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aueeive | a , = = = = = —_ = Whe Reasons vw )) (orelgners eannot under- | 'he same moment, the servants rush upon the Eag- | they expected, and others were totally unqualified | We saideuch tourists were the irast valuable. ‘She Mexican Indemnity. stann Country. \ishman like an avalanche. If the three call for for the sobor and responsible work of reviewing « | They are so ; for if they would write a book oaly fo Se ee ee It may be asser's |. with a degree of confidence | the same thing, and there is enough only for one, nation’s work, character and resources. Now, | to amuse, let it be in the unpretending form of a oF 148 Unive Staves, in Uononnss ASEM BLED: our readers would almost laugh in our face, if we | fashionable novel, and nobody will suspect them of |, The memonal of Issac D. citizen of should ut ittotheir candid sense, whether such | any very lofty» otive, asageneral rule. But atill, Frere ig people are qualified to write about America; | such works, when well written, are valuable. onder i whethe. they-are likely to give an honest, impar- | They ate.even usef', vwrtiou'arly in this country, | tant rate n tial account of even what they saw through their | where the fire of life burms it) » ceaseless, all poe ee & fol European spectacles; much lees whether they are | consuming flame, and 0 little time iegiven for po ap | _ which cannot b:!ony to most declarations, that | the Englishman is sure to get it; forthe: few books have yet beca written about the people | his tastes and meceasities knows that he ‘will not of America that at¢, just-—rfew which give the | dispute the bill. He is not so + if be is» stranger @ correc: {:¢W of the manners, the spirit, he is eareful to appear to be igaorant or even the: insticwtiows of the country. If proof | upon the subject—with the real value or the regular ‘were Becessary {© sujport go bold and yet so self | price of what is furnished. He ia, on the whole, ot : evident a charge, i\ite enough could be found in | apt to show that this species of information con- | likely to lend us eyesight, or furnish us facts, or | leisure and reflection. he wrote to an agent in Washington to ascenain the admissions of ‘hose authors themselves. | cerns rather the duty of his steward, courier, or | meke up for us conclusions worth having. ‘The seson'i, and higher class, are naturalists, Rabe 2A A al = ; Amongst. them (!—s0d they are now numbered | valet. I have often observed that, at the table| We have no disposition to revive old disputes, | whose works are always valuable, and always ia- | Mexican Hyenjum, eoceyt the crafty by thotisands—i: 14 be hard to find half @ | d*hofe, all over the continent, it is no uncommon | nor to talk long about what has now been pretty | teresting. If we had space, we should like to | and ee i i fe 28 ‘dozen, if we exce -arliest, whose names have | thing for the Englishman to be made to pay just | much given up; and, indeed, the whole scope of this | glance at the many European writers, trom La oxc pores Re Messrs. Riggs for inded with sho): «orks t0 oblivion, who have | double the price of everybody else, where every: | article might seem, at first sight, to have bee more | Salle down to Professor Lyell, who have opened | treme" nde, ane ime Uarin for what ay- Beencarefui io i us how much pains they | body fared juet alike. Englishmen, therefore, con- | appropriate ten years ago than now ; for this short | to the world eo wany brizht pages of the natural | ment of the United States, dissatished weit sheer took to ead ev: that had been written on | gtitute, in acme reepeets, an exception to the general | period of ten years has worked a great change in | history of the new world, where God seems to ote, enae $5 rey the lee ‘instalment through Ameri¢a and its ;~«', before sailing for the coun~ | proposition we laid down in regard to society. In | the style of thinking and acting towards this coun-} have treasured up the chiefest physical wonders of | ite Mini ah Se Se geedlpe Srey rrr try, and they have sonnet invariably followed up | travelling, he is always sure tohave money at his | try, by Europe and every poor devilin it. America | the globe, and lavished with the greatest profusion i yhich he could obtain for bip drafts, this important «coment, by saying that sub‘ | tanker’s, and his banker is always expected to give | has made more progress, during these past ten | the majestic works of hishand. They are little i ak momnorialite offered to the late administra- | sequent observ. «\vineed them they knew | him an entrée into fashionable society. years, than Europe has made in huadred. The | read and less understood, whit” all the circulating | tion jeu sages tae cent preasinum, for aoseptiag Little more of the «\‘¢ © society from all their read- But the society of America and its race of lim- | whole tone of the European journals has changed. | libraries of London are thrown into commotion by | ment of the ape eta rey ee ‘one veclared that they knew | ners are quite another affair. The one has no » ‘Gat be esteemed valueless | more in common with the other, than his Gracz for all useful pv ‘rom which they who ap- | she Duke of Wellington has with Richard Cobden, ply it with the gr care ‘receive the least ad- | or Jefferson’s gunboats with the victories of Lord advantage; and y«1, «\.v making some abatement | Nelson. America is a republic, becoming more for the partial buinoy wth which succeseive rivals | democratic every day, and the majority have their have regarded exc), 0" \¢r' performances, we are | own way in every thing. They always have had, not quite certain (ho: th-y are not all right. What | from the morning the sober Puritans of Boston flung We are contemplated under different aspects as a | Mr. Dickens’s ‘ Notes,” to say nothing of the ge- | with abatement of interest .n the latter case ; nation. Our diplomacy has changed its basis and | neral perepiration which started from every pore of | it was agreed that such an offer on the part of relations alicgether ; and a vague but all-inflaen- | demoeratic America, even to the Five Points, af- | Mexican government would be socepted, and tial and all-pervading image has come over the | feeting boarding school misses in Troy, and old | to enable the govemment of the United States to mind of Europe, of a vast, and gigantic, and illimi- | maids in Vermont, poets in their pork cellars, and Ry the money at once, and thus save to the United table power rising out of the western ocean, which | senators drinking their mint juleps in the groggery ogee the pearding, jairTem. which, caret with promises to become the seat of empire, which is | under the Capitol. But such works are read eas Pont del "of della La ge, amounts to ly one slowly leaving decayed and crumbling Europe, to | thoroughly by those men who do the thinking of the ‘With this underetanding, your memorialist re- J | hb B, y' . ach one has thei "yer to say of every other, | the tea into the harbor and burned good King George | found for itself a more firm and endurable seat. | world; and although the corps of their readers is ae a March last to the city of Mexico, we think it jurt o proper to say of all; and we | III. in effigy, down to the admission of California; | For it is wow reduced to a demonstration that will | small, it is the lifeguard of humanity—the “forlorn genecement by which is authorised, as the doubt not the: | European reader who | and we think it likely this will continue to be the | machort time be self-evident to every observer, | hope” of the world. agent of that governn.ent, to allow to the United sits in his lor d reads carefully and | case for some time to come. They will, moreover, | that this country will be compelled to become the | And then, there is the last and highest class tes four and a half et cent re jum of ex- impartially eve that has yet appeared, | have their own way in every thing—in making | asylum of order and of power, as well as of liberty. | of tourists—those who combine with clearness, and pa ees d be bose Be arn on this now - subject, will really . Jaws for banking, and in makiog laws for society, | There is no confidence in Europe in the permanen- | analyze with honesty and truth—whose hearta are | United States; and ‘erme rate of six per pom , know very little + hout the Americans, and | They will elect their own presidents and their own | cy of a single institution, and there cannot be. | with man in his progress through the agee—who | annum interest for payment in advance of the & some instance sly less, than when he | lady patronnesees; and these, be it remembered, | There, revolution, or anarchy, or death, is the des- | have ao party to serve but truth, and no country money becoming ra ee Luisde la 04 unless indeed hv v 'y in want of infor- began, | were the very objects they had in view when they | tiny, and it is felt to be the inevitable fate of every | but mankind. These are the mento whose writ- United § States, is wnchidrbed bythe Mexican, -~ mation on the eturt fted with the discerning | cast off the mantle of monarchy and put them- | nation in the old world, There is now going oa | ings we are indebted for whatever we know of the | vernment to receive and receii the money | derpate spirit of a philoso) ‘ad, In the one case, any | selves into what Cobbett called the “straight jacket | an emigration of power to this country, as there world in pest centuries, Theirs are the writings bay pets rue, and duly notified thereof tilted tame aemslprtneene ike oe es notion of an upiac ‘otry may be better than | of democracy.” They could not do just as they | has been fer two hundred years an emigration of | Which, above others, enlarge the heart, and | Dy [8 government. ‘l in here, unless some! m ‘ i nen morialist furthe: , being ad- | takes place, until I beat from you. none ; in the oties,\. wold be but another illus- | pleased under the British crowa, albeit Lord | liberty. When the Cavaliers of Virginia and the | Make 1 beat Kindly for the irace—which have so Viced Be bie necnta ce Wiasbnnton, tect ic tight |’. Lean your singere fiitad. > TDi MARKS, ‘tration of the tro: y's rsally admitted, that some | North said they had done 60, and they rebelled, and | Pirgrimsof Piymouth leftthe old world, they pluck- | times—which have inepired confidence in man, the | be desirable to have the meme ratified by’ | | 2-0 As we will unt require any banker to edvance, men are so consti" {hat they can evolve truth | set up a republic, fighting seven years against fear- | ed up by the roots the tree of liberty, and within | child of the universal Father, erring it may be, | the Mexicam be session of the | orion of this contract, n money to carry it throu, r ag rth rt i of abeudies | 4 and often deceived; but still struggling on manfully | Mexican Congress has been convened for | wad ID MARKS considera scoees from a mass of absurdity; | ful odds, to prove the earnestness of their words | itself were contained the seeds of power. There against darkness opposition, ‘and untruth, every- | Pose; and your memorialist believes that the as- | statement of the two instalments and interest due by as the ae juces wha hyo sure of ar- | when they issued that noble Declaration of Inde- | was more vitality, there were elements of a strong- | where the same. J ® | i cent to pe tae gwd ot — arrangement by be the United = riving at the tre’) »* | 9", when all his witnesses | pendence. It should not be forgotten that the only | er and more permanent empire for generations, Ne labored argument ia needed to show that | Mexican wi luly certified to BF) ay, 19ST... » 0 - - 2 iadcie™ ‘senane have told noth: » And yet, we would not | object the Americans had in that memorable | on board the Mayflower, than she lett behind her. fenders on pa Sir caeeanee stein 4 goveroment of he Unica Rue tee Ore oo the doth May. 1802 = Nas eae + «+s + «8.000.000 have ventured + 4d sweeping an assertion | struggle, was to do as they pleased in every thing— | The proof of the pudding, according to the old say- | harriers of oceans, mountains, and verke ah, It will be seen that this arrangement Proposes Interest 4 years, at 6per cent perannum — 720,000 against Europens : had we not held in re- | a freak which had been more. common among | jng, is in the eating of it. Any man who will read | that have separated man from man, deserve to be | that the government of the Uuited States ff $7,200,000 serve some pret’) » reasons for our conduct. | kings than ameng the people. Victory, at last, | history for the two hundred and thirty years termi- | esteemed the Guthors of whatis yet to be seen in oa nen inthe Vaieed Sexist, duly. Deduct 4X per cont, to be paid to the U. We think we for the prevailing churac- | secured the object they were fighting for; and they | nating next December, will find reason enough to We wont oan yo oe ee eee. due to that government, and allows to the govern- pe Fog arene. a iy - . ys 312,631 6 ter of these w their inutility, in sucha | immediately began the difficult work of organizing | adopt this conclusion are deservedly reckoned the best of authors; | Ment of the United States four and a half per cent ‘ mG manner thatga « der will perceive it to be | civil and social institutions. The only rule ever | But this is a diversion, although its practical use | that, im the estimation of enlightened criticism, fy odvacs te webreeke ie —— pret) arene tenener ees Ro easy matter > » good book, or a just one, | proposed among them that has always been acted | will appear in our argument; for we have intended snk Ate Rarely 9 be separated from great histo- | T) UEWMEt testander the contract made with the ; cl I. D. MARKS. about the Ane ios Chere are two classes of | up to, has been the greatest good of the greatest | to show that the opinions of mankiad about this - Messrs. Baring and others, which was referred to . ‘ difficulties to over » effecting this, either of | number—the only test of strength being the ma- | country huve changed, and consequently those | WEATHER IN Catirorsia.—We have been Youeriay v. the Chairman of the Committee of | The Recep’ ae which is quite 1» enough. The one exists | jority. This is the principle, and this the spirit of | outrageous, stupid, libellous books, that were so favored, by Mr. George Rowland, of Sacramento nen rates ee Gotett pe Ce ees ot On Saturday jast, Amin Bey, the Turkish Envey, in the country tations, and people ; the | their government, their inatitutions, and their 60- | much the vogue ten years ago in Europe, have | City, California, with the following table, showing | |; requires no advance of money by the government | W4S presente by the Secret of State to the Pre- other, in the chu (he writers themselves. | ciety. Whatever has grown up contrary to this | ceased to be palatable, even on the other side of | the range of the thermometer for the lest three | of the United States, until legal and proper acquit- Sanbichengtebed yale sail wo vet beeieee First—The cou 4 institutions and people. | principle, has been suppressed the very moment the | the water. The palmy days of the Fiddlers, the | days of June, and the whole of the month of July, fance and eee a ly following is « translation of the address, made ‘We believe the untry where the traveller | mass of the people stirred to contemplate itsabuses. | Hamiltons, the Halls, and the Trollopes, have through whom ‘this negotiation has been made. | the Turkish pengudg® by Asia Bey, on being in- from Europe 1. ® the same difficulties in | fy this way, alien and sedition laws, national | gone by. Their race has been completely upset re ee a ¢p. ar | Your memorialist further represents that he has pdneed to Freeecens Willanems y- ited by the giving @ true a) ble account of what he | hanks, high protective tariffs, and other things, by one of those quiet but eflective revolutions 63 84 96 — | been subjected bela as sxpense ead pant tine 4 overnment of His Imperial Ma; aay the Sultan of seed tA peclaty ountry there is no metro- have gone down to come up no more. which is worked wherever facts have a chance. 2 Pr as 4 pre tle great! wth a placke of a the Ottoman Empire, to visit t Gaited States of politan society ve, the capital is the king- | Here is the key which opens to the traveller, or | But it is an opportune time for some retlections 4 100 104 96 | the government of Mexico and of United | America, with aie ot Senet those re dom. Thus it ~ Lato an every day saying | would do so if he ever got hold of it and could ap- | on the general subject; because, however light @ 2 = ss — | States ; that he is now informed that Mesars. Bar- Seng amp ional. wean ae beoeily that Paris is Fr (in is Prussia, Vienna is ply itto the lock, the secret of American institu- | matter it may seem, in Europe or in this country, £68 4 4 64 | elie hoes mare’ Pom ad, en gentler Ihave it much at heart to execute the wishes ot Austria, Rome wed London is England. | tions and society; and no European can trace its | it is, nevertheless, true tha: much ill-wi!l'and bad a. 9 s 7a | the city of Mexios, which is not to be binding on | Y Sovereign in an acceptible manner; and, In these crows f richand poor men, every | operation without being struck with the fidelity | blocd have been engendered in consequence of 6 HH o 94 | them Unless en appropriation is made, placing the | *hovgh the two counitive are so fat separated, grade of socir sented, Barriers, which | with which the Americans have adheréd to it. | the deep injustice and outrageous insults that 70 90 96 — funds under their control. Your memorialist va pron gi 5 te preg Bh oo ab 3 ot go one dreame » divide rank from rank. | Many of the grossest errors into which European | were offered to this country, even by those trivial, bf R rv) hr papa) Hinge gs Byeoy beast tape stad With their exvension, more intimate relations wili Every man’s » are weighed, and his | writers have fallen in regerd to America, would | but still libellous, publications. In referenoa to 66 6 x — | late administration and himself, which hereefter naturally arise between the Ottoman atanding fixed »y " vere censors of rank, ele- | have been entirely avoided if they could be made | England, the mother country, from whom the vast 1 if Poy ® | ing was prior to, and equally binding in Prope fed he ea repeals of sea hew Seria. gance and tas these re a has | to understand, and afterwards constaatly refer to, | proportion of these attacks were made, a deep 5 84 88 83 Srendet Ghiol beobesscake Conon oye sure to now that he has won the approbation of nothing to d: obey aed e ra | this fundamental principle. malignity was stirred up in the hearts of many ‘$ = 3 = | ing and others, and that it is due, in comity to the wipe tem aud wast of the American people, veller broad “ved to litle or none of | But to be more specific. ‘The tourist who comes | Americane, and in nearly all we have conversed as 96 99 a1 | Mexican government, as well as in good taith to your | by he ecurse which he recently nme ss this universal ostracism, He always | from the old world brings his European education, | with, even in England, a feeling of deep disgust -68 108 108 98 | memorialist, that the wishes of that government, nf Cepentoctennte Hungarians, whose position had assumes the b. nigher class, and his pre- habits, and prejudices along with him. He isal-| Indeed, we are sure that more than one -British rT 102 100 91 | indicated im the arrangement referred to, should be | ¢ on ie feelings of humanity and benevo- sre Sewn oanded Aa} nd | z 4 : " “20 él 88 80 85 | complied with. If it be said that the contract with | lence Which at all Limes copay the heart of His tension: : most as distinctly marked as the fossil, and almost | author would find it exceedingly unpleasant to} | 2 = 85 me — | the Messrs. Baring & Co., in writing, binds ~ 1 am instructed by my jovernmeant to he crosses the “yt iron barriers of polite | as certainly betrays the place of his original depo- | attempt to travel through the United States again, | # g 3 orf 83 | the United States, your emowtalat is informed | ¥ peaptemerenpaes of public and private industry society, he giv he coontersiga, which is easily | sit Ajthough he may have been often warned | unless it were done incognito; for at many points} “ 2%. o8 =_ es pes wor Vedio ensued the 7 ston a po erent ny gegen nae ope nited saeesvend % she at ey = oa against it, he is sure to try everything by his own | public opinion would manifest itself ina way that | « F.3 a 1. 10a rt Congrethy" aad he respectfully nameel rene g 4 States, for the purpose of making a report oo the mitted. If hiss sy,himn, or some unfortu- | standard, or rather the standard of the place he | would not be particularly agreeable. After Mr « of 64 96 104 99 | Were notso, the previous understanding had by your | 88@¢. ‘The hospitable and Gtteation> which nate suspicion js whispered;the impostor, | came from, and the people he has formerly dealt | Dickens’ book of “Notes” came out, the Common | “2% 4 a1 va 84 | memorialist with the government of the United | Lbave received from the American people, siace iiiaaiciehavme ery peculiar and fla-grant | with-uplese, indeed, he be what is called a man of ; pth - 4 « 3. 62 86 % — | Staces ts more binding, because the contract re- | ™y arrival in the new world, | regard as so many A the case, ie vded.; for he ina birdof | nosy . “ r Council of New York gave & new heme tothe} « 9% © - = | referred to was made, as your memorialist believes, | CVidences of good will and respect ‘towards my * 5 the worki—a genteman—and then he tries every- | Five Points, and called it Dickens’ row. And,so| “ ® 6 ~ ~ — | without a fulb knowledge on the part of the Secre- | Tevered Sovereign, whose unworthy servant | am ; passage, and v himself away. Through | \pinghere by the Europeanatandard. If heisintro- | precarious is the eway which popular writers | It will be seen from this table that the heat is | tory of State, who made it, of the previous un- | nd 1 bes leave fo take he gpm Opportunity of out Europe th f rank, taste, and ele- | duced into a circle in Boston, it is select of course, | have over the popular mind, im a country like | ™UCh greater in California than on the Atlantic | ye ain Detwrers your recmmarielis Bes od Sst contig’ hoe dsr ga f- 4 gance has be shere pretty nearly the | jixe every other circle, from the Congress of | this, where everybody reads, we presume if the | *0p¢ beet “ | understanding had been. carried into effect ie esideat then replied =~Ia the name of the seme; and b- ager enter? & Certain | Vienna up tothe Forty Thieves. He takesitasa@ | guthor of those “Notes” should visit New Our Ocean Correspondence. arrangement with the Mexican] government, your — government and people, I bid you wet- Circle, be kn. twill be composed, and | sample of the select society of the country gene- | York again, he would be dragged through the | Assasin Odds, memorialist further representa, that formerly large | Come pn Ie rey Bo —Se mes adh el ‘what will be + e He knows when he | rally, or, at least, of that particular? place. And | gtreets by the very mob who were ready to | Srramsure Parcapetruia, Sept. 5, 1350. chante by the pe Mey Z poweebinn Rarm te 9 oe there is in our political otgenisation, our system ects there, . will be ip Rec | yet, | could introduce him, im that same city, toa | drag his carriage, as Marshal Haynau was the | Our Departure—Tuking Leave of the Ptlot—Rat ©. which were brought into the United States pth ren ay and Byieer | Ye eememneeial e Upper Class ey are all congregated — dozen circles just as select, from any one of whieh | other day in London. Mrs. Trollope only excited | Passengers Caught—The Voyage—Lady Pas- | ‘ifough New Orleans and other ports ; that, for | "ulations, or in the organization and equipment re , . purpose jr f 2 of our me! if al ae: or ue ane ithe ° eonyie he would carry away quite another set of ideas of | disgust in the half Puritanie towa of Cincinnati, by sengers—A‘tentions of the Captam, §c. Pad ory ‘and beh nt p that Saas ae race Army or in the Susp ods boeesinpeetoened ts with any disp © y—always excepting, of | the litle town of Boston. some of the peculiar foreign arrangements of her | Here we are, some one hundred and seventy | government has, for many years, had an agent in | YUF inquiry. Competent officers will be instructed couree, that gr vulgarities, aflestatioa— | Now, we venture to say there is no town on the household; and the idea of a Cavaliere Servante | 80uls, sailing merrily along to the haven where | tt city of Mexico, authorized Ae ed up, by £0 oondart you to the dock sarde aud public arse- he may be su ris a stranger, whe has ” continent of Europe of the same size, where the | struck those honest people as quite an impropriety, | We Would be. The heat being excessive below, pnt Pt FS rT hy rection ag fostitutions fer the: : tof of he’ es eee no right there ideal perfection of the | stranger would find any two rival societies, each | This, with seme other circumstances, which Ineed | amd thinking that I could not occupy my time vonning senthh torand fen Venn Once nt the blind and the inipotent, will lady patrow hese important person | claiming to be the highest and the best; or if he | not mention, made her the object of publicity ; and | More profitably than by writ ‘ou a short ac- | that purpose. Your memorialist further’ mta, | S08. You will slong, with opportunities te P , Pp 7 y Tepresenta, | So" ~ : ages aze not co w hallowed precincts of | found two, he would find twenty, which amounts | being pleased with the place, she began the erec. | Count of our trip, 1 have taken my writing appa- @ Brit Mr. Poinsett went to Mexico, there pone gle Ena ogee | my i cy “ Alunack’s—is « The cold civility of taste | to the sume thing. In Europe, every where, the | tion of a sort of European bazaar, intended for the | Fatue on deck, and find myself thus engaged hed Oentess ter the cone one Brisk | @*#mine those inanutacturing establishments, th has excluded «| H offend, and fashion has | best pociety means the only society—the highest | two-fold object of being a renovator and filterer of | We left New York on Wednesday, August 23th, and bankers, and of the agents of the | [dtce end growth of private enterprise, whic been called 1 o hat could neither be re ojyes, the aristocracy, made up of nobles, offi- society, where married ladies coull while away | at 3 o'clock precisely. The wharf was crowded ernment, in Mexico, has been to mono- Lory dh — bled the vessels of the United State fined nor ex: ne Continent we expect | cory of government, civil and military, prelates, | their evenings pleasantly, leaning on the 5 of | With friends and anxious relatives, bidding adieus, lize the trade of Mexico, and especially the trade | 1). 7°0r mumps (ot (he sat ene edneny © such society ith none. A thousand 4 sthileis ta A bs,’ the ‘wtaderd ‘ e° P Te Neenng, arms OF | and, in many instances, @ sad farewell, perhaps | #4 the precious metalas that fs Aank, when in | ‘belt people ail over the: Levant.) You will see Evy Gecatthai bt tah thee artists, and scholars. In America standard | whiskered Messieurs, und doing many othér thiogs | never to meet again. After a most delight{ul | POWer, Was allied with the British merchants and | [Dt bread fields of American agricultae, produc- well red She y describe it} anc of best society, of the highest class, so called, is | quite European in their way, and of being a good | run down the bay, and outside the Hook, of about | ®S*t'*, and enriched himself and them by large ts wheat, maize, rice, cotton, and wbacco descriptions mm points, agree. Theit | perpetually changing. In New Eogland, it is some- pecuniary speculation; for Madame thought it | ‘We howre, we diecharged our pilot; prior to doing | 2°¥¢!#ment loans, jobs and contracts; that your haany in oe eo een we er merc ite as tauch about the | ‘ines charseter Gididiiices bins," tn te Wen sry we vo ate Fa. ood | Which, however, the ship was searched for ‘ stow- memorialiet is informed that seme of the best in- tol og ¢ mountains, end the rivers, and the cassinos of |t vas of Germany as the neem A br oe aflair; and it was uaderst aways,” those gentlemen who wish to reach Cali. | [fmed commercial houses in Mexico have written | '@*€* Of this continent, and be able to report, ne- left f wealth or politics. In the South, the amount of | that she was in need of hitting upon some experi- | fornia ‘with the least expense. Two of these un. | {© heir correspondents in the United States that | C¥ftely, when you retura to the coufines of Eu- writers them» © room is left for mis- | cotton produced and negroes owned. In Virginia, | ment, as the Americans say, of “raising the | fortunates were found, and sent back under the | Briteh interest in Mexico desires to place Santa | TP? and Asis, on what seale of magnitude are take or deee ys ders of tours and tra- | family ; and in New York, God only knows. In | wind” enre of the vilot. How strangeit i, that when the | AnDs uenin in power, und that their putpove, is to acted peat ceed Whe i tibeuae ae ad : p , < ” accomplirh t e velo—and the workl—know neatly 88 | New Haven, the best society means the best edu- | ” But the bazaar was failure ; and the disappoint. | Ret EN®s Yh it SRAtES ytd leaves the vessel, it | Piemonalist further representa, that 10. nao’ ake | country, Mr. Commissioner, every Broper degree much of con’: + when they are em ' cated and the most refined. In Boston, the poor | ¢d proprietor lost all patience with the country. | bound them to their homes, is severed for ever— | P*)ment of the sums to become due to Mexico, | °! Teepect will be paid to you, and, 66 far as de- barking in om nous steamers at Folke- bewildered traveller finds the standard one day | The upshot of it all was, that she wrote several | that while he was on board, there was some liq- | 10% the United States, under the control of the | Pde on us, the wishes of your sovereign re- stone of Dev w when they return t0 | orhedoxy, the next Unitarianism, the third Parker- | books about the Americans, ia whieh it is difficult | f¢tie rey of home, but with him all departs. We | Barings and their aseoci:ter, will enable them | ¢i(cling the success of Your mission, shall not be yards; and, indeed, eR “ ae ' : ¥ ave many ladies on board. who are sensibly af- | S€%iM to place Santa Anna in power, greatly to the | Carpotnted; and I trust, with you, that ita eflect the sare e)« rwards; and, indeed, ism, the fourth transeendentalism, the fifth aboli- | to decide whether the preponderance be on the side | fected by this occurrence. Up to the present time injuty of the Mexican government and people, | 4) Dé & grester extension of friendly and com one of the me whic, and readable of tion, the sixth some other tm, and so on ad inf | Of libel or vulgarity. We have never heard any- | we have had most delicious weather. We are | %®4 Much to the prejudice ot American com tnocepastions dl wate henge OG ame Englich tour vd the channel in hit jis It is probable that the number who, ia | body in Eurove or America hazard the opinion that | nw in the Catibean Sea, very nearly in sight of | “etce and of American citizens engaged in | the republic ot the new world. Amin Bey, you ~ , Cuba, thet far farmed Island of 2 notoriety, | Yade with Mexico. Your memerialist farther | DAVE Seid, and said truly, that hia Imperis! Majes- fe tinent, and suchis the | 4™*rica, put forth pretensions of belonging to the | they thought she ever intended or expected to bt | Tua evening, we inade the paasage of the Cracked | Fepreeents, that he verily believes that the bill | (9: YOUE sovereign, the Suilan, has won the appro- Such te eos aeanceive thet, ite the | frst class, is nt least tem times larger, in proportion | believed by those who knew this country. She | Island, one of the most, if not the most diffical: | "©W pending before the Senate would not have re- | betion of the American government and people, race of its | conceive that, in the | 1. the entire population, than in any couatry of | Wrote solely to get money, and she calculated well | channels to navigate. ‘The vessel ig completely | ceived the sanction of the House of Representa- | [1 pote Hunge hans vesens Ussdiios tat main, tho. gro" taken will not be die’) Porope. As a natural consequence, inthe wtraggte | the taste of her readers. It does no particular ho- | !#8d locked, surrounded by rocks and coral recta, | ont-hachenes vrneatene bea been fully informed: | etnias on the feelings of the humane wad beacvo- puted. It w “ry. gitth drawing | for consideration there is a struggle for the true | nor to Englishmen that she should have rated their prong quovessfelly, bes we have is eoeneh & tients herein tnade tiny be "verified before a com. oY ge fee tig fp me the picture n ¥, to make some spe- vendard of best society ; and the traveller sees, in | Moral eense and intellectual taste so low ship, and as noble a commander, as ever sailed | ™ittee of the Senate; snd, inasmuch as it will be | 4) '8 “ S ere eee cific exceptres vats, where the English | o Vittage, as manny little temples of fashion as | But aside from all such considerations—and ape- | from! the port of New York, and one which well | 27@utly to the advantage both of Mexico and of | (ishosed to ey with political occurrences ath inet ule, the rank of Eag- pata A . __pandioneagh A cifications of this kind are too disgusting to dwelt | Sustains the reputation gained by her in the storms | {h¢ United States, he prays that the bill from the t bern - ol aflect ba the foes of Ss ran i far. to do with their | Bt 40¢# Places of worship for wrangling sects. of the 13h July Houee of Represeotatives may be so amended as | oy cuite oherrrars ahi end well ia ° — a How can he apply his European standard, where | upon—there seem to us to be but three kinds of | We have on board a considerable number of | ', eneble the Mexican goveroment, through its quite observant of all thet passes in the world Fecepticn on teen her oo . it is, for the most part, entirely unknowa, and | travellers whose writings are worth the trouble of | ladies, among them Mrs M. Welton, of New | minister, duly authorised to receipt therefor, t0 re- rghts “While They masse pauespeemaing ts b 2 » a d ™ “ . o1 Ms >) erive the mone % “a te provertia in France, Italy and | everywhere disregarded 1 reading. The first, and perhajs the least valuable, | York. on her. way to a eae of in Mexico, and to carty into cffeot in mead tecke,| ll foreign wars, they nevertheless sympathize dermany whek yy 5 lo Europe, society has gone through centuries | ate thote who write only to anruse their readers; | Marcus 1), Boruck; the Lady ond deophcet the understasding between your memorialist aud | Most deeply in ail struggles against oppre-sioa | money se supposed, of Course, | oF srecemnive agitation, struggles and tepose. The | they have seen nothing worth telling, and if they | Zabriskie, of New Jersey; M the Inte administration. They are lovers of justice, of mii rameate, of aictrenaet ntchaired, red-faced, | © Giment has gone to the bottom, and the foam | hed, they would not condescend to tell it: their | others; iso, Judge Bryant, of C And your memorialist, as in duty bound, ke, _ | humanity, and of everythin coy clove-copped hunt ee hasisen tthe top. In America, to keep up the | Works are the spawn of dulness and ennui; ad yet | O@od, and Mr Flandia, Col. Fremont’s By Bend 'B. Geran, attorney. In explenation of Amin Bey's mission to the\ai- enn ‘ * e Hes Sah, that bi ra chemical image, no precipitation has yet taken | they are sometimes the most readable works in the | Captain Pearson to Warninoron, Sept. 19, 1850 Suskar Mtncrsien Wiganer eater pa plac: After all that has been said, there t no inety-nine cases ou world We do not want to be always instract must demand the vilege here, th — ‘tat lev hagter gees columns of your Widely “extended wait, [Translation } my Ayah ott whiny Le a 4 a “s aristocracy among ws; or, at all events, it ia, at | There are moments, hours, days, when intelli- Moet Excetienr Sin:—Tenae ’ on the partof the Turkish eroment, with t ater pag wiping: gp pein af oe wontd Ba foetus from which only | gence and facts pall upon and cloy the appetite; | gineerert. cdubelebaeen ee al party, “my | to the #upreme Soncamens the following propos, pormer and revourers of the Aumdrioam Dalen micte ate she never takes the | some still-born product can be reckoned on. From | Whem we stop on the road of life, from sheer wea- | acts Of kindness performed by him, during out | Tri. Ie uedertekes that the government of the U, @ | Chore berwere the tee cane commercial inter roubie Wis well known that 118 very mature of things, there can be no aris. | ines, and wish to forget what we have been, and | ‘ip, Which, under crdisary circumstances, could | pl accept the drafts of aleam goverament tet | Rimself tolndece the Porte to send an’ ages 1a vast 0 te of small incomes, are tocracy, in the European sense of the term, in thie | 80t think of what we shall do. These periods oc- | not have been expected His attention and sym. | t+ six millions of dollar: d the interest due this country, for the pur; reterred to. The des on . senceuc pathy, eo graceful y extended to the ladies, wil liver all the money in ad- a . found io for Hg r seonon’: | country for a very long time to come cur often in the lives of the most earaest and buay | forever be gratefully remembered by them, > a at New York. withonly eight per eemt discount, —- ae ein px poeta meal - ~ vy da peptie fall po =f of th . Government, institutions, and society, then, being | mem. Sir Robert Peel was & constant reader of | thr er fs fat so pleasantly passed by them | Stherwhateortel Pe TUxerMes commission OF | ionel, has been commissioned to proceed to the home, or tras . " ; ‘ *° constructed upon a basis widely difl-reat from that | “ Punch; and Lord Brougham is « passionate lyver | {je Recetas ef teams ree reverted to as among | 3g ‘upreme governmant shall dispose of the | United States, for the purpore I have indicated rights of an I he Tt rea matter of | Of Europe, it may be readily perceived that the | of novele written by women. Cowper, who died of | We are now within a few hours sail of Chagres, | ment-t seesl of an pon ebis, Caan gee pote’ ween Pectty ousted inthe corte euten agai hole. Ic isa matter of European wil find it no easy matter to apprehend | the blues, was often humorour; and the author of | and all ate preparing to leave. Aw we shall re: 3 pays to thal of Mesieo, shail be liqut- is Communicated to the Legation as # every day oer a i jontl- | ence the tite of things that actually exists |“ Night Thoughts,” which we never venture to — I will endeavor to write a _ Tht ea diindin tis ence public egentof the Sublime Porte, and may, imme nent, to see F ve largest fortunes and | vioong us But however serious may be the ob- | read after dark, was a rollicksome companion i eT ee cee teeet seaneicthevaptome per eene, | diately or hereafter, be invesied’ with diplomatic the highest roverbial, that where | 1 ies of thie description=and they ate #o great | Indeed, we should like above all things, to lay our |. N#W Yors Finzwen ix Aneany.—Howard may take whatever security It may think necessary | TAK; but the principal duty with which he is & h men pase toad withgold. They y 8 7 gine Company No 34, of New York, arrived iath for the seourlty of ite fands. and shall be exempt from | Present cha is the examination of our navy suc! ~- on, ifit be only aques. | ‘M8! foreigners seldom overceme them—we con- | hands upon one of those dolce far niente books on | city yesterduy afternoon, and were ‘seovived att all responsibility for the collection of the drafts on the | Yards. docks, ships of war, and other establieh cheerfelly ev’ . fay the hey ot | ceive that others, far more difficult, have been en. | America. It would 6¢ really to some purpose, as | landinglfrom the Alida, byfDaniet D. Tompkins Com- vu 4 be ay © a account mente conrected with our militarymarine. [eup tion of money seerfully the penalty of | countered in the character of the writers them. | the Duke of Wellington said when he heard of the | pany, No. 8, and escorted through several of the | Cot end Liberty. Menlve, ish May iio ote ae fA oe le aise lnerornes 9 nd the their nume rer titles; above all is this | ives Some have come to America, and have | conflagration of Mexico; but we are not aware ane | Seer eae, Stanwix Hall. | The com. | Mort Excellent Minteren or tw Trrasvay condition of our preteen Ra Wes the cere in] to the only imposition | . item about ite institutions and le expres that euch a book bas been written about the Ameri- | Ineenpine en —y ing set of men, and Wasnimoron, 24 August, that every facility in the power of the ramen | ence; since ia people expressly ; the engine is of ihg piano patiern, highly fini foment received a latter whie 4 ‘ Laub the foreigner pinoy saony | | to do them an injory. Captain Marryatt, for in- | cans. Christopher North could have done it, if he | #nd « great power fH the evenin Jou, aud I believe it is from Mex: soll uponened ppertent Srenlebenuaenty that nation, « aners i# 80 UNIVeTSAl, | ance, boldly declared, in one of his books, that | bad put om his hunting: jacket and marched out to | the Fire Department of the city honored their gue came in hie private correspondence pon these important hrasches of industry and a certoir blendoess, with any ‘of the West; whi wa with an escort by torch light. Nearly the whole | Being ignorant of your residence, I avail myself of the ec ree | his object in writing was to reduce American demo- | the praries est; where, by the by, he | strength of the various fire companies was conti- | port. and my only object in ow ie that Domestic Miscellany. Amount of reve + wards foreigners who to contempt. OU bay er- | would have found game better suited te so good a | buted on the occasion Ateight o'clock, the you may ray where I can see you to deliver the letter, | William M Stewart, convict Henrietta, Ga cracy to p ‘hera, baving failed in enter. @ ‘ig! hy hor ’ ed at have men: y te refor> happens that as prises they wadertook in this eountry, have vented | shot. Sheridan Knowles oulght to have written | Ce®*on was formed ot the Hose Depot ia Hamilton A a } one ~ to Cee i OO ee wd ae” mail has been sent to the State prion the Eogishm ¢ low estimate Up00 | their gpleen om the nation, like the bad driver who | such « book. We believe he did resist « pretty | vel under the charge and direction of Chicf | “, we ‘Bes, m Oxees be Chess were 100 bentne 16 Maen Celine ible money, on still lower one U70M | Hogs his horee, because he himself loses his pa- | tempting offer from an English publisher, who | and Parker The Howard Company, (the gucets) | Rerexsen Priexn:—I am waltlog shoot mocivndy | Wk tRding the Zist instant, of which 11 were of oon politenees, the most charmingly to- | 6. Some—and much the largest class—have | wished him to “ write a book to use up the Ameri- | Wee received at Stanwix Hall, and escorted to ite | for letters from hope aed trust that the deeth | “UmPtion every hotel, «+ wat, in every railroad | d, like every other tained or made | pression, General Morris, of the‘ Home Journ il,” | of the city seemed poured into the streets thre the twoinstaiments, The Mexican Minister of road in the State of Wisconsin. and, ry iy pou hrough Finance car, malleposty whic garden, and gal- | 5... certain market, they were suited to the taste | got up a benefit for him, at the old Park theatre; | whch the paseed, and the crowd was $ dein Rosa, There were ty-seven deaths in Baltimore, pd tinge veitarn, disagreeable | orine cunsvmer. Tt was necessary to get back | and the Irish trngedian received n remittance | *rPreinily great in State street. The Fite Depart. | to : hewn | Stam Eaginbewn, © ard, not, as we say it | tie money they had apent in theit travels In two | of $8,600, as the fruit of it. Charles Lamb, too, | Dreeided over this fine scene. H Semper, they weeld. be rent Tmmedistaly on vie | gg Cente Jackson hes been arrested ot Boston fr ao duttohave somebody | incunces, at least, it was advanced by publishers, | could have writen an inimitable book of this kind ; | together with Tompkine, No. 8, Toor ars be Outy oo. So peter ofleet in Bee leave it to him, ine refined, well-bred | on the promise of & book; and their books were | aud poor Hood could have written better one, if | Sermon, upon, invitation of vhe Tra) un firemen. ray dar Ofean, ee oo cate thd @eatiemen of F bland, courteous and jared like other commodities to order Some | he would have left off his detestable habit of | inthe Alia ie SS Sr few Foe nae wien |, William Bulloan has been conviated of ” 2 toon pre i on Friday mourning —d/hany Atlas, On post haste with pe SHACCIBNG Ryeuncs NG ICE CREE RHO AL | Were disuppointed in mot Feoeiving that dolerenoe - punning. oer teed we wai mane | Lenes, Mare., and erntgnoed to be bu §, |