, and. because | [0 Tetum, to Le pe rT ae F Washington | " ndien depredatious, murders, &e,, continue. ‘The forgiveness for myself, and for every consolation ana | !**°" sion that all the chances of victory are for the Danes, | the last. perhaps the most captivating, was one of | being unfavorable to his health. He is one of the f Diatainh pln Weley talent of sont tansy, occupy their position—from the 15th of November, | who are openly rupported by Russia and Sweden, bet | those delicious Swedish me which, from the lips | Candidates for President. Pepers notice several skirmishes with ourtroope. In justice to those dearest to me, I beg to assure | 18% to the 26th of May, 1862. The three last days of | the power ot violence and brutalforce isonly recognised | ¢f the “Nightingale,” may viein characteristic brauty | | ‘The war in Yucatan does not rage so fiercely. Batrimonr, August 31. 1850. »T beg 50 ;| ‘sa ocaldteg hove hoes salehod tr the negli. | by Azevolutiopary principle. ‘Thereare rights justis- | With the national melodies of Scotland and Irciand, | The heavy rains have calmed the ardor of the ie Cal iaaiin eeila etenaaiteah ‘ you, and I entreat you to believe me, noone ofmy | O00 0 a) A clare parse sued from the Almighty and history,which are the foun- | !™mortalized in history and poetry. The song of the | combatanis. ne ve arrived to-day, leaving one family had the slightest doubt of my entire innocence | SP0' \ pati Sout, bp ogvakinhh m aa oe] dation ot dy pasties and peopl und canuot be destroyed Bh ene he waleh, Sg nce ene ered The Minister of War has received a letter from | Still due. s le) Unes. make \- ~ juen' i i it Ve ” up tothe moment when the csutrary was communi | before the end of the comedy.” Even the mountenesrs | ed that diplomacy will soon interiere to areone tite Peculiar call by means of which the focks ars | yoy ati hacen Fgreme genau hcg prong utr parts somber ate pratt cated to them by Dr. Putnam. That they have your disappeared without uttering their last cry of Vite fe | settlement of the Danish question, brovght together is tellcitously finitated, gives Malle. | ¢y — F Sarre Sie PRS, BARTO: | will be. belied with entishetion by the ettinnpiet vsincere pity and eympathy, I fecl assured There is no | Repubiique Democratique et Sociale. In short, during | | A Turkish ambassador, you have announced. has | Lind scope for indulging la certain eaprices of execu | Slaves, have entered the country. They pre- | texas generally. this frst period of the ression, if you wish to point out | embarked in the United States store ship“ Hrle,” om | tion that, amidst an apparent simplicity, present more tend it is their intention to locate themselves | “‘o,, whole country on the Rio Grando was seriously family, towards every member of which [have always | what ureful law han been voted by the Representati his way to Warhington, where bi than usual vocal difficulty. The exquisite intonati there. Among these Indians are one hundred and elt a greater degree of respect and regard, than tha; 7%, will be unable to discover it, and pinks will pe affair Polative te tie eeigion at the fort of Mesmetiase, with which the quaint tabcevel alluded to was tovent. eighteen Seminoles, belonging to that war-like alirmed by the daily occurrence of Indian outrages, otwhich you are the head, From more than one | ‘0! everything is but a sketch, which will be revii situated just oppesite Rhodes, which has been postu. | *!y taken, and therich expression of humor and arch- | people who held the United States at bay for years, A part of Capt. French’s company were attacked by have received repeated acts of friendship and kindness, i fed 8 possible; and it is to be hoped that it will an by sae koverument to establish a neu- = —_ oe fre ys ne hp ey of vores and cost them millions of treasure; the others are | « party of twenty-five Indians, about sixty miles from eTTANCAN see. a i ] forwhich I have ever been, and am, most traly grate- | ‘The commission of the prorogation assembled on | Mr de Lumarti ed at Toulon on Friday last, | ofthe story. thoroughly enchanted the audience, A jp ben Glen eced wish te beates’caty. | Corpus Chrietl, and two of the party, named Sullivan Lal. Towards yourself, in partioular. have not oaly | Twesday last, in order to pr vie agro age rg tonm ined afew days at the hospital | Cemoiselle Li zeus. The whole frontier country has suffered | *®4 Wilbargen, were killed, and another, named Neill, iy own feelings been those of the most sincore regard | Ponta oLehitty-nine members, Including those beloug- Ith, was allowed to re-enter | {he 1ano, the uproar wi — pe allie greatly fromthe incursions of the ‘Ayach dthe | ## dangerously wounded. The Indians entered aad guetitnde, Dot dreryinBNibedt”et my fouily has h ghetto y AT te ‘ fic once morecame back and tip, | Camanches. Henge, it is not remarkable the | Corpus Christi, and stole 9 herses. The citizens of 6 tors. M. Dupin, the President (Speaker) of the flouse, | Mr, Terte, the Minister of Louts Phill ull continu mat tT , < ‘oxas were petitioning the Governor to raise aforce te felt towards you that you were their pastor and thelr | left Paris last night, and bis reat was taken by one of | imprisoned in Paris, having finished his time, was | PiDE lightly the platform, resented Rereelf at the | PO? aederogpe per pen a at the vicinity Of the | trer the thalane. _ friend. Often has my wife recalled the interest you the Vice Presidente; for it is understood that the com- | released on Monday last, and allowed time to " i miusion will always be presided over by ene of them, | remainder of the fie to whic he had been cond bea teen just iy, Bvery breath was held, | The assassin of Don io Burros had been | pare raced te ants ans the message of Governor took im her, from her first becoming your parlahlon 7 h ie lest a single drop of the “rain of melody” should be | condemned to be hung. 2 and often has she spoken. with feelings of dvep grati- | wal always » nprecat wy their deliberations ; | The order of the comminsion is, that twenty members ibarine, niece of the lost. | This time dile. Lind sang pastoral love-song. | ‘The cholera had appeared in Tampico, but as yaa, corn and cotton crops of Texas promise large coin atthe int ; iw gentlemen, one ter of the Duke Michael, | *° full of wild t t , of the influence of your public ministrations, and | ything interest- ¢ one noe Mien > yet oe famed or ‘ ravages as ceemiese. A Speman toes secahes jee Fraicvity at ‘of your private instructions and conversations, aud of | ing takes place, Of course, it will be for you and the | The French’flect arrived at Cherbourg on Saturday | Be) but when. flurhed with triumph, she rore to take | (1° Shp iad cays th fe4 bey od then great damage world her i Sruz. The§ Eco del Comercio eays there is great | we: your direction of her enquiries and readin, | readers of the Herald. last. and willremain there to wait the visit ef the er lea very Longue was loosened in eheers, every J t 4 ; - sufle Cc the enor. related to her religious vi Our President left Paris on Monday morning, on his | President Louis Napoleon. palm extended to beat against its neighbor. in honor flering in Vera Cruz, in consequence of aoe ia thas gral daiags wenld a! " vere storm Was experienced at “— West, but ‘and admirable artist who had afforded | mous price of flour. ‘It is proposed that a vessel | B¢ serious damage had occurred to the shipping. These oi wey to Lyons, by the way which I stated to youin my | Chernuschi, the Italian refugee, arrived at Mar- reoalled and referred to, as having firmly established letter. At the last aecounts, which wo received | seilles on the 1th inst on board of a #reuch man-of stostian teldiagesaans. «9 wen seatly | be a5 ganas ones to Kew Criosas to marahase Bout, ‘The Cholera, the mail, he had rexched Dijon, aud had | war, and was allowed to go free on shore ; ich can be sold ut acheaper rate than at present. the religious faith and trust which are now such sources ry indifferent reception, Ae the eneep- Mr. Louis Borg vice-consul of France in New York, of Miss Lind has been in the highest | The authorities of the city have forbidden an ex- o. 6, August 31, 1860, of consolation and support to her, aud our enildre tion of that of the public functionnaires. who had ut- | is bere in Paris, where he eam the affairs of the 8h mn rtp nde ~ nner port of flour into the interior, as the city requires | There have beem mo cholera dvaths reported during nd every dust of it. Besides the high price of the | the past twenty-four bours. The weather has been ure, it war questioned whether he would leave ae Adieu, = BLL. R. Mette crowd named ea Theme | article, it is dreadfully bad. All descriptions of | voler, and it has commenced raining for many letters had been received from aeleeennees 7 ree. Sugar is above the purchase Mount Venvow, Aug. 51, 1860 ince. b; Jenny Lind at the Liv Phitharmonte, | ¢*¢Ding in Hope street and Myrtle street, whose pro- | Provisions ore the province, by which the enthusiasm was eters oS one pgp " * | longed cheering, ax she proceeded to and from ber | of any butt There is a cull upon the go- | we are in hopes the cholera has diss Asto myself, nothing that has occurred hi tered the warmest ories in his hon-r. Previous to his | brothers Montesquiou, at St, Louis, ened those fevlings; and altboug) those I leave be! me may not meet you without the keenest anguish, trust you will exonerate them fr y part icipati 7 “4 From the Liverpoci Chronical, Aug. 17 carriage, Was an enthusiastic attestation of her popu- | vermment to do away with the duties upoa foreiga in, of knowledge of, the father's rin, up to the moi Bled: ond’ Sectaree’ with ueontatty thet enay eoetd | _ Thotrst of these long cmdsageriy-entielpted Rettvale | istity. ‘Zhe a wpaifected character of senay | produce, and allow it to enter free. There seems a | SO cd#es are now Known, Thave mentioned; and may you remember them in pot pay apy visit to Louis Napoleow. Such a protesta- | came off last night, in the splendid pew hall of the Phil- t the rehearsal, where she mingled | proepect of famine on the sea shere. 8 - your prayers to the “ Father of the fatherless, and tion was oulre, and of course it was blamed by all | harmonic Society, There were upwards of three thou- id indulged in all the ino ‘There were ramors of a pronunciaments in the Railway Accident, the widows’ God.”” | thore who knew the fact; but, leaving aside its im- | fand panels semenss including the orchestze, The | Prot we Jon a fal may mye amy vm cepital, and many of the military supposed to be Ownso, August 31, 1850, I beg you, my dear sir, to consider this stristly a | found’ Sal wipoeer wis wer bedcee to tne tromaene, euty euch os only l be bas no idea of enshronding herself in the celd | *PS8eed in it have been ordered to quit the city | The express train on the New York wn pow rmality and lofty dignity which artistes, infinitely | ™mediately. which leaves New York at 10% A.M, whi lees gifted, #0 frequent, ———_— : . #8 6 equently ape. The Southern Convention at Macon, Ga, | FX About & mile from this village, oame in contact The following are the resolutions pa the | With @ two hore team, belonging tos Mr @. W. Holtea, Southern Mass Convention, recently in session at | Of this place. The man driving was thrown from anes teat but little injured; the horses were dragged « , That we approve the resolutions and ad. | dittance, one being killed and the other badly injur ot of the Narhville Conventh No damage wax caused to the train of any momeat, private letter, and by no means to give it publicity; at ‘the same time, I will request you to make Known to . Bar - the immediate members of your tamily the state of my nister of the Interior, ery in Pari Fee | as the Lora Montes Acaty —We find the following feelings, and my contrition lation. was presented, by Previous occasion ©89 | in the Assemblée Nationaie, copied from the Bulle- Sliel exety dondallina “Gin , With the crors of Commander of the Levion of ‘oo oall to watt 6e ‘beilitant an Sanmntly, a that con: | +m de Paris :—"'The tranquil quarter of the Valin | Beavjon was on Sunday throwa iato agitation by | js Napoleon is accompanied, in his journey, by the eters of War, P orks, Agiicultars, Com- tl hi england, perhepe in E Utul edifee devoted to mui sing may be vouch- | aber of your family, | jtuetriow safed to yourrelf aad to every erm ‘Our liberties. | of attraction was, of courre, t b | Wel, thur goes tne Germany and Engl ey one of the most striking incidents :—Madame Lola | them to the cordial support of the people of ¢ | aud it proceeded after a few minutor’ delay. J. W. WEBSTER, | [cannot pars im silence the two banquets given by | failed, since the beginning ot ber triumphant career, | Montes had tehen forfifteca years a mozoifiernt Resolved, That im recommending the peopis a acne _* “S| the President to different corps of the French army, Whether apnownced in the divine cause of charity | hotel belonging to M. Kosa. She caused it to be juiesce in the application of the Missouri Fatal Accidents, MAILS as they were marked by very curious incidents, You oF offered as a simple medium of public amusement, to | furnished with extraordinary splendor. "Turkey ine of 36.96 to the Territories ot the Gus dramesau — | will find in the Days of Professor | 1!8u festivels Webster. {Prom the Boston Journal, Aug 30) During a great port of the day betore the execn- tion, the prisoner occupied himself with setting aside litle memorials for those few friends ia . with & recognition of slavery south of that line. we propose that acquiescence for the sake of | ‘William Smith, a resident of Sixteenth street, New the peace of the country, and the preservation of the | York, was killed to-day on board the sloop Leeds, of Unien Ponsa ag < Reselved, That it is the constitutional right of the | Tr°%.0" her trip UP the river, by the fall of the gail, citizen to be protected in the enjoyment, in the public | !!¢ lived about an hour after the accident. The sloop | territory. of any property whieh, by th 4 at this vi ewepapers ibe details of these preto. | bring together the crowd—whose virtues are cven ed 4 ing which eries of " Vice Cimperewr mere dazzling than ber geulus, noparalieled as that la parm yo tn mmnayg Shere pe ons aur Twideries!”” were uttered | —abd whote successes have thrown completely into | ments during ; TFN ie name dniges Tcan judge from | the ebade these of every other voealist of modern | &2d Tare furniture w ofa tradesman, w times, The knowledge that Jenny Lind was on the | *educed by the re jon of the great forte point of leaving these rhores. not to retarn for at least | the romantic adveotorer, had had sufficient con! a twelvemonth—that some forr-and-twenty dence to give credit for six months, On Sunday, after her second and lat per the day on which a large eum fell due, the furai- | State of which be i# an inbabitant, be is a the bedy, which will whore charitable feelings towards him, whea he launched on borom of t presented himself, bot Madame Lola | ©¥; 80d to witbbold from him their protection, is to | on the rloop wae gone, he might hope, LHe selvcted a number way toa distant, though a triendly country him to eal a at the end of the week, | @ebar bim of » constitutional righ Hugh MeCarty, of Breakneck, was dr the event with tenfold significance and int Di cco! " band elved. That the admission of California into the | morning about 104 M., in art sveb a distinetion as Jenny Lind’s last public appear. oD ghee Has ah "he OF her - and, ba Union, with her pretended organization, will be the | in the river. His body has ance In England should have been accorded to M Uy Met D leave the money, uring this | panetion of the mort unjustifiable aggromsions of in- | - town, In the face of munificent propositions from the | tie Madame Lola made preparations for leaving, | trudere upon the public territory. on the rights of ff > ond sore ve “e to be sent ov hd remove her | teen sovereign States of this Union. | . ' mitted an ¢flenee towards the cofistitution. The delibly recorded an the brighavet page inthe musiesl | goods. he upholaterer, iotormed of this, hasten- Resolved, That the territorial policy of a majorit One incident, which eeemed to affect happily the siost elenr point of all this, 1s, that there is @ well or- easels of Liverpool. With Mr Sudiow, the nctive and | ed to the Villa jon, and found himself in the | ¢f the two houses «f Congress x fo. prevoat. foreves, = spirite of the prisoner, during the interview with his ganized Napoleon conepiracy—a plot tocarry onthe intelligent Secretary of the Pbitharmonie Society, and | midét of the confusion caused by the removal of | the adtoticion ef another slave Btate iato the Union | House of Ff epresentatives, my be worthy of meutioa For several pavois—the elected of the 10th December, 1849 This with the cunmittce of that rociety. who, with the in- | his furniture. A great uproar took place, ond the” | *bvert the rights of the South in the public turrito- | BY BAIN’S ELECTRO-MAGNETIC TELPORAPH. | of his books, and wrote in them the names of se- veral perrons towards whom he wished prees some recollection of past obligations vors, Ile seemed to take much interes’ « y to the enthur by « bottle of Burgundy, and a dish of ¢ is very curious to see how silent and pater been the government towards men who were #0 mnch iu opposition to the laws ofthe country, and had com- great metropolis--the modern Babylon—must be in THIRTY-FIRST CONGRE FIRST SESSION = months they have been in the hcbit of reading the organized society, whieh is named the ~ Association of fntignble exertions of the xgent of Mr. Barnum. sue- | Commissary of Police. some | a bolish slavery in the States; Pidle to him in bis cell, taking the chuptere of the the 10th of Becvmber,” ere ditors, "whe Pe git tle me} re oan tan ment which was establiched Wasnincros, Augast 31, 1880. 2 1 nd members of the Legita- New Testament in regular course, without skip- military m ived. “ toan engine of attack and THEE TAN MUNSON + tee a . mbiy, § unéderdtané thet § wow tf going on, arrived. Among the creditors was M i bei i of New ¥. * ping. ‘The chapter which thus came up yesterday, doe. they would Oo lermodistety armen eee Jacquand, a celetrated painter, to whom a large lavite those wh {Me Saracen; (ual of Now. Bem, ented leese and Was read, was that exu'tent and consoling chapter, the 15th io Panl’s First Epistle to the | to offers olution, requesting the President, if aot sum was due fer portraits of the lady. Surprised pee before they perpe inthe midst of these Spe for flight, the pons of all sorts ot remed| 4 to which ® poople | incompatible with the publi i vor of the ambiti mm caw je interests, & Corinthians, in which ocenr the words :— Seah cemeee Op Oe tas L te ogees ledy wee bet Gimponeeeted fore staaie inctents che } sing’ nts Ain reeultof the mission of R. R. Gurley t “Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood with succers.. The Orleai That Jenny Lind hae agreed to do thi netended that she wae disposed to pay. that her p That should the whieh It | pe pabile of Liberte. are n ss paved poe cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth plotting, each on thelr side; and whilst t lly known; and Monday night will, if | Eooband hed sent har the money tor that purpose, | ‘sil become the duty of the G Pee |e oe ne corruption twherit moor, too met at London. at the fret communion of the Die ben still more memorable occasion than that of that she had lest the key of her cash box, Tretion of the last Legislature, to call a convention of | files of the State Department “Behold, | chow you a tysiery ; weshall not all de Faris, duriog which ceremony it is eald that the yesterday evening. = | ithe begged the creditors to wait fora moment, it, Pecple ot Georgia. to, consider of the necessary | Onjection was made Py " “6 . Lind, for 0 + measures of eafety to the State, it ia the opinion o sleep, but we shall be chang-d Duchers’ of Orieane atjured Protestantism, and en ut not eatisfied even eeariee eee and. | whilst she went fora locksmith, but neither lady | meeting thet out Senetors aed. Reprossaratives ta | THe TRRRITORIAL mute hileg tered the vein of the Roman Oatholi fh, the lat. | which slene would suffice to shed a lustre on a / jC gerne pba ge fd ft. to pay sical performance, the Philbarmonie Society. resolved | BOf locksmith appeared. Madame Lola had en- oe dae As ie shall 4 rt im every way irreproachable.en- | treda vehicle, which was waiting for her in the + should immediately return to their State.and Mr Canren, (dem ) of Obfo, moved the House go im th their constituents in consultation and se- | to Committee of the Whole on the #tats of the Uuion uch measure , at ¢ of Bordeaux, Count of to render the con: N tell whet 4 a host of t tte nd her. Signor Belletti, Avenue de Ohatesubriand, near the Barriere de | . p primo hasvo at her Majesty's Th I'Enoile, and had disappeared like » shadow, with- «4, That the territory claimed by Texas to he | nd take up the territorial bills, Disngreed to n incorraption, this secend pligrimage of the le in conjunction with Malle out saying when she Would return.” within ber boundary, is her's, om every princigte of | THe PaivaTe « - A ve pete oy pad lg = be ene I a | Mr. Dassen, (dem) of North Carolina, unvuccess ead Gin mort pt pocagpiad gray med yee vy tae tes Axenicay Smrrixa rx Liverroot.—Pureuant | §: mand of portion of It ' folly moved that the Houre go into committer on the al to the lete orders of the Dock Committees, the geword in one hand an Isane Webb, Captain Cropper, and Tusearcra, | coming the dignity of the nation is grossly im | Ceptain Turley, went into the docks apprepriated end eapnot and will not be approved or sustained by | to the American trade, but such was the roll of © virtuous and enlightened people. as been so long private calendar brated rongstrese, tality, then shall be brought '~ pass the saying that written, Death is swallowed up ia poe “© death, where is thy sting t O grave, where is APPRoPRiAaTions. the Indian Appropriation The House then thy viewer | fs by no means | the seatwhen the gates were opened during last Resolved, That the mersage of President Fillmore to Tite cding of desth is vin, and the strength of ein the mearstirontier | confined to this country. but extends to Germany, | Friday's and Saturdsy’s breeze, that these geatle- » strongly totimating his determination. by | AL PRosenirTio8 ts the law P of France is a which may 4 Itely, and France, where his compositions for the | men heuled their ships ont of the dock, aod went report made by Mr. Stanley, “Bet Gushote we Oot, whieh giveth us the vic~ « future iull cf incidents, Time will prove it | am p= Lh a the aad are generally known ead | into the Waterloo Dock for safety —Liverpool the oor Lord leeus Chr.” eorreet joroughly appreciate y “"TpSeralacr ecomed tweed tmpreceed by those: | Wate ur tltr é Loo before the hour announced for commence. | Chronicle, Aug. 17 errant in the constibution of ln this city ume incidence, which hud, without calewtation on any Brivis axe Avr ety of the constitution egal to ancver one’s part, ‘nm this chapter to be read at his last The rettlement and winding ould be investigated at t of interview with bie family, and on the last day of his earthly existence. He recurred to the incident afer the ioterview, with very obdvieus pleasure, and with Mozart's 4 sempeor has bern referred to the Mast: is government holding the Jone. on the petition of Known duct of Atsuee | a8 Chaties Enderty ‘ (whig.) of North Carolina, replied to the . yesterday by Merars Fitch and Meade, Rerolved. That in the emergency in which the State ae hg ‘with the general | who bad condemned the | sitorial character of the y Ball proposed eapi- consolatioa tal was £1 000.000, in 10.000 ‘100 bh. Bue of T ie placed. by ber dhe: ow yy De a cenenpe of ton Asse oe Ly comive calis of £8 per nd with the ent. che. bat the sympathies of the people of | sarenetie romarten es v0 faapee he resurrection of the dead, so in dishonor” extensive conspiracy was discover- eds the company constructed and equipped the | a, and will have their ald and suppors in any | pop rence in elections. by mbents under ou" ” : Nes, and ite ramifications led ritish Queen and President, which made several voya- adopt to her honer. her pro- | the last administration. Having concluded, the qaee end “te weekenes. from that city to the north of France; but. iu er between this country and the United States; but yg ws tiom was about to be put om the several propos [Prom the Boston powers were principally at Valence, and other cities , ot Jenny Lind— which Immediately followed ¢ latter vessel being lost. and no profite being made, | forbearance | pending, when After being then dew t- rem of Dr. of the Depertment de la Drome. For the Inst two | The appenrance of the “ Nightingale” was the sl the company gave up business and sold the Britieh Mr (dem) of Alabama, moved to lay the Webster were placed in the cell which he had weeks, the eyes of our for 0 demovstration that ars description. The be ‘were made upon the shareholders ae, whole rubject om the table I with the rume previously called, The motion was a to—yeas 82 mays 96, 0 lately occupied, and kept watil pat overing, when were removed to the residence of 'e understand that bis death wee communicated to the fomily yesterday afternoon, by Mra. W. H. Prescott, sister of Mra Weiter. Rev. Dr. stood up to welcome her, and such a volley of cers as rent the air war, perhapr, never before heard iT share, The petitioners within the walls of ation Thessivo | 15s Yan thet Ae age A Deslees | we towards ” | J the £60 per share bares each. It is now je FO wd aah, to mabe thoce pay the A5 ctths exciting question which led to ite : order that those who bave paid | convocation by the people should be known, aad if of Mr, Staxiny offered & resolution requiring the Speaker to iseue bis warrant to the Bergeant-at- Aras to arrest Mesers. Ritebie and Sengstack, to be brow;nt before the bar of the House for contempt Mr. Bewe (whig) of Ohio, offered mend. " reeitative t | the writ returnable om the see Mon- Potoam was nt when the communication was from “ I Pari itable share may be reimbursed, | a character to require it. be reassembled ber meat . The jt d the i lige with fictieg clatme the ereditors Resolved, That we dina Of the mencure known emend: sa 14 nage Tale feslgection asd Christen fonese j eivable charm, in eoreams ond oeapa to distribute among them fairly the ool aeete that | asthe Clay Com conan intrinate ae sod | 106 saga ag funeral boy it is said, * place on Sun- it ay even better than before. The FS exe. | Temain, amounting to £650. Chronicle | we adoption Secnrbed Copp re “ wth ueetion Toourred on Mr. Carter's rubattae te om sa 7 1 Stanley's resolution 0 whole subject > a i ted -pe cited ia the family an a” Mont j thished the intonation exquisitely pert ond gence. eltee of somiatervention, oplesios i. | committed te the mleet committes, with instructions ubure. Rev. Dr. Welker will officiate at the | {zutbful. The cadens at the eomeluston was one of sect, Rev. Hoven | Interposes to rever a portion of the territory of Texas | {n? yincharce of thelr Important duties funeral. [Prom the Boston Bee, Aug 31 Ballou. morning. See eC ree tee meneame be erceien, aad | ir. Wratisies, (while) of Svan. moved to lng Ge One circumstance red at the close of the | ee ee ape eteen ; Rev, B. B. Bry promotion of free States thereia , it Interposes t9 wae Sean abd nays rerused, and the question waa tae interview of ae qo bet KY one LJ Free Chureh, Monroe street; Rev. BR. Soares Gatien, weed Red formed 0 ution. hem hy'svining rots and decided inthe 0 ee 4 di i on jay evening, ines it | . to lay the ea! h trygei's doubt that the family when they left the re: La Pen street ; Elder Darr, morning Tory, while Nt admits Caltfornie, aa ri ‘oe asf Doctor that evening anticipated seeing him again, — tas 5 arene Cy the Advent Oburch, Hester street , Fider Burn- by . me ia) ~ at bee —= SS LeMay Syd one af the dere + ter of Agricul iy the 3 hd TY Jateal Oathoge, Crosby street, Rider J.P. Wether, tape pare pesey Same} 7 Oyen eamandment, desire to remain a longer. They were very te had My re), of "ee A . . morn. | #04 unconstit: poliely end Kindly, informed that the hoar for eukeed , ° nhtee ivr st aden | som. Becotweg ; Rev. Mrgthempers, y resstation te d Mr, §Anére “will be your eweet, . decided tw We mer gobs "Mr. And = by the miateter of the 0 4 the go- i ia pa wae confused for an answer at fall Sreandal. In consequence of . the | Tt may not be shat, exttees, ee anewered her that it woald. Biehop zonl was confined in the nricon of Fener- | dile, Lind hae tm rising Profersor Webster made no de- trelia and no one can tell what will be the iseue of that hae been pint tip said that feared tbat the P: in the face, tailed confession to go before the He be ny ted Ite mach fe Soh talhed freely on, the vobjert of the murder, ou Nnow Rew terrible wold be rach rtate of (hlogs borome the ogee aele, Sod ot’ oaks dlgiins ieiealy,” Only imagine the churches shut, the more- | whieh water. # s BE 28 ii j i i i # FH Fi & i : i ‘