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mn wast femed, viz., that of prom: ut ‘Phe World's Fair of the Nineteenth Century, | bibi The Antt- Fugitive Slave Law Convention “the [From the Byracuse Ji Jan 11) tion, or prove wholly unworthy of the great occa- | the German governments, ministerial conferences, | United States. But the moment that a difference sion. F the London Chronicle, Deo, 20. union of fine ufactures. [t would be in common, appear well suited, having been suc- | of opinion on this vital question arises men The Lean et Se claneiticaneet age esticles | Unie? Ot ceeseie cn imamagae sonier which: ieee |. Tit rof the paper was followed by cons | cessfully resorted to formerly in similar cases. of ethoxy them, the arrow material in- an the od of the exhibition, 19 one has | cessful, would tend to dietalahopee ‘udices of those | siderable use. In concert with the Austrian government, we | tereets rod atren, present personal | anne ¢, THIRD DAX— mes SESSION. eccupied a considerable degree ta u ‘on the | whose eyes are yet unformed to color, to develope serene thei a request to all German govern- considerations may outweigh all which result from e yor assembled, and was called to of the commissioners. pri wn the imperfeet appreciations of others, and save this | The Curtesities im Aimed Lind’s Reception mesilate seed their reppeocntatives, to Dresden, Bmore gstendag a view of nal oper at Sution in relation to anti-slavery coll Important bran ot their duties, will be that of nae te fea Er tae oneeian (From the Londo fimvs, Dee. 14.) Per nf tee presmal penne that the (a nbn injustice may be the donsequenee « rege pursuit | Ws laid upon the Table, th owing resolue arranging the productions ot each country in dis- | would not fail to make were the building other- | The Americans. have begun to moralize upod | be opened there without delay, and with maiate- ney really benevolent end, and the direst political | tion might be introduce ce Resolved, That it is the ty ot pes citizens” to 1 ‘natio! . i their own sensibilities. After receiving a popular ~ A — ry} Bae en oe ean cae eng | Wing uunteds it would everywhere DOE 224 per | songstvore with a depth of enthusiasm huhervo con- | hun Diet ie indlsolubles te suocnie revision and | are, im fact, carveedy seeking fo exaln da gbjoct ia the nature of the articles themselves, would be im- | fore, would appear higher, * longer, ‘and more solid. | sidered peculiar either to loyalty or devotion, they | smelioration of its fundamental laws to the com- | the highest degree wise and politic. In other practicable in the short period within which it | To produce tee result ifs essential not to make a | bAve turned to analyzing their seatiments by the | Mon consideration. words, an ill-judged endeavor to bring about the would necessarily have tobe completed. Oae halfof | mistake—parti-coloring may become the most vul- | #id of European commentaries, and have pronounc- We entertain the firm conviction that a, union | great and holy consummation of freedom for the the building willbe oceupied with the productions | gar, as itmay be the most beautiful of objects. it | ¢d @ deliberate judgment on the late display They | will result from these conferences, from which the | unfortunate negro, may be the cause of strife, sepa- of the United Kingdom and its colonies and depen- £ necessary, therefore, to proceed with great cau- | presented Jenay Lind with 804 poetical welcomes | interests of all will derive a powerful and compe- | ration, war, and ‘misery to those flourishing com: ies, andthe other by the productionsot foreiga | tion, to ealealate the effect of every step, not to de | (one of which she was expected to sing herself), & | tent representation, the common welfare of the | munities which promise to occupy the wide conti- the principle of exhibiting thearticiesin | misled by the appearance of any one portion of the | monster bouquet of perfumed flowers, curried by 16 | country receive a wholesome developement, and | nent of North America. Cannot prudence attend “nations” will aot apply to machinery im motion, it | building; but to bear in mind always the effect the | )eung ladies, anda very substantial specimen of | ryinvigorated Germany assume, amor European | benevolence, and wim freedom for the one race, having been considered advisable to exhibit the | building will have when complete aud furnished. | Whatthey term the “almighty dollar.” | What | states, a position responding to ita importence, | without, at the same. time, inflicting unspeakable whole of the articles requiring either steam oF | | have not shrunk from treading a path beset with | they did besides n respect of deputations and ad- | tho sdtisfaction to the just desires of the | calamity on the other ? water power together. : so many diffieulties, and | cinerea npear before | dresses,we need hardly repeat; but it now becomes | jation, without preventing the free and individual ee The commissioners have already announced | you this evening to meet youn Gioiaiotas and to | our duty to state, that by way either of correcting | ction ‘of the separate members of the Diet, accord- | The Relative Military Force of Austria and that they will be prepared to receive all articles in- | weigh any o which ‘the experience of my | their idolatry or vary their entertainments they ing to their own necessities. : Prussia. waded ee the exhibition, teat mey be samt 00 Af | beosberevehinarn may suggest. (Cheers ) If we | have “had her up” before a police court. | “The ‘he reaults of the consultation will then, by the | TO THE EDITOR OF 1HE NEW YORK HERALD. after the Ist of February next, and that the will examine the remains of {ie architecture. of the Rabanne pas! pean. arely.. stages 7 ines consent of all the members of the Diet, to whom Vous Eaaiiaeaiiad peer Se, and Ge bes cei e same t of Mare! i i > P " in their unity in common w: e entrusted the or- q continue to receive the same until the Le ancients we shall find everywhere that in the early judge of that identical name, though the reports of | wanization a developement of the constitution of | Cember, meations the force that Russia might be resist the execution of the Fug! lave law, even to the taking of life. Rev. Mr. Loausn, of Syracuse, was glad to mes come an approach to the rightful jusiness of Convention, as the presentation of the above reso- lution indicated. He wasa fugitive, and would never submit to be carried back intoslavery. He ‘wanted to know the views, not only of the aboli- tiomsts, but of the whigs and democrats, upon the law; and aleo their advice as to the course tobe ureued in the event of its attempted executien. He wanted to know if they would stand by" the fu- gitive in any emergency, and called upon the Con vention to do something that should be felt. Gerrit Suitn offered the following substitute :— Regolved, That it is our duty to peril life, liberty and property, in behalf of the fugitive slave, to as great anextent as we would peril them io behalf of our~ i i has been decided is ili i ef ; ——? is ves. . i bong hay ty benesdived: ‘Rules and a 2 wens fee ct ge aa the transaction are at present 30 imperfect that it Diet, receive their solemn sanction, and be | able to bring into action—a force amounting to} After further discussion, the resolution was regulations have just been issued for the inform | “secondaries” eppeatiag very sparingly We fiad peep women bn ere Dereeee any | made officially public by the administrative power pry Feat ey ime pieces, Russia has | adopted. PEER Te tior of foreign commissioners and colonial com- | thisequally in the remains of Nineveh, Ceatral cpecutstina atime att of tie plaintiffs for getting (to be), as organic law of the Diet. aad I presume he alluded to Prussia. if you think Convention met, and was called to order by the ae etiding a Hyde to ihe Tecoption of ArUnles t.| Americe, of Egypt, and Greece, and throagheat a gratuitous exhibition out of **Barnum’s singing itis Melons spe. £hh mi iy fo ecious master, has | seeag you may insert the following translation r the building in Hyde Park. Among these regula-" rally. We find also | & grat ‘ I ert H u Sioususethe following :-— . 4 pot EE eaprg Eee the secondary | bird.” We suspect the most correct version of the | above-named conferences to (name of govern- | from, the ila a Meo (Cohasche garage 1 All articles and packages must be delivered at the | colors invaded the dominion of she primaries. Biue | story will peqnagenaciny aha planer hepcinedis. | | ment), to which J add the expression of the con- which is a very reliable source regarding statistics; building’ wich the freight, carriage, porterage, and all | and red were suyplanted. by green and parple. | Ia for the concerts conceived themselves de- Echt ope: tats | reer cae Oo Ne Infantry 68 infantry regiments; 14 frontier barges end dues whatever, p t, in the temples built by the Paaroahs, blue, | ¢284 “ : Hi : os i “ must be delivered at the Fare ie wae eevniad whilst in those | frauded of their proper salanes, whereupon they | the distracted affairs of Germany reorganised and | Té iments; grenadier regimeuts; : hepatons of the butldimg, appointed | built by the Ptolomies the greens and purples take commenced en action not only against Baraum,but | firmly and legally settled on an amicable footing | Tiflemen; 7 battalions FDODSIOE, 6 an lemen, 3 ae eae age, | thet places, In those ofthe Roman period, colors | sgninet Jenny Lind, ke hie commerce rant any | by the usual conventional means or mutual con: | Focruie from the as call. fLegurding the mumbet : : i ° J ’ get ence and amicable agreement, an at a A o . n pete) sce ox Ee of wht “gh vel ot the Fey Oe E, eee 6.6 ae tee as lady with a eubpana. We sincerely trust that | members of the Diet ‘will voluntarily hold forth | Of men in these regiments, there are 29 Italian and y y ich they @ produce or of col: many of our réaders may he so wholly inexpe- | their hands with similar federal and Triendly sen- | Hungarian regiments, consisting of 3 battalions manufacture. and, as far as practicable, with the name | we can gather from the few remata3 of color we din the f f litigation, as to leara now, | vit 2am each; the other 38 have 3 field battalions, one-fourth ©, the exhibitor or exhibitors. have, the same law prevails; whilst in Pompeii | Tenced in the forms of angie ot fewal de: | timents. ? Von Manreveve, | C0003 tine 1848; 1 Landwehr battalion, A batta- ‘4. The following is the form of address, &., which | we find the secondaries and tertiaries as the ruling | for the first time, that the neg o! ties Pat do- Berlin, Dee. 12, 1850. eee eect easton of if ae. ph we the executive committee suggest should be adopted | harmonies. In the Alhambra, the blue and red of | Cuments consisis in exhibiting the original missive picts een 200, inela re comipanten ne Pino bey BY when practicable the Moors were painted over with green and pur- | Of the court, and tendering a true copy eet to The Safety Valve of the SHE Ne Beate. vepidter ps ay ppp Sep en Ee, | ple by Charles \. and his successors, and with the individual unfortunately concerned. The Ame- (From the London Times, oe, MS United oo on a cotinine oe ne Cae ee | The worsteffect. In modern Cairo, and in the east | !i¢ans have not yet quite cast off these chicaneries If we were to take the people e at dj ru wert n pan ah’s dLend Pe ber } . generally, we have green constantly appearing side | Of traditional routine, hp bein in a fair way | Statesat their word, ond accept a agcurste : sett nmap Reset wm tion ae fa eet cee Nt teween ene * ***x | by side with red, where blue would have been used | Of doing so, and the proceedings consequently 1 own description of their own con: ‘oe ‘¢ sho! ek aout oh te oie ga 4 ered wdc’ 9. It is requested that every foreign commission and | p earher times. quired that the Nightingale should be bodil en- | at once aseert that a dissoluvion of the Union was | to formed ou! ,000 recruits, c: colenial committee will cause to be prepared and tor- It is equally true of the works of the middle | ‘Tapped. With these views, an attorney’s clerk en- | about immediately to take place. The storm of | the 7th of November. The frontier regiments con- warded to the executive committee. two copies of @ | ages. In the early manuscripts and stained glass, | Closed the subpena in late addressed, in a| words now regmg between the South and the | sistof 2and 3 battalions each. Sum total of the list or invoice, giving such description. im the English | though other colors were not excladed, yet the | feigned hand, to Miss Jeany Lind, and delivered it | North, between the manufacturing and the agri- | Austrian infantry, 380,000 men. | je. year’ Magy had beg 4 — to | primaries were clue fly used ; whilst, in later times, | to her at her carriage window, as a professional | cultural interests, between the slaveholders and | 2. Cavairy.—S regiments cuiressiers, at 6 esca- opera Tp Shy Se Mcgee. Scan, 3. oN B- | we have e variety of shadeand tint, and rarely | communication from Mr, Seguin. This done, he | the abolitionsts—the fierceness of the language | dronseach; 6 regiments dragoons, 6 escadrons cooted Fist Tus So Nemes Be One SMMRGHS SA FO | Maik eenabomeanne Ta aeee allbae {hex | completed the * service” oy mounting behiad the | empleyed, the violent and warike threats in which | each; 7 regiments chevaliers, at 8 escadrons each; “fie: the commission will essist in unloading | the human mind, ever seeking for change, became | Vehicle as it drove off, and displaying the origina! | all parties indulge, sould, Looe induce any | 4 a, i mapeete at prenanee make fing the arricles and packages at the building and taking | weary of the simple harmonies which tne primaries document in the air. As the average number of | one not acquainted with the habits of a people ac- | menis Lp 4 follows: 2 regiments in Ys the tame to certain places appointed in the building. | afiorded, and sought more complicated etlects from confidential epistles daily received by Jenny Lind | customed to live under dnd respect constitutional | escadrons each; 9 regiments of hussars, in course In the first instance, the productions ot each country | the secondaries and tertiaries, or probably it arose | €xceecs 300, there is nothing sarprising in the fact | forme, to believe that a continwance of peace in the | of for: ion, of 2and 4 escadrons each. The es- murt be brought into one epet, to enable the officars of from the decline of art, and the incapacity of the | She should have neglected to open this particular | Umted States was impossible. But with such a | cadrons amount to 150 horses. Total force of her Majesty's customs to examine them, and the offi- | 41.161 who, unable to deal with the primary colors | missive. The object, however, was gained, for all | people taiking and writing, big words are, in fact, | Austrian cavalry, 32,250 men. ers of the commission to ascertain the nature, | i011 0i, pure state, took refuge in the secondaries | that was desired was her presence in a public hall; | their constitutional safety valve. Grumbling with | 3. Artillery.—Each of the 15 corps d’armée has ‘n the articlesofeach country are thus deposit- | and tertiaries, where error in the balance of color | and, a3 she did not appear to the subpwna, she was | the government, disputing violently with opposing | 60 to 88 pieces of cannon—altogether, 1270 to 1300, sibigued to them. cbecomminioners | was lese fatal, although to produce « perfect har. | fOrthwia mpereaea el sa uatice Lpwehs at | Uncy efeGheuapelves a. most: dangerous ect 10. be | non to ine infantry being ih pieces to each 1000 “or Nae ena DO Ge etted | ee, ek en canoe Auta todem ene id i . titled with—all this is but a part, and fortunately a | men in the Austrian ay whe there are but 34 pial committeés, or the exhibitors. must themseltes | doubt much more difficult. Amongst modern ex- | the suit of the afor rtie: 7 t n I uppack, put together, and arrange allactivles. Inthe | ymples of the use of color, we may ce the Royal Ultimately, matters were so arranged, that both | small part, in the result of the life and manners of | pieces to 1000 men in the Prussian army. cate of foreign and colonial productions, as they must | Chapel of Munich, in which blue, red, and gold | the suit and the warrant were set aside, on condi- | a self-governed community. The rush and the PRUSSIAN ARMY. be necessarily unpacked for a considerable time before | F411 the principal harmonies, as fat superior tothe | Yon of Jenny’s appearing as a witness on a fixed | roar appear to unaccustomed ears very terrible ; 1. Infantry.—l4 battalions guards—each batta- they are finully arranged for exhibition, the Executive | 0140) churches of the same city, in which the se | 4ay, Which she undertook to do. On this conces- | the initiated, however, smile, and feel assured that | lion of four companies are equal to 1000 men; 112 bao zengueah chat Se eee = saents condary and tertiary colors prevail. At Paris, in sion to popular feeling, justice itself became in- | no real mischief will happen, so long as these | battalions of the line; 120 battalions Landwehr, coverings to protect the articles from dust, the Chureh of St. Vincent de Paul, decidedly the | stantly mollitied, and preparations were made for | means of letting off the extra heat of the patie saat oe eee rs 2 a President at half-past six o’clock. est Router B. Miuugr, of Utica, by permission, ine troduced a series of resolutions declaring that there was “no higher law than the constitution,” and, in other respects, decidedly * old hunkerish.” The resolution in relation to anti-slavery colleges, reading as follows, which had been laid onthe table at the afternoon session, was taken up for consideration :— Resolved, That inasmuch as sound principles end, sound teachers are as indispensable in our institutions of learning as our pulpits, we rejoice to ynow that under the progrers of the anti-slave timent, there are already several colleges in our try which are opem te colored students and that there are two of those im which colored students find themselves emphatically hese are Oberlin College, in Ohio, and Cen- ce, in New York—in the latter of whick there is @ colored professor, : An incidental debate arose in connection with the discussion of this resolution. Gerrit Smith could not co-operate with whigs and democrats in their opposition to the Fugitive law, because their connection with the national parties neutralized their good efforts. On the other hand, Mr. and Mrs. Foster, and others, extended the hand of fellowship to all willing to enter the field in opposi- tion tothe law. They believed in “growth in grace,” and could not consider a man all devil ua~ tlhe was a saint. Mr. Smith’s doctrine was; that whigs and democrats could not promote the cause of anti-slavery until they came out from the national patties, and proceeded to defend himself’ and the liberty party from the charges of sectariau~ ism. The Convention should send forth the im- pression that the whigs and democrats were the reatest opponents of the abolition of slavery. Abby Kelly Foster was willing to tellowship with all who could help on the good cause. She liked to see: whig pitching into whig, and democrat into demo- crat. She believed that the Fugitive law was the pivot upon which slavery was to turn. A motion to lay upon the table was lost, and the resolution wes adopted. ‘The consideration of the address was resumed. TLDING Frem [state € verry and & ie the ‘of his 4 polished goods, he t perfect specimen of modern decoration in aay | the hearing in exactly the same style as for a con- | emotions are allowed to be fregly employed i yequisien ‘arrangements 105 Wosping tbe articles oe | pases gy some are blue, ah a gold, eed cert. The case was removed from the common | nation at large. % pioneers. 50 to 60 battalions of this force are pro- ‘That portion of the address speaking about the from dust, ete. rated by white ; this church’ contrasts admirably | ball to a more convenient chamber ap airs, but There nevertheless are symptoms attending the | vided with Landnadel muskets. Total amount of | American religion as being one of the great ob- 8. All packing cases, etc., must te removed bythe with the decorations of St. Denis, St, Germain des | Judge Cowles, on visiting the place beforehand, | present commotion im the United States somewhat | Prussian infantry, 450,000 men; therefore exceed: | stacles to the abolishing ofslavery, was loudly ob-- suente, exhibitors, ote , as s00m as they receive orders Pres, and other churches of Paris, in which the | Observed that it was *‘very shabby,” and that | diflerent in their character from those which attend | ing the Austrian 70,000 men. poe ors dens pag a gd pal tend secondaries ani tertiaries prevail. When the se- , —_ Lind ** rose nage @ poor — of the coriaany azplesians of erg ming oo and , > Coat eames cura, 4 esca- : ai | din the best ods in merican courts from such a@ specimen as that.” | quarrel. e manifestation of hostile ings is | drons each, of 160 horses; 13 hussars, 5 dragoons, a ae ea en Pract Daseniioes, sek she pes eeaunibea wile the othe, they on general: He proposed, therefore, to change the venue either | not now confined to individuals in their private ca- | 8 lancers; 120 eseadrons Landwehr lancers. Sum jected to. FOURTH DAY. Pursuant to adjournment, the Convention met at o’clock on Friday morning. C i ” i F ; : : 9. T it lose, miscarriage, . it is ly confined to the |. rts of the building, fol- | to the town library, or the corporation “‘tea-room,” | pacity. It is mot even large classes, or public | total of Prussian cavalry, 43,000, beating the Aus- It seemed that after the adjournment on Thurs requested oh eatielas, on og = So eh gy this, satere. ee Anh for her Sewers but the aldermen’ declined to accommodate the | meetings, or suboréinate bodies in the State, by | trians better than 10,000 men. — day night at 12 o’clock, hee, the Convention in het them, which occupy less bulk than two cubic feet, may the primaries, and reserves the secondaries for her | P¥blic with either apartment, and the case, as 4 | whom the existing strife is carried on. The State 3. Artilery.—Each of the 9 Prussian corps | favor of adopting the address papernies, by the busi- eld pot be sent separately, but that packages under such jeaves and stalks. Jocal journal reports it, was ** becoming deeperate,”’ | legislatures have entered the arena, end the chief | d’armée contains 96 cannon, making 969 pieces, | ness committee, called and another Conven- nize, containing, as tar as possible, she Seen classes of In the decoration ofthe exhibition building,Ithere- | When the office of the Clerk of the Peace was | executive authorities insome of the States have | one-third of which is horse aides ls tion, at which all the doings of the previous Con> articles, nok Ss eaeeer —— ah tL be fore propose to use the colors blue, rel, and yellow, placed at the disposal of the authorities for the oc- | formaily, in their character of governors, and in This is the relative force of the two powers. vention up to the time of adjournment, were re-en= ia sened to dante Kunio pe in such relative quantities as toneutralize or destroy | casion. This was all that was desired. Jenny | solemn messages to the assembled ur Yours, very respectfully, AH acted, and the address adopted without essential, to urpack and arrenge the articles, a:auch | ach other; thus no one color will be dominaut, or | Lind, who “looked agitated, and was in a simple | given expression to threats of dowaright hostility, ne if any, modification. . times apthe Executive Committee may consider advi- | fatigue the eye, and all the exhibited objects will | dress, with an expression of scorn,” underwent an | and have seriously counselled their own States to Scareity of Cepper Coin. The original Convention, therefore, on Fri table, which ticket he will be called upon to produce assist and be assisted by the colors of the building | €xeminetion long enough to give the assembled pom fora tion from the federal Union. TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. morning, not having the address to examine and) on entrace. itself. In house deeoraticn we occasionally finda | multitude an idea of her voice; after which the | We are, indeed, aware that this eame threat is | , An article under this bead, appeared in Satur- | amend, and not thinking it would be courteous to By order of her Majesty's Commissioners, run upon one color; we have a green room, a pink | Judge came down to shake hands _her, and | every year made in grandiloquent phrase, by some | dey’s paper. .The information must have been | their lete aseociates to take any action thereon, (figned) en eeSBY Weare, room, and & red room, &c. It would obviously be | she departed in the midst of an enthusiastic crowd, | one of the State Governors, but the is said in | furnished by eithera pawnbroker, or aprivate cop: | voted to re-consider certain resolutions affir: Dec. 5, Sroretary to the Executive Committee. unwise to adopt apy One color for this building, | the case of ** Milner v. Loder” being left to take | Bobadil fashion, and ought to be viewed simply as | per coiner. The pawnbroker complains that he | the correctness of the positions of the address, to lay them and the address upon the table. Several resolutions were then passed, of whicle we are able now to give our readers only the fol- by b= he Resolved, That as all of us are liable om any to Soi peri, #0 Panes Sines violate our 4 ip ive, OF ‘som oppose cxeention of ty a x oa thousand dollars, 4 civil proc 1@ expenses of 8 onthe; therefore , itis It is algo highly important for foreign aad colo- | where the ts will be of all imaginable hues, } cere of itself. a specimen of the bad taste but too prevalent in all | Cannot so easily purchase it at 104 or 105 for a dol- nial exhibitors to be fully acquaiated with the fol- bonny dhe rngreg roe Tiesastiage on the other | We are rather surprised that the action was not | the writing and speaking of our ‘American brethren. | lar, and the local coiner, that he dare not make lowing decisions of the. commissioners, with re- hand, the perfect neutral white, as unfit for the | contrived as for a breach ef promuse, Which would | On the present occasion, however, the menace is | them as usual. ie ct to the admission of their productions: ocearion, we naturally adopt blur, red, and yellow, | have made the occasion far more interesting; but it | more systematically insisted on—reasons are given I find a letter signed McGaw, in Monday’s pa- 70. No articles of foreign manufnctare. to whomso- nor neat the neutral proportious of eight, five, | Served its turn, and gave the popular excitement an | for a formal separation, the means of eflecting the | per, which fully explaizs the use and abuse of ever they may belong. or wheresorver they may be, and three; but to avoid any harsh antagonism of | #greeable variety. Perhaps, indeed, Barnum | end proposed are pointed out, and distinctions made | Copper coin amongst a eertain class; a reference gun be admitted for exhibition, waless they come itd the primary colors when in contact, or uny unde- | himself was at th: bottom of it, for it begins to | between different parts of the federate community, | to his letter will give a good explanation. Per- ranetion cent a Sane rnd sired complimentary secondaries arising from the | be more and more generally acknowledged that | which seem to indicate a deep seated cause of haps any other remaks may be considered useless; vush centralauthority immediate proximity of the primaries, | propose in this eminently-gifted speculator is the entire gusttel, and to prove that hate, already inveterate, | but | have taken some trouble to look into the the amount of space which cam be all to the pro- | all cases to imterpose a line of white between them, and exclusive founder of Jenny Lind’s trans- | has mastered the prudence and patriotism of very | cause of the redundancy of copper coin, and may ductions of the country for which it acts, and will also | Which wiil soften them and give them their true | @tlantic fame; nor is there much doubt en- | large sections of the Union. The instance of this | throw some lighton how much came intoexistence. state the conditions and limitations which may, from yalue. [i is well known that if blue aad red come | tertained of his competence to provide another n0- | unheppy state of feeling which has produced the on months since, I had to take in from four time to time, be decided on with respect tothe admis- tovether without the interposition of white, they | Vélty equally stimulating, when‘this has passed | greatest effect upon our minds, when contem- | to five hundred dollare, weekly, and had to beg, ston of articler. All articles forwarded by such ceatral wil each become tinged with the complimentary | away. Barnum absolutely formed end tutored the | plating the quarrel which is now raging on the sub- | pray and pay to pawnbrokers, for from twelve to authority will then be admitted, provided thsy do not ooi.e of the other: thus the red would become | minds of his countrymen to his own purposes; he | ject of slavery in the United States, is the message | twenty dollars a week for bills. Your article of Fequire » greater segregate amount of space toed that | slightly orange, andthe blue slightly green, As | furnished them with all their ideas before- | some time since sent to the Legislature of Alabama | Saturday, shows a decrease in coining at the mint. —s p~, A all colored bodies reflect some white rays, the | hend; he created the mania before even its | by the Governor of that State. Such ingens is | It is the partial stoppage of loca! mints,in and about pro- omnia e 48 Well ag of good fellowship in a righteous cause, that we thould unite ourrelves into an association, in eacle of our neighborhoods, pledged to stand by its members in op this law, and to share with aoy of them the pecuniary losses they may necessarily iucur under the a, of this law. for six m they come; ovided, also, that they do not violate > med ‘ai i esolved, That a Central Committee of be meh onde: oe white in juxtaposition, by its superior force, extua- | Object was visible, and he did this, so economically | not the result of mere sudden passion. New York, that has made copper less plentiful. red, Shes 0 Centend Comantiten of exven We ape pe ay Sn por lle, in each oventzy to decide | guishes A renin =e rey a dad we see the colors | Withal, that he actually turned to profit what would, posal to prepare for separation is not the outburst of | C cents is a very profitable business, as one | gern apse Son tn ob aw tna wpon the merits of the several articles presented for purer, at the same tite that the white becomes | With ordinary mortals, have been the expenses of | an accidental fit of ——— bat is the result of | hu cents can be made for fifty-three, | gemorisl to our Legislature pra} ve . exhibition, and to take care that these which are sent tinged with the complimentary color of that against | his speculation. Instead ot advertising his protége, | that concentrated ill-will which takes posseesion of | Out of new copper, includitg all e: . But | enact a law ma! zi are such es fairly represent the industry of theirtellos- which it is placed, thus further heightening the | he made the newspapers pay him for intelligence | the mind of a wary, cautioug, calculating, practical | they have generally been made of old copper ket- t mapping wou! for any man countrymen. * etiect. As one of the objects of decorating a build- | which he had taught the public to demand; he sold | men of the world. _ | tles and pote, which cost much less. Hundreds | or assist te tak: raon out of the State = tovs hen any sheoiay th cook tase’ tien laste ing is to increase the efiect of light and sande, the | to om hotel-keeper the privilege of entertaining him- | ‘+A threat,” says the Governer of Alabama, in | of thousunds of dollars have been made and Cit- | tive trom aver yo lias not hoon proved voto be by tobe a te ee best means of using blue, red, and yellow, is to pes end tek 5 he seosived ment from an up- | his message, caated, that never saw the United States mint. | jury trial, or what is understood to be “ due process of cuoe auhien te place blue, which relieves, on the concave surface; | holstererer for the right of furnishing her apart- | —to employ force by the federal government to coerce t is well known, and has been kept no secret, , ni Chet this comnmnisten-egpelat.e sub-com> ments, and counted all services rendered to him as | the Southern States, or any one of them, into obedience | that thousends of planchets, (i. ¢. r cut ef Congress, or the executive of the | ready for sta ») were made in this city, and irrepressible emotions of indignation. | reported to have stamped at the U.S. mint. ane ea Sn ee Sen ee | Liat Lealled at the mint in Philadelphia, nine sonattess toe aspnghi tom | 804 asked the Treasures il they stamped coppet all dependemce on our Northern brethren. Their re- | forparties which | named. He assured me that they yellow, which edvances, on the convex; and red, eviirely, any communiestion with ey color of the middle distance, on the horizontal | #dvanteges well worth the purchase of any clever | t? the behes Sathoried Padividuale; and should any sueh bead- planes; the neutral white on the vertical planes. | Uadesman. He knew, in fact, that notonety was | ‘lon, ex dressed to them, they can only refer it to the central Following out this priaciple on the building before | everything with his countrymen, and that there body. This decision is essentially necessary, in order us, we have red for the undersides of the girders, | wes no edvertising van in the universe equal to oi io r the round portions of the columas, blue | Jenny Lind’s carriage. 72 The Commissioners do not insist upon Meike hollows ot thecerital, Now it is necessary | Its painful to think of what this greatness must | spect Tor us is the dictate of interest, aud not of feol. | did not stamp coppe a rity inany country, they must declia: miitee, or a commictee of other suitable powers to ap- pear betore the Legislature, during their present ses- sien, to urge upo! members of that body the enact- ment of such a lat teny laws which may St necessary to protect the liberty of citizens of in the hollows of the capital. J for anyone. Igave hima | At halfpast 12 o'clock, the Convention adjourned pam Ng Ce Fes ag eg A fw gene- not only te put the ceveral colors in the nght plases, | Come to. We are touching on a mysterious and | ing. Our resources, agricultural, industrial, commer- | Written statement of aames and lnoations of the | sine die. aes Z rally be the mort satiriactory arrangement, but it is but they must also be used in their due proportion | perhaps unfathomable subject, but we believe no- | cial, are almost incalculable. Our cotton, raw and | planchet makers, with other information, which vasable that the sanction of such authority should to each other. thing is known of the fate which awaited Mr. | Manufactured, would give usas much ofthe commerce | was cent to the Solicitor of the Treasury at Wash- Sxpretion or a Scnoot Giat vy a Manrigp im all cases bo expressly given, and that it beheld re- = Mr Field, in his admirable works on color, has | Barnum’s former prodigies Where is the woolly | of the world as interest or avarice could desire. We | ington, and that officer returned it to Prescott | Man—Annest or THe Srpvcer.—A most sponsible for the fitness of such articles for exhibition, shown, by direct experiment, that white light con- | horse! Where is Washington’s nurse! Eac er pny Sa oA Hall, eq, U. S. Distriet Attorney, with instruc. | Vated and villanous case of seduction, and quent abduction of the victim, has recently come to light in this city, and we are happy to add that the perpetrator is in a ition where he can tions to arrest the coiners, who got the hint and ere. Let us avail ourselves of our exbaustiess | Dave since been a little more shy in their opera- we should abstain as tar aa | tions. One of these T makers got a new and fer not sathorising the exhibition of a greater sits of blue, red, and yellow, neutralizing each | of these objects created in its day a sensation quantity than can be ecceensen in iw sPeeton other in the proportions of 3, 5, and 3. sf will | rcarcely inferior to that excited by the Swedish | he; mee ve the prosuctions ef the county is quest readily be seen that the nearer we can arrive at | Nightingale; nay, as far as that goes, the New | resources, ‘To this Colonial and fort ign productions will be admitted : H d . this state of nentrality, the more harmonious and | ork Herala plainly confesses that * pasteboard or | porsible trom the use of Northern manufactures, Let | machine, made about twelve monthe since, which | escape punishment, though we doubt if he ever ae ae eT cree livht-giving will ® buliding become; and au exam- | Navarino bonnets.” had * exactly the same re- | ushave our own carriage makersaboemakers, clethiers, | Would cut out thirty-six hundred dollars in ten | gets his full deserts, ‘The circumstances of the jonere of Customs will consider ali imation of the most pertect specimens of harmo- | markable eflect on the public mind,” as that now | batters, Sc. Let us give preference to our houre, which would leave a profit of sixteen-hun- | case are substantially as follows:—A man named ers or who purchase their g: B. Shaw, about 45 years of age, having a dred and ninety dollars a day. There are still some planchets made,but | don’t know where they are etamped. ‘The great bulk of cents come into the hands of people who sell goods to Lg riego nious coloring of the ancients will show that this | produced. Indeed, itis by induction from these | 70 are proportion has generally obtained—that is to aay: | recorded facts that an able American journalist has joe thes ha importers. Let ou: 1661 will make suitable arrangements for their re- that there has been as much blue as the yellow and | construcied that analysis of the “ Lindomania ” to consage gogo ds gg . engtes a red put together. Thus the light and the shade | which we have referred. The writer in question, | Carry out these ot ae BECORATIONS OF THE CRYSTA!. PALACE. are made to balance each other. Of course we | who speaks with the experience of an eye witness, | ¢ifect such modifications of the revenue lect them in small quantities. The ferries Ata recent meeting of the Koyal institute of cennot, in decorating buildiogs, always command calmly argues that his countrymen are constitu- | tion laws as make discrimination Harlem Railroad take large quantities. If the con- Britich Architects, Mr. Owen Jones read a paper the exact proportions of colored surface we require, | tionally prone to ‘unity ideas.” ‘ They | South, and the legislation of this State, eo far asthe | templated alteration in small currency takes place, on “ The Decorations proposed for the Exhibition but the balance of colors can always be obtained | “ circumscribe,” he says, * the whole present to | copstitucion will permit, must favor the enterprise. old cents will be worth no more than old copper, Building in Hyde Park.” His odservats by e change in the colors themselves; thus, if the | one class of sensations.” They can only take in |. This is not a proposal of an ordinary character. | which will be a loes of about seventy per cent. on the mode of puinting the interior of furfeces io be covered should give too much yel- | one thing at a time, and bee require the periodical | It may. indeed, be the language of a rash man, one | Although government sanctions thete issue, it exhibition build: ‘e said, as the specimen low, we should make the red more crimson and | production of an idol to revive their natural sensi- | Of violent prejudices ; but rash, violent and preju- | will not receive them. J. Parr. already exhibited there has ‘excited some attention the blue more purple—that is, we should take the | bility. What this idol may be signifies very little diced though he may be, he would hardly epeak in near from professional brethren, and, in some quarters, yellow outofthem. Soif we had too much blue | Jepny Lind’s actual voice goes for nothing at all; | Such 4 manner were he not addressing himself to Destavctive Fink at Utica, N. Y.—A despatch met with very severe censure, | will lay before We should make the yellow more orange and the acknowledged, inthe very words which | large numbers of his countrymen who strongly | to the Albany Regtster, of the ith inst., from you the motves which guided me in the selection fed more scarlet. A practised eye will as readily | we em; loyed ourselves, that ‘'if she had croaked | *)mpathize with him. He seems, indeed, conti- Utica, says:—A fire broke out at one o’clock this of the mode of coloring proposed, and explain the man maytune @ musical instrument. | like a raven or howled like a hyena, public opinion | dently to expect that the Legislature will adopt the | Morning, in the upper part of the First Presbyterian ciples in carrying out that system in detail hat science abandons the artist, who | would have pronounced her performance superior | = he suggests, and that they will endeavor by | Church, which reduced that noble edifice to ruins a: c in this world, hope to obtain the uni- to his own perceptions, cultivated by re- | to the music of the spheres * | law Co shut out the produce of the Northern States, | With terrible rapidity. The steeple was entirely 4 d failures. In the present instance We can only say to this that it must be avery | @nd to support the citizens of Alabama in every at- | consumed, very soon after the alarm was given. which be found subject to duty as and her Majesty * Commissioners tor the om wife and three children,and who has been em- te etd the nes eee Hoste ama eeper we couse chr of ce ulin dy tend heel @ very pre yor irl, Mise qi Chadwick: only 15 years old, wi s attended the ol. oe peer of a a poor man, but respected for his upright character, and honest, industrious habits. ‘At what particular time Shaw first introduced himself upon the atten- tion of the young girl, isnot known; but he eyj- dently set about the work of achieving her ruin at once, and with the coolest deliberation. His con- nection with the school house afforded him fre- quent opportunities of meeting her at the opening and close of school hours, and before many weeks Maria suddenly disappeared from her home, and from the school. Search was instituted by the a ce of his views on subject, , . , Sov anpeciealy. oa cue op teeneaed smenga ies {must do this in the presence of the world at large. | fine thing to be an American idol, and it is ex- | tempt to counteract the constitutional p wersol the | The appetrance of the fire, just before the fall of | friends of the unfortunate girl, and the fact of her decoration. hat pleases: ne person, will be dis Jn ordinary cases the architect may shut up his | tremely unfortunate that our countryman, Mr Congres, which has long favored the Northern | the steeple, was most magnificent; and that fali | disappearance communicated to the police. At the fastefal to another. We are only now begincing building till it is complete. Here the public will | George Thompeon, did not put himself into Bar- | Menvfacturers at the expense of the Southern pro- | itself, though it carried sorrow to the hearts of all Plepse of several weeks, policeman Warren traced to shake off the trammels in Whisk the Inet suet wateh every step from the first to the last. Oa | num’s hands at first going out. With adueexer- | ducers. So long as there was harmony in the | Our Citizens, was a brilliant spectacle. The epire | the missing girl to a house in Eliiot street, where universal whitewashing has left us. Everytnin count | invite you to suspend your judgment, | cise of that gent! ngenuity he might have | nion—so long as the chief object of every man de- | fell about half past one, with a tremendous c Shaw h n board, and lived with her as man but pure white was coasidered universally, and and beg of those who have already seen the speci- | teen reared, in some character or other, asa suc- | *iting to be popular was to make the people believe | and, though apprehensions had been felt that it | and wife. At the close of December, he had taken still is considered by many, a8 wanting ia good men at the building, or who muy see the work in | erssorto Jenny Lind, instead of beiog hunted about | that he wes earnestly intent on maintaining un- would strike some of the neighboring houses, it | her away, she telling the family that they were Application was im- friends, to the Police Shaw for adultery, or going to live in the country. mediately made by Ma Court, for a warrant ag: taste. The evidences of color on the monuments ts progress, to banish cons’ it eir minds | from town to town like a runaway negro. | broken the federal compact, so long the Southern | fell so perpendicularly into Washington street that b Grease wen 2 we ‘all know, at first toatly the ob,ects by which it isn — _ on | producer of cotton, tobacco, rice, and sugar, was | nothing was touched. The whole interior of the The Lasts of the Dresden Conferences. | content to forego the advantage of a free trade for | church was consumed, and nothing but the bare det . supposed to be the works of after €Vident to a)! that a yell J i. 8 8 a Men were reluctant to give up peat very differently w The following is & literal translation of this im- | the benefit which the Northera manufacturer | Walls remain. There was an insurance of $10,000 | abduction, that he might be arrested, and throagh their long tished iden of the white bie of other hangings fora back ground, portent document—the basis of the conference to | would derive from having an assured market in the | on the buildin, , and $700 on the valuable library of | that means, if nothing more was done, reclaim the the Parthenon and the simplicity of its forma, and 80W With a back ground ot de be held at Dresden South. But now the sacritice is proposed not mere- | Rev. Mr. Fowler, which had been placed in the | lost gurl to her home. The court not deeming the For more than ten years, the necsesitY and the ly to an epathetic but angry people. The popular | study a few days before. The books were saved. wish of a thorough reform of the constitution of speaker and writer of the South expatiates not | A small house adjoining, occupied by the sexton, the Germen Diet have manifested themselves uni- merely on the injury and insult inflicted by North. | Was destroyed. The heat of the conflagration was versally in Germany. It has been generally ac- ern feelings with reapect to the slave question and | $0 intense that the houses in the vicinity were knowledged and painfully felt, by trae patriots, | clave property, but he also followsthe consequences | several times on fire. The First Presbyterian that the edministrative power of the Diet, as con- | of their federal Union with the North into the busi- | Church in Utica was built about tweaty-five years ed by the treaties of 1815, responded very life, and proves that a diminution | since, at a cost of $32,000, and, at the time of its ly to the wat f Germany, both merely comfort is the universal result of erection, sul any other ¢ h edifice in the ernally; that it did not unite closely enoug The doctrine which England has | interior of the State. It wasa building of great German States together; unat it did not provide principle of her commercial legisia- | #iz¢, with a steeple 215 feet in height. The church forthe common welfare with sufficient vigor; th and commented on—* sell in the | coatained a large and very superior organ, which it did not represent Germany abroad in so effic st, buy in the cheapest market.” ‘ Tal was purchased, a few years since, at a cost of about a and worthy @ er. he — and m Pa cotton Vf England,” says the Governor of If terial powers of united Germany and her antece- abama, “ and receive your price in the cheap man- thade. The myriads of similar lines, therefore, of tion of the principle | had laid down to start wi dents demanded | ufactures of that country, place of beying the en Se rt: Fase Sraupino.—The which the building is composed, falling one before | knew that it would not do, and so the event has | The individual governments of the German Diet r and inferior products of the Northern manus | }reathed hi lant eakut ding is no more. He the other, would lowe all distinctness, and would proved. The column painted a neutral tint, when | have bitterly felt these deficiencies, and eagerly facturer, who insults while he injures, who asks | jngr at ihe oe hen x ard peacetully on the 4th in fact form one dull cloud overhanging the exhibi- Viewed in front of the carpets, lost all form, and | joined in the expressed wish for a revision of the | you to make a sacrifice for hia benefit, and evinces | i.” “Wher he uen “4 son, Charles Spalding, tion. A line of columns, as even now may beseen might as wel! have been a round one, and ali ad ypstitution of the liiet. Various attempts, he his gratitude for your compliance by making your he eid he oe ~ aot ith pen Convention, at the building, would present the effect of a white vantage would have been lost of the’ very beau that effect have proved ebortive, in conse. | lives and your property insecure, and by tob- | hee not oo died, bus ha did cor iee ee road.” He wall, and it would be impossible, in the distance, | ful form of the column, for which we are indebted of the magnitude and the multiplicity of t of national independence.” These are | {tthe island home hi M ae live to return again ame at present } to distinguish one columa from another. This to Mr. Barry. | woul h ne for the creation of new and sufi appeals. Nothing wears down | io that conv: on Th sited unotag repaired | Superseribed Thomas McShea, care of Mr. M>Namee, mode of painting would have the further disadvan. frem your mind the g tions. The partial reason of these le enthusiaem 90 surety a asehold me | that yabbe ital wip carreetis alma | taste ce i tage of tendering the bonlding totally unconnected | decorations are now seen; to. forget | was, that the © ition of 1815 offered atmali terial grievance of every-day occurrence. Every oak ike ie je friend was correctly impressed This letver, and some additional facts implicating wah the varies objene ie iw Gecined to bold, | foreground, where men ere engaged handle for eperating organic reforms, but the prin | Southern farmer with his family knows and hourly | Peann of langer to one of his years and feeble | Shaw with the seduction of the girl, were next Should the building be punted of a dark color, like riety of occupation for the completion of this great | ciple reason was that the consequences of the in- | feels that he is making a sacrifice, in order, as they | teox hi of such a journey. His remark, when he | day presented to the police justice, and a warrant the roof of tome ot out rulwey stations? ‘This, building, and I will ask you to suvply it in imagi- | svificieney of that constitution had not made itself | have all been taught to believe, to further a great | ist would bee agechel carla ec vention, that | issued. Shaw was arrested on the 20th I-cem- a testimony suflicient, declined at that time to grant the warrant. A few days afterwards, of/icer War- ren and Mr. ©, father of Maria, calied at the house in Elliot street, to make further iaqairy, and while there the rsany post came in with a letter, addressed to Thomas McShea, the name by which Shaw passed while boarding at the house. Chadwick recognized his daughter's hand- o1 a Say oy 4 open ~ letver. It was eld, Dec. 26, and the material ~ as follows; ~¥ b— ome up or end the trunk and some ve the Int of) for L want | much, and it you do not K soon't that will give it me“ rite” away, ta y the damages, and be giad to get me at that prise. You Will let_ me know in your letter how my folke are, which I“ foreaked’’ for you, and which I am sorry tor. From your affectionate and lovii refused to regard it as a building colored in every of carpenters’ benchy part, and covered with a most elaborate system of This I had the honor of p ornamentation. 61 Commissioners a f It m@ not necessary for me to describe the build- 4 series of carpets at a ing, the painting of which we are now abou: to dis the columns. The yello cuss he very nature of the material of which out clear and solid, while this building is mainly construgted, viz., iron, re- red fell back to the level of the red and brown | quires tha: it should be painted. Un what principle carpets, and the columa lost its brightness and so- shall we do this! Should we be justified in lidity. I may as well here mention that this red ing 4 simple tint of white or stone color, the usual color, which has been the subject of some mi method of painting iron! Now, it must be borne prehension, never forined any part of my plan in mind that this building will be covered on the peinted it in obedience to the wishes of some c south side, and over the whole of the roof, with ‘ics, who thought it would be preferred to the y canvass, so that there can be but little light and ew and blue colors; but as it was in direct vio ww Swee 3 ~ : ‘ ig | vit would be a graceful termination of a long life,” | be id waivi ination i : e with the white method, wou @ nation with the georgeous products of every clime, | practically manifest by experience | patriotic purpose. He is lees comfortable ia his of a long life, er, end waiving examination in the |’olice moony 5 teres nee te Fog nf which will be displayed in the finished building. | The events of 1848 have completely altered the | home ; his wife, his children, have all less in re- ren. ares presets termination of a | Court, was held in bail 94 61,000 to answer before would disappear; each colurn an’ girder would | 1 Will nek you to picture to yourselves in the fore. | cate. [tis not necessary to revert here to the litle | turn for their Iabor and their capital than they dignity of this state of ‘io and the | the Municipal Court, On Saturday last the Grand present to the eye but a flat silouette Let us now ‘ound the brilliant primaries, blue, red, aad yel- | will displayed then by the Diet to oppose the then | might have, because his country is theught to be Sates see oy (oa of t a are Janie Jury returned an indictment against him, chirging consider the building painted with some pale neu- _ low; the rich secondaries, purple, orange and gr threatening » and to afford protection tothe made more powerful by means of his sacrifice ia) Republican, Jan. in the first cont that he was a lewd and las tral tint—dull green or bull. In doing thie we moulded in forms of every conceivable diversit individual States; it became virtually extunet, the When, however, che finds this very power em- Tue Naw Oc Manor ae oe th erson, ene Reeroene, camer wen should be perfectly safe, provided the colors were and setting against them darker tertiaries fading | fundamental principles of the Liet were shaken, | ployed to coerce him in one matter upon which he | __ +) pte Semee Steam Live at Protavecrma. | Chadwick, on io Lith of October last. The inver- not too pale to be indistinct, or so dark as sensibly into neutral perspective. Such an effort, difficult | and the state of distraction which still continues | 18 painfully sensitive—when he finds that he i wen the telowes of 1ith inat., | ception of the letter was most opportune, as Shaw to afieet the eye. Yet how tame aod monotonous even to the artist, accustomed to a@!stract hie at. in Germany then drew its cormmencement. The besides, ropbed of the di y which belongs tou Gives the followin, it of subscription: made at | had made prepare tio ‘0 leave on the very day of Maria is supposed to gow festival, on Saturday evening | his arrest; for I’hiladelphi arn that itis the iaten- be in Springtield, and we resorted to since then, to cure that dis- | citizens of an independent nation, patriotism is tention from present interruptions, and to calculate would be the reeuit. It would be necessary this tint, whatever we might choose, should be of future harmonies, is impossible to the uninstructed , have not met with sacce: overcome by a feelmg of personal wrong. Such - such @ cubdeed neutral character as to avoid a dif- spectator, who from the experimental decoration 1 the presence of all the convulsions under | is toe meaning of the language employed by } L Miller, Jr. .€1,000 Megarge & Cope.¢1.000 | tion of her friends to endeavor to induce her to re- ty shape which the affairs of Germany have as- | Governor Collier when he says that “the con. | 4°% peer 10,000 HN. Burroughs. 10,000 | turn to her deserted home. 1: is said she is eaciente, ficulty well known to mounters of drawing: and of a single column draws a premature and neces- 3 I paneer of picture galleries, viz , that in propottion Farily a fallacious, inference ax to the colleotive din the last few years, the Prossian govern- | summation of the measures which the fanatics of « 1,000 EB. M. Dav 1,000 | end that her mind, which is not very strong, his line to any shade of color, in that exact | ¢fiect of the whole. From my brother erchitects | t has remained firmly convinced that there | the North have been pressing for years upon Con- quair.. 1,000 J T. Albu 1,000 | been deeply degraded by the cont 29 yee baie or & deo tes | hore for a mote patient, a more comprehensive, | Would result a revision of the constitation, and a | grees, and which are not sufficiently resisted by | 12h" Grigg...... 1,000 N. B. “Thompson. 1.000 | ence of her eelucer. She isa re 0 ou injure or destroy those objects it is 7 Grrcdea to rokeve, which may have setter colors. and a fairer appreciation. For myself, ! have a , bew conformation of the German Diet by commoa | the vast majority of our brethren there who pro- _ poet Gram. 8. M. Wala...... 1,000 | seme Rr. and before her unfortunate « atinee We are now brought to the consideration of the confident hope, grounded on the experience of consent and free agreement of all the German | tees to difler with them, would desolate the South.” 0 & Co. «++ 1000 The Pennselvanian 1,000 with SI pot) wes considered chaste and virtaous.— only other welb defined systern which presents it. |} ears devoted to this particular branch of art, that | governments : . Hivherio the Southern members have retained their « 1,000 M. Newkirk..... 1,000 | Botton Evening Muil, Jan. 13. seli, vir , parti-coloring. This, | conceive, if suc- | the principles and plans | have had the honor to Acting on a similar conviction, the Austrian affection towards the Union, because they have 1,000 Parrish & Price... 1,000 fhe Winnedene irik: - ily carried out, would bring the building and | propose to the Royal Commission for the decora- | goverbment has united itself with us to invite all | been taught, by all the leading minds among their 1,000 F. Ne Buck 1,000 apsiecty Teleall the tas I is has at length beem contents into one perfect harmony; it would lon of this magnificent structure, will he found, | the members of the Diet to meet in free conference | countrymen, to believe that the |'nion is the chief 1.600 tho laptremonvallty of the Gaston Boe uy Wasky VON OWE UE ine VOZEYH lus Winwwis tiie car | bes comple of to disappoint pabdlig expesiae tren thie all temportent enhierr blessing which their ereat forefathers, who formed 1H ———« | Vs ited Btaten trovoe in the wn 4 "As @ proper means vo Jead to uaanmimity betweey + Mie eommuraiuen, Vomliied apo mae propre vl sie + a, 10 BEE 0UO ) leved cscs stubores ws