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INTERESTING CORRESPONDENCE ted eye. Let those of the rural districts hich point it is proposed to revi' Mc nroe, and more recently the acceptable Minister Trouble between the Germans ‘The Erie R ft by this sat and induce others to do likewise, for a continuous route on te Evie en the lake. The | to Russia; and Gen. (mend bell, as our late hi, and ae of st ge THE ERIE ROAD—SHALL 1f TERMINATE IN NEW pee we an 3 regardless of Mr. Brady’s fears that they will } effeet of this bill, if s will be immediately | distin, and consul at Havana; v pe qe by ok moan Same nel ae smear. Gur Albany Correspondence. scarcely be able to “keep out of the way of the | disastrous to the interests - Philadelphia, as the | the as one of the most talented, learned, En, sich Iai A} take 3 ihe papers boy ws eiditee ared from & tS Sol wi" Semana tit ae cme re | tan Scene nese | San Ae cee hk hone lana | SHON" Bea Me the > New York. F .. means 0 hepnye made by the portion of ulation , James R. Philo Tr. 3 Regents of the University of the State of New Yor! Axuany, March 27, 1851 cit} Baltimore, thereby becoming doubly pre- pamasent establishment of the Indians withim a | ude by bree ane & pantion 0 p _ Weataally Foveens 4 Berhnell, ‘Thomas £3. Davis, at ite i i i i eae al ity a phn dod the | te produce riot and bloodshed. ‘This seems to be | jock, Jr., Henry O'Reilly, Hickson W: Field, Vietge ° tisfied that the best had | the especial of the two papers published in | (;, Audubon—warning ‘their fellow citizens’ of ener for. Meniee ~ ourselves, as for | the German anguage in this city—the Anzeiger des | efforts now being made by New Jersey speculators, to the Indians. Once assigned a territory which they | Vestens, and Tribune. For some time they have | pring th Erie road under the control of that State, can call their own, and influenced by our example, | been carrying on a war Seales the Catholies, but | and dive trade from this city, showi the our aid and our protecting care, the Indians will | more particularly against the Jesuits and their in- | seard” of the Erie Directors, that they had made soon become ed ye and cultivators of the soil. | titutions. We propose now to allude to an attempt “Jong, earnest and faithful efferts” to resist the di- ‘We will then have peace on our frontier, and our | Which has been gotten up, and is pressed with great | version, but had been only “reluctantly driven’” stock can graze pa secmadag upon the prairies; | ardor, to produce an excitement which may lead to | into it, und calling upon our people to #econd their the enormous expenses of the government, in sus- | Serious consequences, Whether the statements in | honorable endeavors to secure this immense trade tai ‘@ useless line of military posts, will be | the German papers be true or pe we cannot say; | for ourown State and seaport. The Journal peo nd we can then join in the proud expres. | but at all events, the colnmns of a newspaper are | Commerce having spoken of the question as one of sion, that ours is a “free, happy, and peuceful | Mot thé plage to keettrs & proper and impartial in- | frog tage, My. Van Schaigk has replied ia the twg country.” vestigation. The laws of the land afford ample op- following Nettora:— T have been induced to address you those sugges- | portunity for this purpose. We have procured THE ERE RAMTROAD TERMINUS. tions, solely from a sense of their importance; eneiairtan of some of the articles in the German | = Mp, Eprron:—When you class the question and by calling attention to the subjects alluded to | Papers referre a a whether the terminus of the Erie railroad shall be in this communication, yon va sonher an obliga. ar nti) fm pings the: ange contained in these located in this city, ‘a ite act of [corporation in- tion upon the citizens of ‘estern Texas, which , i tended, or whether it may be taken to jersey they zatihare posterity will gratefully remember. ter Brossart, a stranger, arrived in this city and put | shore opposite to this city, among gone of fre’ There isa body of men, organized many years | 7y¢ Fight lutween Fillmore and Seward Revived—The | judicial to the interests of the State, by decreasing Bince by a law of this State, distinguished asthe | pyar Continued—Removals and Appointments, §c. | the is pronnentive tolls on the Columbia railroad. ef Regents of the University, who are appointed by 4 | The unrestrained rejoicings of the woolly whigs | i+), pany he resinet in the there, | doso-wasetle Joint meeting of the Legislature, and who hold | over the greys, in the formal election of Mr. Fish to enjoys, which was ably and eloquently set forth by their places until removed by death or resignation. | the United States Senate, has incited a spirit of | Senator Packer, of Lycoming, who appears to be ‘They have the principal supervision over all the | yeyenge, to which the administration appears willing the head and front of the movement, and who vee higher literary institutions in the State; are re- | to give aid. It was thought that because the oracle managed ns salen rival seamen belmete éhe to examine all candidates for professorships, | of the administration at Washington had given as- | interests of Philadelphia. The’ bill is now in the 8 . 4 and distribute such funds to the several colleges and | sent to the election of Mr. Fish, and also because peas, 08 is Seng pented by powerful infiadaces Seademies, as may be placed in their hands by the | the three silver greys in the Senate of this State | Nom Beltimors; ands from present appearances, Legisfature, in proportion to the scholars in the | supported and voted for the bill taking power from quickly made by Philadelphia interests, who have Several institutions. A regent is a mere honorary | (anal Commissioners, and placing it in subordinate © anos 0 ee from the prospective division of the State officer, there being no provision made for 4 | hands, that a flag of truce had been sent in, and that | t™ade wi boo imore, coming over their great he 4 salary. As polities controls almost everything | 4 cessation of hostilities had been ordered. But the | "*3p ie om mol zalizend, ane for which they have else, it also selects the regents, Of thove known as | intelligence received this Morning, of the removalof | ‘The Harrisburg and er Railroad have i e democrats and nine are whigs, # resolution to reduce the fare on passengers pach, thirteen are democrats a i8*> | the Postmaster at Troy, and ofthe Marshal for the ponte eG te he eee ome having been on the list as long as twenty-six | Northern District of this State, has disabused that an ced citer the Geek fer oF Lo ent taee chee BS B., a Pronixe. up ut the “ Myrtle Street House,” corner of Myrtle and | trade, {think that you ceneralize further than the years. impression. Thomas Clowes Postmaster at Troy, | made a drawback, in sonmncien with the Canal earner array aan ee et yy ze nena. “Siento Beant case will warrant. ‘The State paid three millions In examining the names, very few are found who | Seward woolly head removed ; and Wm. T. Wil: | Board, on ull articles coming over the Cumberland The Herald in California. House,” in company with a Catholic priest, tly to | of dollars towards the construction of the road, and San Francisco, February 14, 1851. takes sie, nd ae not ret returned lef ie frank at gm te sooplete iA ae } In Sox Jom hia vé ‘ “) reet House.”* etter is received by |- ) ferring to route and termi ion of the r e cae ay oe sf the Great demand there is for Oreo Myrtle Street House” from Brossart, by a farm- | Legislature guarded the interests of the State and your paper in California? er, in which he complains of confined ina convent, | city, as they had the right and power to do, by ex- iv ‘. and not allowed to leave it—said convent being some . 4 By the last steamer I received a file and box of eee aes nea ae Lome areata rte fis press enactinents; and J undertake to say from per- : ey i hy : , Valley Railroad and passing over the Harrisbur fre qualified to discharge the duties, Among | lard, a silver grey, (if anpthing,) appointed to fll | .04 Lancaster Railrosd andthe Columbia Kailrosd ethers, we discovered three third-rate lawyers, two lace. So, also, Palmer V. logg, United : + Sieccs of tameanc eee ¢ leis laa pre- Stale Mandal woolk removed, and sour. Bash, $ Pes cyan maybe co sae fe toe mt, United States dry dock contractor, an anti- > 4 a sented beginning of the end in which cheap fare on passen- quated historian, a civil engineer, a methodist the appointment of Clowes, his best friends mani- ere willbe tested, like cheep Nona ke nals i init ve 1 knowledge and observation in the Senate of ini: 7 Sach i fest uch surprise, for there were reasons as Asi % ge, on the your papers, containing twelve hundred, and some | sented to have gone to said convent, on the Manchester | 502! 6 ample of the men wiv ave ‘placed at the head. of | ‘thick ax blackberries,” why he should noe he em | Hine in Penmaylvania. ___Svsacsuassa. | five andred other pepers, through Palmer & Co.'s | fd and ngulted or hn; they were ld that he was not Here bees iteuied. had aE ance ; : r .— es distant, They 1, ; eur literary and scientific institutions, where philo- | trusted with the custody ofsuch an important office. Our Baltimore express, in thirty-three days from the time they | went thither, and on their arrival they were told that ke | not have been made, if the Legislature had known sophy, the languages, history, mathematics, alge- | The finger of Seward was distinctly wsible, and Barrimone, March 27, 1851. 1 geal gee dlr apmgegerintieg Met ve had ‘been chbircled ‘by the serpent, | Mr. Fillmore | Mr. Webster's Speech—The Democratic Nominations Latin or Greeck—whether be has attained a pro- | has also been mulstotegn.in these lection of a successor | New Democratic Paper—Prices of Real Estate,§c. Geiency in either of the branches of education, such oe. pode os Miegaotl vied se eae The speech of Daniel Webster attracts genera} tag ne pices ee eee aa es Bhs ken up. He was a standing candidate, * booing, | #ttention this morning, and gives general satisfuc- ful for us to be compelled to make the expose, as it | booing,” to Governors Young and Fish; but neither | tion. Had the dinner been given in Baltimore, will be « euble for those gentlemen to be thus | of those gentlemen would trust him with their con- | instead of Annapolis, it would have been an immense e the! ere ii e, | fidence. Although Clowes was distasteful to the * = seer ie face ie ruuniugevery swiftly, who hag been | ¥big party, Mr. Filmore has not sueceeded in fur- | Mair. As it was, the dinner room at Annapolis i “iy » republic tters hi nishing a successor any more acceptable. would scarcely hold the members and their guests, pineed. a1000¢ i rempie % Me te po pd As to the change in the marshalship, Mr. Kellogg consequently no invitations were sent out, and, as is er e iti tale did the whig party much service, and took bold . " Pi left New York. They arrived in advance of the = not there, hag he convent ie Lracoster gh woe or believed that its termination would be transfer- mail some five days. I sold all your papers readily be las Ware ic ea ie had pie ate: they ae Toe its own city of New York to a city in New at 4s. each, and could have sold many more if I had | not whither. f ‘These grants of credit and money were fought. them. It is much easier to get 50 cents forthe | This is the foundation of an excitement which | jrough fhe Legislature with great itheulty; but Herald than 25 cents for the others. After Thad | MAY be productive of actual violence, | ‘To such an | he benefits which the city and the southern tier of 7 extent did this feeling prevail yesterday, that Mr. aeeive sold all that I did not want for myself, the cry was, | Mayor Kennett was Sted upon by a putation of a ree Fy a a lt of thot Leptd a “Can't youspare mea Herald?” Any thing yousend | gentlemen, who communicated to him the facts, and | Who advocated the appropriations, prevailed over to California, send through Palmer & Co. sexpress, | Fequested him to strengthen his police, as apprehen- | “he councils of the raid cljecterst who, opposed for by the last two or three steamers their matters | sions were entertained of an attack upon some of the em. had ‘arrived some two or three days ahead of any- | institutions of the Jesuits. We understand that | “jt was not for the benefit of Jersey City; it was thing. the Mayor apes Be cpie for any such | not for the purpose of creating a new rival to grow After this I will send you files of the different pa- | emergency, and he will defend the property and | out of the immense trade of the West, that the pers through their express, and 1 hope you will | protect the rights of this class, or any other, at all | youd was authorized to be built, and assisted by ix naga my bas ever been known to do. In taking the census, | the press were provided with aside table, and only | eee at the same, I have sent thee tune by a | hazards. ° se 4 eS romper the last itaet gegen fase ap he Fora i the allowed to judge of the bill of fare by the sense of friend, to have a large quantity of your ates See Selon seatslasions of baker oa which ap- poe etc paren pecusitnry, means through “gn a teesest gel Ht ‘ wesent llouse of Assembly to issue directions to the boxed d sent to me by the next st «1 | peared in the German papers yesterday :— tg i only be allowed to Kia in the Board a certain Reputy owe to take s vensus ofthe whigs, smell. Based pea — - ee en steamer, and | P pe It was not considered to be a question of free are quite dull (From the Anzeiger, of March 18th.] trade,whether passengers and freight (for the one will here at present, but the Herald is, as ever, always in | Mr. Heinrich Grosspeter, farmer on the Bonhomme | jnevitably follow ibe aicgotien of the other in time,) demand. With respect, yours, road, Central township, sixteen miles from here, called on | should be carried to Jersey shore, opposite to this nee? Butlat us yesterday. and advised us that Peter Brosaart stays at | “2 ; re i 2 James A. Logan, Miners’ Building. his een ann geeks er toe Having pipers enact nave city, or whether the benéfit arising out of the trade ——_-___— this aaianea. ill lay before t lie th < should be confined to our own State and city. 2 Virginia and the South Carolina Resolutions. | Yeyclopeimeuts in this inatier, The letter (referred toa | ‘The policy which has diverted the travel, will The following resolutions were adopted by the former number) received by Wm. Hert, was carried to ap divers a ie and Say the bulky pyedetiene i ns of Viredat 26th ins 3 the Post Office by Grosspeter himself. It is now a ques- | of the West be transported across the river from Legislature of Virginia, on the 26th instant, rela- | tion, ‘whether Peter Broceart is a swindler or a tmaniso, Jersey City to New York, or will they remain and tive to the resolutions of the South Carolna Legisla- [From the Tribune, of the same date,| be stored at Jersey City, and from that place be ture, favorable to the assembling of a Southern | .,Om Saturday afternoon, the landlord of the Myrtle shipped abroad ? ‘the : - é ‘ A ig Street House, and other citizens, in company with a’con- en hie. ea 4 ~e Congress, with a view to a dissolution of the Union: | stable. depur onastery on the Manchester (?) | pit’, Sigon genre. syey Ae teint oy od Whereas the Legislature of the State of South | rod, where they suspected Brossart to be. Here they jeati ae hen . x Carolina has passed an act to" provide forthe ap | Perit Uhat the man they hunted for was not there, | munieations, promise for , Sacerarseese ‘i " 4 3 . but ina monastery two miles off. Having arrived here, | ness of trad , ointment of delegates to a Southern Congress, to | they did not find the inan in question, but-were told that city will arise out of its business. re entrusted with full power and authority to de- | (grosart) was in the place they had first visited. ‘They he resident population of New York is heavily iad with the view and intention of resisting | returned to this place, and were now told that Brossart | taxed for the support of its municipal government ; further aggression, and, if possible, of restoring the | had heen there, but he had left again, not knowing where | and are we to carry the principle of free trade so far constitutional rights of the South, and if not, to S - lm learning this, they prnite howe. oF na as to dispense the profits of a large branch of our recommend due provision for her future safety and Ce eyriaipen a Lois lieder = ara 7 4 internal traffic to a new city to be erected in Jer- Independence,” which act has been formally com- | Howe (the enue who brought Brosarss letter) and sald | soy ‘with ite docks, stores and houses, for the benellt. municated to this General Assembly: layed by him in cutting wood,and denanded Browart's | of those who sustain no share of our burthens. Be it therefore resolved by the General A fs hha soe) sand Seana Pere i i Mr. Edi (Virginia, That whilst thie State deepl trunk and other things. ‘This, of course, raised new sus- You are disinterested, Mr. Editor, and so am I; of Virginia, That whilst this State deeply sym picions, and induced Messrs, Scheiler, Hert and others to | for when [had the opportunity to subscribe to the thizes with South Carolina, in the feelings excited | accompang the countryman to see whether he had told | Jersey road, built for the purpose of diverting the by the unwarrantable interference of the non-slave- | the truth. Before leaving, they went with the man to a | business of the Erie at Suffern’s from New York to holding ‘tates, with our common institutions ; and | Justice of the Peace. ; Jersey, I refused to be concerned in the underta- whilst diversity of opinion exists among the people Late last evening there was a report that those king, on the grownd that it was interest adverse te of this commonwealth in regard to the wisdom, | who had gone out had found Brossart, but they | that of this city. seegea! and constitutionality of the measures of the | brought back frightful tales, and announced that The subject no further concerns my expectations wumber of years. Such only should be selected as Ihave the proper qualifications—such as have passed Shroagh a series of years in such institutions as they may be desirous of Superintending. ¢ present Board scarcely ever. meet in quorum. in their r ive districts, in order to know how | The question of nominating a democratic candi- many there were, and where to find them on elec- | date for the next Congress is commencing to caues ie years Rs ee oe of pay foe some stir, and the present member, the Hon. R. M. should be gratefully thanked, instead of being de- 3 . S, . the session of the Legislature, when the rriveil of his three thousand a year, Hissuccessor, | McLane, will have an energetic contestant for the Governor, Livutenant Governor, and Secretary of | Mr. Bush, is one of the earliest opponents of Seward | nomination, in the person of William Pinkney State, are at the capital, they ‘occasionally mieet | in the State. His opposition fein before | White, Esq., a young lawyer, who has hitherto been With one or two others living im Albany, and usu- | Seward was made Senator, and long ere Mr. Fill- | advanced politically, rather on account of his modest ally turn the business over to their secretary, who | More was a identally nominated for the Presidency. snerik, than fox the usual cnelifnaianasaquteed ts maanages mattersas he desires, ‘The Legislature, in | Mr. B. showed his independence as long ago as | merit, than for the usual qualifications required for a Shoat cases take for granted any proposition which | 1547, when he: first took eat in the New York } Success et (aay pg lide t ik a gad = he euggests, coming, w= they are led to believe, from | Senate, from the Buffalo district. From that pe- | Stymie’ Eimetlt & candidate for eee Choe the entire Board. “Last year, however, that body | Tied, when he was joined by Mr. Calhoun, then Wrdtomte kus Wie ok torah Dita cat was completely entrapped; this secretary presented | Clerk of the Senate, he has persevered in an un- | MErIPAtO OY Wl most sanguine friends, @ re-nomk a report upon iudian antiquities, which he desired to | daunted manner. He first suggested the establish- hirer tyes ete gcse ¥ have printed for the use ‘ the Regents. It con- | ment of the State Register, and contributed liberally mgd todo sdlgs . ere 0! big? ri Lal se tained an account of the Iroquois tribe, some hun- | towards starting that paper. | Mr. Bush, therefore, | (0's Ne wspubets Sm atveral heading members o| dred years ubellished with numerous colored | i8 no eleventh hour silver grey, but older in the | the, Pi thesmicte to contribute largely to en Lae ancient moccasin: unpum, | ftith than Mr. Granger, Mr. Duer, or even Mr. eget’ Be stele competent men can be found aa en aus we an an nigraved and | Fillmore himself and itis doing him 'no more than | t0,take bold of it. E ee aiibel ead yh propriate places inthe | justice that the President should place him under | |, The prices of real estate and building lots in this Saaen come dred pages. A large | liberal pay—the best situation which could be | it¥ are increasing to an unprecedented extent. suasher of the fd, at an expense | given him’ in the Northern district of New York. | Property, soldj at auction brings prices far in ad- to the State of 1d dollars, but Now, how long will the whigs be to retain | vance 0 ath heat peg ir gy tions of the there was not a sing in it which re- | Power in this State, or in the nation, if the great | Onmert, and the cash is: paid down for it in sums ired legislative action. This amount of printing. | Mass of the intelligent gentlemen in that party fur | (pe! ATC beard sie ber geid aa fe lots in was done by order of the House, at the special re- | therallow the leading demegogues much longer to | {he Victory of fhe Monument sold a few days Sauk of the sncrcterg.of the Megents, aud Ro one ct them! Seward having the. Legislature in | Since at $325 per front foot. The number of new : the hollow of his hand, can compel laws to be en- | buildings in the course of erection is double that of At the early part of the present session, another | #¢eted providing places in the State for postinasters | @8¥ previous year, and dwellings are still scarce, e = a 7 A i . “wap d rents tending upwards at a rate that is most ,) > od State: 4 “ the ti ine seni Aved.”? 4 dani cument Was presented tothe Senate | aud others, displaced by Mr. Fillmore. His syco- | aud rents ¢ of e late Congress of the United States, taken as a the time for action had arrived. ohe Pt ° Several Senators, recollecting the hoax played upon | Yaseals ever called to carry out the behests of any Mea aa aaundance of work can see no prospect yet | measures; yet the Legislature of Virginia deems The Late Captain Cobb. city; but knowing the tranefer_of the direction of the House last year, opposed the printing, and, atter nt. ‘The miraculous power which he exercises . pay: it a duty to declare to her sister State of South | posaxce AND REALITY—SAD REVERSE oF ronTuNe. | the trade and travel of the road from the metropo- a bard struggle of near: entire day, finally sne- completely subdued the independence which The Carolina, that the people of this State are un-, (From the Springfield Republic lis of the State to Jerse: y, to be a violation of Ks 8 errr lew warty cnators Babcock and Owen, and nearly the whole Texan Frontier. willing to take any action (in consequence of the’| Many of our readers wil! remember « veries ofar- | the charter of the comp: dof the intentions ceeded in rejecting the proposition to print. An . ts : r : “ors = iy o the charter of the com and of the intentions of effort will be made to secure the passage of a reso- | dele on in the House from the city of New York, OUR TEXAS CORRESPONDENCE. same) culeulated to destroy the integrity of this | ticles entitled * Three Cotton Planta am i it . the Legislature, and that a perseverance in that Union. ; s tion,” which ap). «red is tywcloan & twelve | line of poliey threatens « continued and increasing 2d. Resolved, That regarding the said acts of the | month since, or nore. 1 those articles, the | injury to this city, [have performed my daty in re- Congress of the United States, taken altogether, as | yomantic history of the plo er, whose hospitalities peatédly opposing a scheme which, as ave, de- an adjustment of the e: questions to which | the writer so gracefully recailed, was briefly given. | rives its origin, not from the iples of free trade, they relate, and cherishing the hope that, if fairly | He landed at Natchez, a boy. ile had come down | hut from private speculation alone. P ppi on a flathoat, with his fa- | [ therefore hope and believe that the Legislature executed they will restore to the country that har- | the Ohio and Miss mony and confidence which of late have been so un- ther’s partner. There his father died and was | will not permit an immense depot for tht product: it with them to the capitol of the Stat the Ist of January. On the other hand, Mr. more provides for his section of the party who ha a San Antonio, Texas, Feb. 28, 1851. State of the Froutuer—The Camancha Indians—The been ostracised by Weed and Seward, by placing Boundary Commissioners, §c. them fn post offices, custom houses, marshalships, An old Texan, and for a long time not an uninte- satis kesest parti boa the community care not a | Tested observer of things on the frontier of this State, » honest portions eco : Tution in the House, fleecing the >tate out of ten or fifteen thousand dollors this year, finding that the Senate refused to do ; ; Speaking of regents—a gentleman has recently deck dette by the Legislature, whose tule pacity, and literary attaiuments, will do hon: on alluded to is the ier this City. ‘Fle isa perfect | fig Which political party are uppermost in the State | 1 have been surprised at the strange policy which | happily disturbed the State of Virginia, deems it un- | buried, and there the boy was left by the heartless | and trade of their own road, to be established out a > oF the terse tani with | 4nd national councils. They have long seems to prevail at Washington, in regard to our | wise, in the present condition he co partner, without a picayune. Naturally shrewd, he | of their own jurisdiction: Yours respeetfully, vii ” dge of most o ler fi iving at Washington or Albany, they no poenang sas envectf unenei ie _ od. Kes h pst ul aftec- | did errands, peddled knicknacks, &c., until he gre Monpay. ol x Raving a complete Knowledge of wot of the dead | STS ‘tread the vestibelo for some tae, to express myself wponsome subjects | vongtely appeals to her ai puth Caro- | up toa proper sige for larger operation. He then | _ONP4¥» March 24, 16516 guages aud living scie pothedliod ay gauge sufficient number beee vitally important to our frontier population, through | lina to desist from any meditated secession uy the Presbyte the State in the tcientific studies. wantee of his cor ies ussigned him tain order of religion feeses, still the publ mobleness of mind will » Views to cuter the tran Regents. Being in the cit pute with his brethre @ literary taste unsurpa . found one of the most active His energy, perseverance, and shame y of the antiquated drone: ignoramuses, with whom be will be compelled to amociate in the discharge of his duties. Why can- pot the Board of Regents be at once re erganignd ? became owner of a dray, then of a small plantation | erie RAILROAD TERMINUS, AND TAXATION OF THT part, which cannot but tend to the destr near Natchez, then of an immense large plantation CITY OF NEW YORK FOR THE BENEFIT OF ‘THE the Union and the loss, to all of the States, of the | at Milliken’s Bend, above Vicksburg. Here he went WHOLE STATE, AND OF BROOKLYN, WILLIAMSBURGH, benefits that spring from it. sai into speculation, and, before the crash of ’37, sup- AND JERSEY. Ath. Resolved, ‘That Virginia, believing the con- | posed himself to be worth a quarter of a million. When in my letter of yesterday I came to the stitution of the United States, if faithfully adininis- Hlitherto_ his fortunes had waxed. He was inde- | conclusion that every merchant, niechanie, and tax- tered, provides adequate protection to the rights of ndent. He then, for the first time, returned to | payer, in this city, would be opposed to a course of all the States of this confederacy, and still looking | Cincinnati, and sought. out his mother and sisters, | policy and legislation Dy the constituted authorities to that instrument for defence, within the Union; | whom he had left behind long years before. He | of this State, which should permit the Evie Rail- warned by the experience of the past, the dangers | ‘ound his family, who supposed’ him dead, in po- | road Company to locate the terminus of its road at of the present, and the hopes of the future, invokes | verty, and provided for them, and then came the re- | or near Jersey City, I did uot advert to the maguifi- all who live under it to adhere more strictly to it, | verse. ‘The wife of his youth had borne him three | cent power which that corporation possesses through- and to preserve inviolate the safeguards which it | beautiful children. ‘These, one after the other, died, | out the city and State, by the influence of its debt in affords tot hts of individual States and the in- | and the wife was laid in the grave. An interval | bonds and stock, amounting to some twenty millions terests of sectional minorities. . | elapsed of pecuniary prosperity, but of yen gre of dollars. There are many hopes and some ap- r That all legislation or combi when he was blessed with the hand of one of the | prehensions suspended on the operations of «0 vast « tions designed in any way to affect the institutions | most beautiful of womankind. Then came the | capital in trade. It impends over free peculiar to the South, deserve the most unqualified | energy that parried in sume degree the force of the | with an aspect by turns threatening and pi per as meee ag to the rights of, and pe- | blow,’ and he was enabled to getain and add to his | and if parties who own the proper’ culiarly offensive to the Southern States, and must, beautiful plantation. inclined to favor the views of those sushed if persisted in, inevitably defeat the restoration of Years passed on, and another family of beautiful | gentlemen, who, with consummate ability and un- peaceful and harmonious sentiment in th 8 ad grown up around him, to whom and finching perseverance have successfully managed 6th. Resolved, That the ii ther he was attached by almost | (by constructing the road,) that large portion of the monwealth be requested to transmit « cop; fanatical idolatry. Two years ago last August, his | estates of capitalists which may be invested in Erie resolutions to the Executive of the State of home was the abode of plenty and the largest hos- | bonds and stock, it will not be a novel or surprizing Carolina, with the request that they be laid before | pitality. Immediately afterwards his favorite child | circumstance that the general and future interest- the next Legislature, and that copies be also trans- | sickened and died. A month or two after this, his | of the city shonld be neglected and contemned, to mitted to the exceutive of each of the other States | house was burned. “A few weeks more, and a long | favor any measures which may be supposed. to. be of this Union—the State of Vermont only excepted. | pending lawsuit, oe in his efforts to retain | destined’ to secure their property and improve its ——————_ - - | his property and ‘pay off his debts, was decided 4 Grand Ball on Board the U.S. Frigate Missis- | against him, and his plantation was put under the sippt, at Naples. | hammer of the aue rt, and the broken spirited | | it (to applian g second to none in y puiity of the atmosphere within, yi made by trading demagogues, and shake otf w! ever of politieal houesty they ever possessed. The the medium of some widely circulated and influen- tial paper, and the murder, recently, of three of our democratic party had become #0 corrupt that thou- | citizens by the Indians—one of themn within sight of sands of voters changed front, hoping that a more | this —besides numerous depredations, im- honest — of erty would. be aa, Uragenae * mr pels me, from a sense of duty, to hesitate no charge of the publ erests. But seareely ha me s * #8 *eRae the vew occupants commenced warming their seats, | longer. I, therefore, offer the following suggestions: before the same iniquities were pri and the It is known to all conversant with the present 1 of public plunder proceed state of our country, that Texas has a very exten- adversaries from power. sive frontier, along which veral tribes of I e confidence ii dians—among whom the most distinguished in valor and warlike habits in numbers are the Caman- ches. These ludians, the freebooters of the prairies and for a long period the terror of the Mexicans, by inevery mouth; and itis, that the the lute treaty of Hidalgo, are incorporated within spent. | The personal hostility between Fill our limits. Accustomed for centuries to subsist Seward has overwhelmed the party. While they | upon the fruits of their predatory excursions into = q are throwing firebrands in their own camp, a Mex our government, when, by an arti: the xY¥, March 26, 1851 igniting every material, not a solitary whig presents | same treaty, she undertook to prevent the nroads Delight of the Members | Waaselt in the breach to save his party trom de- | or indemnify the citizens of Mexico for their losses i struction. ‘They seem to be willing to participate | thereby sustained, assumed a task, the serious na- ent of its remains, trusting to fu- | ture of which was little known or considered at the lity of their opponents for auo- | time. A: thing has been dont to carry out he session of the Legislature was | ther picking of the public crib in the course of a | this stipulation, or even to protect our own citizens a ganize | quarter of a century 4 from similar destructive visitations, except the es " the attempt to organize, yest "jn relation to this work at Washington, the Jowr- | tsblishment of a line of military posts _ bee the being a complete failure. About two-thirds of the | youl of this eveni front ‘These posts are_so utterly and lamenta- ly in the | The war of the } bly inefficient that, so far from affording protection Mewbers were present, having arrived, ¢ Ea seg: : Leteene ts “ ing, j e ste Hendrik Hudson. Very wong ‘a Poy 5 to the hardy frontiersman, and his family, or his morning, in the steamer Hendrik Hudson ry ates Senater seetns 60 he: lee a ce Gee Bittle business, however, was done, the House pro- | mediate proveeation, What an exhibiti even the cadtion, imaeh fees the a# certain jon to the belonging to a cer- a in the fuith he pro- that his y sectarian Zoard of ys ready to parti- rd, and possessing Campbell will b ful mem The inquiry is made " will he able to retain power? The A Retwrn of the sedh their Visit ¢ Reason why they Receivel an Farita ticn to go on board the Boats This morni fairly resumed ate uy, ° ig from such a view of the may be derived, from any course y or system of measures which the company property, they ar bility to ex The Philadelphia Inquirer of the 26th instant, | jnan moved to Vic Here another child died. weeding at once to the third reading of bills, and a Me Legg end the savage—as the late murders so unfortu- | has the following extract from a private letter from With the remnant of his large pessessions, he | may adopt, Will most assuredly convert to the pro- the Senate took up the question of building the | hately prove. And, L regret to aid, so far as we, | Naples, under date of Feb, 22, relative to a grand | purchased the beautiful steamer Mobuwk, aud run | jesveor the. company some orsuene hetive rete, the tillers of the soil and the herd fun: ; ball given on board th y look out for a speedy wa 1 n of the country © desperate between these two factions than | are concerned, the material of which these posts are composed—the ex-cadets of West Point, and the Rowe's Point bridge. After a sitting of about three hours, both bodies adjourned, in a condition amply | her in the Vicksburg and New Orleans trade, acting | ‘who belong to that class of men whe mediate as the captain himeelf. A few days ago, the fol- | interests are paramount to every other consideration Tien lowing dispatch was received by the Northern | — To persons of this description the’ mstanes ever known befor fitted for slumber, until the morrow." — ce stupid sous of Irelaud—may as well be practiving | the Carnival season. » city has heen thronged | papers :— that a large portion of the trade of the Erie Ruil- On coming up the river last night, on board the Our Harrisburg Correspondence. their exercises in their Alma-Mater on the banks of | with strangers, a large. proportion of whom are | Lovisvitte, December 17. | road should be diverted from the eity of New York. 7 ted j : i. tikes Harrisntne, March 26, 155) the Hudson, and stumbling over the bogs of their | Americans. The gress (Xe of inter season, | Captain Cobb, of the steamer Mohawk, blew out | and finally the whole of it be lost, weighs not « boat, they were treated to a splendid supper—Isaac ad ake Siamanienas tasblat native country, as on our frontier. At an immense | however, was given on board the U.S. steam frigate | his brains yesterday at Vicksburg. Cause, pecu- | feather in their estimation of the justice aud propri- Newton him-elf presiding at the table. ‘T was twas wpe entre “a expense, government is supporting these posts, | Mississippi, by the gallant Captain and of | niary troubles, and death of his wife. ety of establishing a new city in Jersey, in opposi- a lack of the ardent, and the mannte which gitive Slave Bill Sustainel—Important Le while they neither inspire terror or respect in the | that vessel, on Wednesday last. Invitations were | Another dispatch from Nashville, of the same | tion to the interests of New Yor had to be duly honored, hy emptying n glase each | t2"-—Reilrond Matters, &¢ ngle Indian warrior. How long, per- | extended to the nobili Se ee | date, stated, that morning the steamer Mo- | If, therefore, the general mass of our citizens d Setlen all the inaanbles | The bill to repeal certain sections of the law rela- ask, is our patience to be taxed with an pera perk, tne tall Yan’ Atuetion toarsices, hawk 2 00 bales of cotton on board, | not take a serious and determined stand against the ‘Two poor weeping, ter- | diversion of the road from its chartered termination the day ew Je ng, war before the Senate yee ance of such a state of things? of us are to suffer the vic f th dl, after a warm de the | before some policy shall 3 , Which strikes out the sixth | us peace and security? Situated nearly 2,500 miles fi tive to kidnayy terday and to-day, a At7P.M., the boats of the squadron began to ‘ken children are all that remain of the | in this city, young men may live carry the company off to the sh The ball began | family. What dream of fietion ever equalled | when scores of vessels will sail from ot §, and was kept up untilthe morning hours. The | a tragedy like this? a compliment | Senate pass« ) loaded with the produce which the road will conve * er The duty wnt ro ste = of ch 84, I817—all the | fom the capital, we’ sometimes fear that interest | company wmounted to nearly four hundred persons, ie > ia to a port of entey and clearance. ” feel upon | ut in searching | *€¢ 7 oF Ge net of Bearen Oe, leer “° | sufficient is not manifested by government towards us, | of the élite of the resident and stranger society of | aoe iN Rocnesten, N. Y.—The Rochester | ‘This is not a Visionary apprebension; for wher i tine, ts wee 3 thes be other € been voteddown. In order that your | or information as to our real condition is sadly | Naples. Sihenrt ificent. ‘The | Azricin gives the following list of sufferers by the | the terminus shall have become irrevoe staal and then My responded, readers may ful tand the matter, I give a | wanting in some quarter. "Tis true we have it ru- The vps Porchoy oh yp bged px gi eymemelimad Pm hgmo ys city, on the 23k) inst :—K Starr, build- | lished on the opposite shore, the natural of Bebalf of the 1 ng M wton | cons of the a + | mored among us, and I have no doubt of its correct. 2 phe Se made Gd wae ee | ps Pe to the brick, block, insured $2,000; loss | the fore coastwise portion of the trade will that he wa enterprising m by : ness, that Brig. Gen. Harney, by command of Gen. | all appropriated to dan am were completely | $9,500; occupied by Law & Johnson as a bakery. be fully developed in this form, and can take n of the ag on the Hades An Act to sopra act entitled \ Anact topre- | Brooke, ix to penetrate, in a short time, into the in- | covered in on the top and sides by a thick canopy, | G. 8. Riley, next building, ineured $500; loss | other or less convenient direction than te be export- erve the puilie pe ain powers heretof . of the pence. aldermen. and | POs . +f this Commonwealth. and to repeal certain | which will cause them to cease t awe at least for the present. Bat th us who have ienneted, § resided a long time on the frontier, and have had much experience of Indian habits, are confident composed of sails, with an ex world. — T i for two h lining of the 0). Killick, the next east, insured 800; loxs i y its pl of de flags of all nations." Fanciful chandel yeod | $IBD0, "Mee Flanders; corner’ stores Ise ‘oe Galas ent of arms and laurel wreaths, shed a brill ton | ings $200; insured $100. The veupants of the | more than its eq ual quota of State taxes, and how the company, while a band of the best performers | buildings were as follows : man & Nagle, many millions for the benefit of Brooklyn, Wil- discoursed mort bewitching music. Below decks a | bakers, loss $500; insured $300. W. Killick: liamsburgh and New Jersey! F coffee room was arranged, and the Capta cabin | flour store, lows $1200; insured g800. B. Flanders, To the Injustice #0 gross which we have suffered, ¢ Indian country for the professed pur- of inflicting a chastisement upon the Indians, depredations, river surpa d. They impose no barrier to pre vent the proper execution of the late act of Congress passed hy suthority of the third that the expedition will be fruitless, and that it endered to the lw for the m, ‘oods insured , which will cover the loss. J. | must there now be superadded the wickedness o aah will result in disappointment, if uot. disaster. At midnight, supper was ‘ann fieyd, grocer, Insured $400. ""8. B. Wotkyn's shoe founding end fostering's new elly, the ereatere o hort hours, wher ed wisdom of the May we not then be excused, nay, will we not be sed «pace forward the engine. Captain | store, goods mostly ol insured . Other private adventure and speculati ad’ New York Plate retired, repos they could, in Viertnea, and jaiiors. in | Justified in calling public attention to our condition Long entered the saloon first, leading in Mrs. Mor- | families occupied the buildings, who escaped with compelled, by ® power move mighty than the Wet sheets and a searcit pot ee yrmeroe bay ‘and asking for some relief, some means by which | ris, the lady of the U. S. Charge d-Affaires. The | smail losses. On Clinton street, a small building | sovereign will, to submit in silenoe, or ve branded Bt was net genera « morning, | approved the third day of March we will be protected in life and property? sumptuousness of this part of the entertainment, | occupied by Wm. Dean, was also consumed. ‘as illiberal opporedty':s «trade what thew wton up | hundred and forty-seven, be. and the same i« hereby, res In view, then, of these facts, and the present unm | the profusion of luxuries, including wines of the Rag erg Ido hoy believe, butwur fear andtreombiing, to such a © ity. There was | peated. eto the third. ‘ch. ant | safe condition of the Texan frontier, why has not | most costly kind, excited the liveliest admiration, | —About a week since M. | that the Legislature will prevents he infliction of ay ee tantiien aan Pn os ‘The dancing was renewed after hs a 1° r, anative of Perugia, died justice 0 seplorable to their own city. ] t with rather increased fervor. At 2A. | y the first amd | the subject engaged the attention of the adminis- to the Leg extent of hie liberality would have tenderca th two hundred ard fit yee of obta wor from the baw wishes to obtain Why have not some of the active patriots of our Congress, devised some by which they nd uth article of the constitution of the would confer a boon upom us a 0 much goo tates, shi ‘y provides for th recovery of fugitives from | to the bay re they waiting until Western procuring ©ome | labor eseaprng from one State to another. approved the | Texas shall be half depopulated by the fell swoops ature. it now of ember, one thousand eight hundred and fifty. | of the Camanche? Why not act now? Why not weems that b charter for the The bill elicited considerable atiention from | empower the United States Indian Commissioners, focorporation of an occan steataship ypany, and | Senators Packer, Muhlenburg, and oth infavor | Messrs. Todd, Campbell, and Temple, who have for thie purpore he appeared Promptly in the of the repeal of the objectionable sect while the been ap pointed to inake treaties with the Indians on Dobbies of the Legislature, this morning. And will | law was defended with muchzeal and eloquence by | the borders of Mexico and the United States, and he be refused ! After bnving enjoyed the luxuries | Senators Guernsey and Walker. ‘The ayes and nays |-to carry out our stipulation with Mexico, to treat mod comforts of a pareage ou rd his steamers, to | were called, amidet much eonfu at the hour of | with the Indians of Texas, and to nega © with New York and back— y twenty senators re- | Governor Bell, for a and was interred there. On f, in some mor 4 of left the ship, the ball was in full life. ig his Till, which was in his own hanawritiag, pup’ sulagtvinge oe to the Saclay of ihe Lane hi & few minutes, over a sea as smoot at the top of that document instoad of the profes | body in exacting the terms of the act ines: rating era bright moon, and au atmosphere ws | sion of religious faith generally used in such cases, | the New York and Eric Kailvoul Compre ant soft as that of an American June. there was a note to the following effect :— “As 1 | that the State will firmly adhere to the ee fits “The beauty of the American ladi have always doubted of the existence of God, I omit | predecessor,s as displayed in the various lawn most striking features of the ball—their here the ordinary preamble to a will.” The dardi- | were passed to assiat and promote the constructi manner, feminine grace and sweetnos of expression, | nal vieur of the diocese of Rome being informed of | of the road, it is only because I have learned trea, long experience that absolute reliance is not to be tration “¢ second section. ites contrast favorably woe eeneee ladies. — . a cneien, immediately ordered ball, 0 perfectly succes#ful in every respect, has | the body of M. Salto to be cisinterred and removed i created & marked sensation in Naples. It reflects | to the corner of a cemetry set apart for the burial Lae S aa {urticn of & cnase Ux whieh the the highest honor upon the liberal hospitality of | of criminals who refused religious succour at their | Croachments of rivate ente ba the captain and officers of the Mississippi, and will | cxceution.—Galignant The people of the city of New York are in peril ing participated in | adjournment, when Bie bounties of the table—after having been con- | sponded eventeen, and nays eight, | removed all of the frontier Indians? This, or a | leave behind « most agreeable impression of Ameri- ne of sustaming the lose of the trade of the Erie rail. Feyed rome three red miles, ull free from cost! | on the final addeus Stevens and David | similar policy is the only one which can result in | can character. The Aiseissippi wae much wi ‘The Hudson River Ratiroad we, | road. Blind, in my humble conception—witfully Ss there n rational Legislator in the capitol of the | Wilmot were both in the Senat edebate, | any permanent good, either to our frontier for the beauty hog pie sages eee Soggy Poveukkersiz, March 26, 1851. | blind and prejudiced, or deeply interested in plane Mate who will harden his heart, and be so ur rele pe it = e 4 perceptible that it took all the | Mexico. ay Se success of the above sugg' ms ee “payphone olor Re Rows “y 1 hig THE porce OF THE NEW YORK HERALD. of present profit—must that be, who does not see, fully ungrateful, a« deny Mr. Newton and Mr. shilosopby of the former to keep down his indignant | by one and the same act, we would in part, to the en y “ ‘ “ bet oe Phe uncal for attack upon my establishment, | on mature investigation and reflection, Drew any hoon’ they. may, ack for? It would be | feelings, While a leading denecratie senater was | eetent of the poweftul Comanche tribe, be earryiog | Philadelphia, and, although in scrvice for all that pon my establishment, gat reflestion, and if the on the dock at Poughkeepsie Main street Landin; terminus of the road is permanently established o period o mone foot a i i . and | demands an explanation Trom the Troy correepos: the shores of Jerse ante double Wack of the A ——— in 00 Ge @ condition as the day they were | dy ut of the New York Herald, signing himself *A | is laid leading from Lake Erie to the terminus, a vinens on iis the tans boon Gstin all dun 8 Citizen of Burlington.” Whatever might have | great city will in time arise, facing Now York, and eed meri : a, = be n fy’ ng be poe been the dereliction of duty on the part of railroad | will grow extensively with the a ntages and the ad ing’* ba tege «Gy apd a tlve beet uctors or steamboat commanders, towards the | support which it receives from its interior eonnes- Saimin ah anh oiliee, te hanee of the berendee of ‘detained at Poughkeepsie, on the 28d of | tions, and with its facilities for foreign commerce {prateting on ‘ae ‘ ee ae he va fhe 1, the charge upon my establishment | and the coasting trade. ashington. mo ot 4 b yon "6 | wae as base and ungentlemanly as it was false; for Myaperr Vas Scwaren. Ten y t orn] f° 4 co v4 id be able to it is a well known fuct that the charge of tlfeir be- = t yg pow Toell team 0 ing — at 2 Mon selling ng is = . R Ror ann Me a ox rie Farmuoevr, (Va.,) ew! owed | Lis Well known that not a particle of alcohol AILROAD.—We Jearn that the men employed their names, from the euceese of their unhallowed ‘rink has been made use of in my establishment | Capt. Piper, of this city, on the rail live mi ‘luring the seven years that have kept the same; | above Fairmount, (Va,.) had a seri and on the night alluded to the passengers were | night of the Ith’ inst. It appears Capt. Piper enter dd, according to the best of my ability, | himself had been threatened if he employed any with fire and refreshments necessary for their com- | but Mayo men; he disregarded the Mureat and em- Post. Orrick Orrnations.—The Postmaster | fort and convenience. Justice to my establishment | ployed ten others, when the shautee, eontgini General has cstabliched the following new Post | requires that your correspondent should make some Foire or thirteen men, was attacked with pm | Offices for the week ending March 22, IS51:—K. | acknowledgment to the publie for bis hasty commu- | pistols, by forty or fifty neenilants, who shot one of Gainesville, Wyomi vounty, N. Y., Kara War- | 0 ation, 0 far as Lam eoncerned. I desire to cus | the inmates dead, wounded «everal, and attempted riner, postmaster; keman's, Paty county, | tein the eredit of a temperance house, although | to fire the shantve. ‘Ten of the rioters bave boow N. Y., Junie Dyhcman, ditto; East Magion, Suffuik | your Troy yorvespondent would intimate tothe eou- arrested, and five oy sowty, Benj. ©. Syshill, ditty. ive fank dixeourtesy to be guitty of such conduct ; | debating the bill, and citing Judge trier’s opinion | out ourfaith to Mexico, and be conferring a benefit mand from the ki * and camplaceney exhibited | of the law, with much warmth, Mr. Stevens was | upon the Indian, and « blessing upon our citizens. ‘this morning, there appears little doubt but the | overheard to say—“1 wich t fellow was a slave, That hoped that this policy would occur to some of eharter will be forthwith granted. ‘They'll “go it | he seems to like slavery «o well: he would muke a | ourstatesmen or editors, and ere this be acted wy pon; ,”” ae Senator Stantou says, and ‘he deaf to all | good one, and would no doubt sell readily for eight | und I hope yet that the valuable assistance of the engeriten ” undred dollars.” It is very doubtful whether the | Commissioners, just mentioned, could give the State ny of the members are yet filled with amaze- | distinguished Senator to whom t above alludes, | in perfecting t € arrangement, ment, created by the wonders which their eyes bee | would accept of the compliment, even f euch a | seeured. luthe discharge of their dutyt held during their absence. They wonder att conspicuous source. in our vicinity a few weeks sinc id have been im the deaf and dum) a uw | To-morrow (Thursday) the general priation | compelled to remain in cain mates obtain a knowlcdge ‘ling, writiug, music, | bill ie made the special order of the day, and every | vicisitudes and hardships of a severer winter, owin, &e rely through the ation of signs; they | other day, until finally dispored of.” Several ai- | tothe impossibility of crossing the plaine wt this sere astoniched at the blind institution, when they | tempts have been made to get up the bill for the | senson of the year, without an cnormous expense, bebeld the proficieney made among its inmates at | consolidation of the city and districts of Philadel | and they might still have time to give their atten- the atylum. Kandall’s and Ward's Islands, the | phia, but have not had foree enough to suspend the | tion to the negotiation with Gov, Bell, for @ specific bridge, the Croton reservoir, the colored home, | rules. territory for the Indians, and to treat with the In- ale, &e. Those sight will dwell in their A hill bas recently passed the Senate, incorporat- | diane, &e., before they proceed to join Mr. Bartlett, memory during life, for they “=r. that they so far | ing the Susquehanna Kailroad Company, which | incommand of the boundary commission, exceeded their expectations, that it yet appears | grants them power to commence at the terminus of | gentlemen, of pre-eminent ability for the disebarge more like « vision than reality. And they ch ork and Cumberland Railroad, ite Har | of any duty, or diplomacy, however delicate or pro- themerlves for remaining ro long, in nine bi on the west side of the Susquehanna river, | found, two of them bering with citing the gre m W with an clegant dinner in the evening.” | Commodore Morgan crowned the celebration | mer fail, and not sooner vil ret with the Pennsylvania railroad, about | distinction abroad—Col. Todd, as the military pu- wha 19 mery weg ui above; thence to proceed to Swabury, from | pil of Cen. Harrison, diplomatic pupil of Preeittan A of them identified. Qtherg Mictsa, Tucase, Wil) be arrpeigd.— Baltimore Clipper, March B.