The New York Herald Newspaper, May 24, 1851, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A Se ee ASIST CASTES SENSES PML CERO “Fhe Commoreial and Financtal Accounts Anthraolte Coal Trade, ‘Theatrical and Musical. NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. ‘theirs, ¥ C ] Bowray THratne.—An exceedingly attractive perform- things constituted them and ala {From the Califoruis Courier, May 16.) ‘The quantity sent by railroad this woak, is 2800411; | ance is cfieved thle evoning for the usempnt AAARARADRADI ND parent State compelled indepen- , or doren Btates, ca ‘The opening of spring did not promise very fair | by pot 18,052 18—for the week, 47.047 09. Increase numerous patrons of this old and pa pernin pon pray They “declared tadapenaaned, tad ‘that aes po « to consent to a or trade generally.” An abundause of f by rallreed, 1518; by canal, 365’ tons. If bosts had | The leading feature will be ¢ THE GREAT SPEnCH Act. pronounced on the fourth of July,seventeenhundred |“ Gentlemen, I was mistaken; } wuccessful drama, ery bet ay on band, and daily # have shipped upwards of | entitled, * Rafaelle, of tho Reprobate earings wale and seventy-six, made them independent. That was au | to the bringing in cof Texas. goes, not by the single vessel, but in 92096 tons. | was greeted laat evening by a full ‘au: or THE act of union by the United States in ae assombled. | I was a false prophet, ; We lesrn that there were upwards Cs sudden in setting of azling, stormy, disagreoable | yithmond, on Thurstey, warei 4" of rn wen | ane . Sib ie wee Gay semen, Me as. But this act of itself did nothing to Lon td over thom | the majority of the representatives weather, when past experience led us to expect the | only about thirt | a wd # general government. They had urticles of confedera- | sented, I went isto Congress free? genre aecots rok Che inayat | See hradr akc ney a ane cesae hs | Meee eee aee | HON. DANIEL WEBSTER, | ioe catia emnat, come | pene citane epatin Tinaatbaeg Aftor which, the favorite e+ bringing daily less and less cheering intelligence, | season. of of n a a . ‘omedy of the “Young Seamup,’s TO TUR indepei “ait whole > and the conscquent necessity under which merchants Bouts Were detained on the canal, this week, about @ | Miss $, Deuin performing her greatly admired charac! Sean F retignrsin A ye tao enw coe ai you ta tase it 30. of ,Lwill tell the in the country rested to be cautious how the actual | dy sade lualf, owing to the damding of # lock-gate by | cf Joseph the Sesmp; and tho entertainments will termi- INBABITANTS OF BUFFALO, and nothing more. Ne Beate was bound by what it aid | truth whether it shames the devil or ot. “CLe ter. di for consumption should be overstepped by | oe of the boats passing [apie There ought to be an | nate with the grand romantic drama, called the “ Flying not iteelf agree to, That was the stato of things, gentle. | Persons who have as lovers bert wh them in thelr purchases from our markets, alt extra gate always ready, at tler of Jocks, to prevent | Dutchman, or the Phantom Ship, Stevens sustali ON THE men, at that time. The war went on—victory perched | ominent lovers othe Wilmot Provise-es eminent freee gother, created the most gloomy apprebenaions, and | Wouccesary delay from such accidents, There bas been | ing his urivesally appreciated character of Vand " se & rent searcity Of boats during the week, and partiou- | deckem, with « further distribut the cast + os 7. 1 pte id er i aapandl ag (ert a eer | larly cf smal! oats and noma to carry coal te Fluid Uther lnyoriten tached to this Thespia temple, “with | QUESTIONS OF THE DAY. NM . e sempi- mau » | phia by canal. A a) formed had 5 raord ractions. also, received trom the Atlantic side fand from | order from Ph ledge fur thres pargoen, penpom waite filed trea pit ie coiling, See Se Tee wer ki foreign ports, of the almost insane recklessness with | ing several deys without being able to procure boats, uo aa tae . - peric showed i which dipptra ndbiored. to" the vielous policy of | wascrmpeled to sent by ralvoad. ‘A number of scows | winganna TitrsnizThiserening Ming Wits Loraay | ‘Tho Latest News, from all Parts of the Union, | Rea theism’ botits eke hare steam eamclent, | tha I was te 10k othe Joaraale | Withont cae vending goods to a market already overstocked, | (sht to be built gt oan for sala rpove, ‘The larger | brief engagement, will make her last ary _ of the war, measures wero taken for the formation of the | Union, under wither of the resolutions oF added to the deepondency of the sellers, wad stimu. | Yo Mean 9 to tal wat fee Be aca long a4 they | Leautiful and effective part of Julia, in the Hunchback ; united goverument—a government in the strict sense of | wards. But New York voted tor the measure. The twe lated the cuntion of buyers, by holding «ut certain | S84 tain loading for New York, Wilmington, aud other | aod the performances will conclude with the laughable the cprernmant that could yess law binding to | Senstors from New York voted for it and turned th» i ledged. confederacy of very limited orm It could levy no | mun that bri it Texas into Oe Speer TM ‘ taxes. It could not enforce its own decrees, It was a | truth, the whole truth, and nothing but confederacy instead of being # uutted goverumont. Kx- | declare it before oat 10 oe fremrritbost ¢ . : gE 53 FF i term—a . ; byes 4 distant places, "i 7 comedy from x tn Nuts havss mont cpportuoely, rt of what anon | fy jurang we areauihorae toate. ele: | pn of Dol Jecreldaasctiva propustion, and Bx wovsn's rmiwrixa rmiwcrarm. | Boss ans by fn executive powecy ech shar eae | Secoworaand tha hepplases ot havion Sve a eiedens > of our merebante considered certain, and, yery pos- | Haren. at Sobuylicily roduced, wo understand, on Monday noxt, with the Dorraro, May 2, 1881, preted by 2 Judicial power Delonging to the goverament. | Btales added tothe Union. | (Great sensation.) | De . RE sibly, have reduced the probability of gi ™ strength of the whole corps dramatique, snd the valuable Mr. Webster delivered bis speccb, Well, J m of the | biame me for it, Let themanswe: the of the change peregptible in tiado undoubtedly ex- | ment will take place Loiwecu the canal and rallzoad eont- | Toudou,’ Our-eid favorite, Ste Dade Will ale amc | rain storm, which drenched every person who was in at- | posed to leave, and did leave, the “Gidterent. inatitut "Gentlemen, whe aided in bringing in Texas? It wae ite fu the actin of uur bankers raising to prog of | Eanict w ih regard fo rales, the former company hat | in one of te principal parts of the comedy, which wil | tenance, ladies and all of whom there were, at least, one | Of the several States to themselves, It did not propose | all fair tol to you. You Moyes and the pror geld dust ; although we cannot th cxin tho | (ahem anindependent siaud, and ate determined to main- | erahirace the (aloat of Mist Anderton, Messrs, Conway, | hundred on the platform. Tt poured in torrente dus consolidation. | 1s did not Chat the las of Virgie | phets, Caughtcr) Hut if Ono. had. risen from the just bave been materiully benotitted by the chango, | t aevards. They are right, and every opera- | Dyvidye, &e.. &e. The name of Douglas Jerrold, as sa . rrente during | pig phould be the lawa of New York, or that the laws of | such was devotion to that policy, at that inasmuch as nothing goes tor gold dust now that tor in this region ig bound to sustain their present course | author, Tequires only to be mained, to Insure an atten. the whole tine, but nothing daunted, Mr. W, continued | New York «hould be tho laws of Massachusetts, It pro- | you weuld not have Leard him, or listened to him cS F . : cry vid ihe talitile sacrifice ; for, we fear! ascert, and ‘i i i that hensh diode geaelinn of tandmioed ak ce oven a ly tion to his productions, till he had said all he wauted to say. Ho spoke as fol- | posed only that for ecrtain purposes, and to acertainex- | moment, Well, all that I complain of is, with the Cleaning the gold from the sand. in most caace ro. | Chal no lartetee nea be oe a eae ee ae rite: | Nusto's Oanves.—The distingulahed American come-,| 1¥r:— be wail rin gwey yy al ane that that | bieeeog of Ged, T will not now, or heroattay, as duces the aggregate value quits a9 much as the | tho trade tos transporting. com havo been treated | dian, Mr. 1, Placido, whose performance were received, | Fellow-citizens of the city of Bi vernment should have the power of executing its own | country, or the world, consent to be numbered bankers’ increased rates nll aeskarto eatie se ab! soabametaiicnaabe pamele of tie icate heen treated | uring the past work, with meet wabounded eosieciams ¢ city of Bufalo—I am very giad | fuws. All the rest was Loft te the several Btates. And | those who introduced new slave power into the Union, t Soa . . to dee you—I meet you with ple . This not the ar ‘wo now come, gentlemen, to the very point of the case, | did allin my power to prevent it. (Applause he very fac | ko the ma- | thore who contra! the Reading Ki with | by Luge snd intelligent assembiages, will again sppoat 7 Dlcasize not the fret » (Ap And feta fet ofeach ation sec oak he mae | a er te tate aad Meth | lant noua me ens etn | ey foweean ha haw ren tm Bata ad | Sipe ig cay eget in ae Sutera ater | Behe aia the Mcrae ke ctl a richer by the diferenco of ralay nod theroone moro | Fiend, er Reval fon abe bn eacelyw head | Sucsvunmats wil commence Wit grand aur | | ve lveys come 401 with peaure, Ts great de | thlaws omg Thet Ie wan. inns ohuoogt to | Ruchar nine toe war, 1 dutiod dhe peace meee able to buy. It sooms to bo, not a change of value, | {', County to advocate her cause, 7 | Teteato this theatre, will bs followed by the ag, | **A0e from my own home. Iam tlunkfal that circum. | the middle States, and disliked; and honestly and se- | because it brouglt in these territories ‘That territery: but a sudden creation of confidence. ‘Tie Inst ton | paired rte,, Lad been reduced’ 15 eonts vo Broad resent, | eslio druma cutiiied “Beeret Service,”"in which Mr, | ‘ances have enabled mo to be hero gain, and Lregret | Tously distiked, as the rvcords of the country will show, | was unknown. 1 did net know whet ib might be. | Tae yb y ¢ Boul tates the Al Ne 0 © they plan cane fret Sou ‘bat aouthore: om hare, boon be pars qrery. angel Campa pom making it Sie To Richmond the rate remuias nomi- Fiseile Poe | sustain fe popular ohareotey of Micheal that untoward events deprived mo of the pleasure of Le- u deat whit? “Were the Norehorn ana side states ratleesen wished the aetinaon ot Celiforuia and. New me liscorcric: rece! nally at $2 00. errin: Mr. Deraunais; snd Mra, Sloan the as . " boda atte: orl Ioektitens whic teed tier re abe eiicocem ania: Fiiataemsi Clesai soit Se Ceol beavtizal part ofThetces. The concluding featare will be | 8s here when your distinguished fellow-citizen, the Pr2- | to exclude from the government those States of the South | Mexleo, and Utah, a s means of extending alsve author~ ral fin New ¥ rs if hich bad produced a Washington, a Lawrence, and | ity and slave population; everything was known about it. to encourage the discouraged, and incite the hitkerte | thelr prices of coni in New York to $3 6o—being a reduc | the triumphantly successful now piece called the “First sident of the United States, came among you, und received | Mave hs 5 » and re ; * a eek. forming his orlginnl character of Monsleur Achille Tok Tieansjncrease, they buy more. As cheering ac. | st week dial welcome, The President of the United States cause they tolerated the institution of él T voted against the peace with Mexico. I voted counts come in, reater numbers push forward to | pV? a7 informed that # mecting of the shippers at Thala Dufazd,j in whioh he bas always been received “ aed he acquisition. TNantod none of ber » | fathers and my fathers did not think so. ‘They t torritory, 4 I £0 | richmond wae held early in the week, at the Instance of | With continued roars of laughter and mppinuse, This | Dee? 8 resident among you for more than half histife. Me | ‘4 nd may H ont \¢ - tc * ' the mizes, thoreby creating a greater demand for | tho President of the rai company, but they could | ast also embraces tho following distinguished favorites : | bas represented you in your State and national councils, pkey eh okt Coben ee ee 4 ‘Searailtes ultre A eee The ee ee a os us, ph pete staplearticles. This is probably a second cause of ecomm — jordan, Lown, er eine afoac wade, cempenes mir et agree Boum aay ieqomunen dation (a bw somenay, on ul a daa Mrs. Siloam, and Mrs Jobm | You know him and all is relations, Loth public and | nection with the North, Thelr views of humanity led to | th tlead to political disturbance, and I voted soph ineeee m Pm 0 e. ice to Schuyl- ' geivath; wxik 1 Wold be bad talks toc no such result, and of course when the constitution was | wcuinst them all—ngainst the treaty and against the catios of goods have left our wharves during the last | kill county is what the people here want, and what they ¢ Tuearez.—This famous Thespian temple, me to «8y ©8Y- | fragned and established, and adopted by you, here in | pesce,end 1am glad of It. Seeing thatit would be ten days for the interior, and there scons to be no | will have sooner orlater. On this point they ought all to hiitiy eeomded ty full nud lan, temple, | thing of him, except that I wish to say, with some degree | Tamed 8B and by your ancestors tn New Mugiand, it | occasion of diapute, that by the ‘controversy the whale imam: Bee rrernaes of shekena eatin such shipments. ; “ ges. isin the full tide of success, To-night a | cf emphaaié, that since my connection with him ts (he | contained an express iaion of security to the persons |, Union woulll be &, ed, Messrs, Berrien, and Many goods which could not be cold here have been ts from Richmend are quoted at $1 621, to very excellent evtortainment ia offered for the amuse- | administration of th tof the United § who lived im the Southern States to ives who owed | Cther reapectable and distinguished men of the So bonph ta ioe sBaument to. oibes goes, sotean the , $1 25 to Khode Island, and 00a 90. to New York, "| snent of the dramatio public. ‘The amusoments Wil | tpeve ten e government of the United Sistoa | OU, cervice—that fa to eay, the fugitive from service of | voted against the acquisition, and the treaty which oe market hes Joas the appearance ‘of being Poatah We euunot give any corzest quotations of the prices of | commency with the beautiful comedy of ~ the stoops to | 1 Bar? ly concurred with him in all his gre Inbor shonid be rostored to his master or owner. Well, | cured i; and if the moa of the North had voted the coa! on board at Richmond, in the present unsettled state | Conquer.’ It is unnecessary to remind Burton's patrona, | leading mensures, from the fuct that I have been of the country from its first | same way, wo would havo been spared all the dificulties of common practice to ro- | that have grown ont of it, (Applause,) Now, there le overloaded. Such are some of the more immodi- | of tie trade. c J 0 0 * that the cast of characters embraces nearly all the | his council. But I do not wish to let ate causes of recont improvement in trade. but, pate ulodecet ot wish to let it rest on th natatution wasformed. Fu- | no srtof doubt, gentlemen. that there were some Massachusetts were re- | sons in tho South, who supposed that California, rte year, lend talent of the establishment; and although o1 althoent 8 better feeling is now op arent thaaat | ‘Tpacrpy iy New Orurans—A Woman Stor | Would imagino thst » comedy such as that presented, sumption ; Iwish to declare that tho principles > last adivices, still, it by no means follows that there | yyy, At that day cameinotall, would come in as 9 slave State, You prenticeship atthe North, | know thoextraordinary events that arose there, You “a > sovr.—An unusual degreo of excite- | ™ht form m good entertainment for one night, yet | President, xs declared in his aunual mosnge s uny decrease of supply; on tho contrary, there | mont this morning prevailed in Gravier strect, on | *Other of as great interest, and ono which ts admired | Jetters, and all documents and opinions which ky wth, takicg advantage of koow that California received ue rush from the northerm esiling to the South, people, and that an Afriesn slave could mo more live i ry. ? ‘ : ae enough already hore to yield an sbundent | tie announcement of the startling fuct that a youn, by pn Deny, ee oy ib ig rr dpa tacos cveded from him, or been issued by his authority, in t fo & clear, express, and well there than be could on the top of Mount Hecla. Of ae . {provision in Cav const lution of the country om | ceasity it became a free state, and that no doubt was @ yinevery particular article, cxcopt perhaps R osting- i Gour, barley, and liquors, for the next = vate sea ctacenile looking rmosiea bad heen e808 dpad euuaited in any part of the Union. Lester will make sa regard to the great question of the times; that «l! thos to say nc of aoine scores of heavy cargoes soon ieee te td ‘ excellent Captain Murphy Maguire ; and Mrs Hughes, | prireiples are my principles; and if be is wrong in tiem, 4 to come #8: ‘ve dvew the attention 6f slippers | previously been on intimate terms. n inquiry, | Mra. Kuseell Mrs. 3 it, receive the warmest 1 A ol . vubvet tow, T kuow that all these things are seurce of much disappointment to the South. And thea Soe ae — PPeTS OF | We ascertained that the scene of the tragedy was at | demonstrations of pleasure from'audiences who are de- | 2 8M) (applause,) and always will be. (Applause.) that they have beon stated a thousand ; there was Now Mexico aud Utah; what was to be dome u = Uantic wis any nog larly to those Sates No. 211 Gravier etrect, a locale somowhat noted as | Uzhted by the acting from first to last, Gentlemen, it has beon suggested that it would be ; but, ip these days of perpetual discontent | with them? Why, gentlemon, from the best investiga. and We ao@ caution them to examine more closely | the residence of courterans. The domicil iteelf is Nationa: TreatRy.—Nothing can exceed the delight | pleasant and agreeable to the citiaens of Buffalo, and | Bd misrvpresontation, to state things a thousand times tion I have given the subject, and the reflection I have gur mercantile reports, and judge for themselves. | low and unpretending, aud tho furniture of the | Pd enthusiaem with which the grand fairy epec‘acio of | their neighbors in the county of Frio, that I would state | if B0t «noush; for thereare more thanathournnd persons devoted to it, Twas of the opinion that the mountaing There are sufficient data seut over by every steamer | gooms makes no pretensions at display. After pass- | “Thalaba, the Destroyer, or the Burning Sword.” is peeing would state | whose conselences, one would think, led them to make it of New Mexico and Ute could no more sustain Ameri- to cunble merchants to judgo of our markets with | Ine througica deck nd harrow cotey, the dor of | MIghUY reccived. ‘Theeast, which embraces diversity of | *° Yu my opinions, such as they aro, on the present | a duty to deny, misrepresent, falsify and cover up truths. | csp aavery than ihe shows of Canada. I saw it was very great. accuracy if they so choose, although | tr Sark | ‘> charactor, is euctained by the entire stre of this popu- | condition of the country, its prospects, its hopes, and its | Now, vere is the constitution, fellow-citizens. and Thave | impossibie, T thought so then, andT think so now, y i y Sb | the uchappy victim’s room was opened, and there, 4 bi Pop Aaah oy retro! word: Jome § osed. shere may be, in tho diforent journals published | jn all the grim ghastlinoss of death, with bar gare lar company. Thescenory, costuines and equipments are | dangers; and, follow-citixens, I hope to do that, thie day | (8ken te pains to tramseibe th mm those 8, , Therefore, gentlemen, when it was prop in Cor here, sume alight diserspanciesix quotations. Thon, e if tho most costly and gorgeous description; tho ballet 0 that he who runa may jo person held to ser- | to appiy tho Wilmot proviso to New Mexico and Utah, it ton: Svahionld be + sea poe ‘that ee ee ments frightfully reddened with ber own blood, lay nices and combats aro executed with grace and dexte- | 24 this hour, as far as my etrength will permit, 2 ono Stale under the laws thereof,escaping | sppeared to mo just 2s absurd as to apply it bere im ty a the poor croature who had fallen by the vongeful | rity; and all combined, produce as i effect Gentlemen, believe me, I kuow where I am. I know inadl, In consequonee of any law or regula- | Weatera New York. I saw that tho snow hills, the uo basis of valuation such as existe in the older | balist of her angered lover. ‘Tho corpee seamed | cae hare coortetieeoen he cates ae ath et | bo one Pant openiog tion thervin, be discharged from such service or labor, | etertal mountain, and tho climate of those countries, sitios of the States. We have no six months and | that of a young woman of some cighteen or twenty | mence with the celebrated druma entitled" Juck Sho w am speaking. I know for whom Tar spesk- | put shati Lo delivered np on cixim of the party to whom | would never support slavery, No man could carry m t months paper here, which, by being long | yerrs of ue, fenutifil tow fuult, “of graceful ‘nty | Gard,” with a cant cf undeniable taleat, embracing the | iP& I know Tam here in this sincularty prosperous | auch vervice or inbormay bedue.” Ts tere auy mistake | slave thers witk-any expectation of profit. It oould aoe credit, enables jobbers and retailers to buy with | Yelldovoloped @gure, with a profusion of beautiful | B&€cs of Miss K. Mestayer, Miss Crooker, Mears, Bran- | and powerful part of the United States—Westorn New | about that? Ixthere any forty shilling attorney here: | be done, and aa the south thought that it wae irri ~ome certainty that, before the credit expires, the djotty riaglet ‘ ” don, Ia Pavor, L. Fox, and Herbert. Atter which, Miss } York. . j. | Ne. 2 will not disgrace my profession by supposing such | tetiog and disrespectful, 1 was not willing to do it; and jotty riaglets, which bung over her face and crk—and I know the character of the mon who consti Phere i Ae ., i wi zouds can be tumed over to advantage. We have, | procs drddubblod in the pod Malvina will’ perform ber Seautifal Swiss Dance; and . a thing, | ‘There id not in or out of auattorocy's office in thyrcom, T_saw no occasion for applying the Siveioe oalz te’ Bog what we acy, oc Ghlake we | ree eee onthe urple stream that oozed | the emeluding attraction will be the succeestul plese of | tute Western New York. I know they are sons of libor- | the eounty of Erie, or elsewhere, one who could raise m provio to New Moxico cr Utah. I voted accordingly, h , e The ball, in its missiou of de- | « ” 1 t . i doubt, ticle of adoubt, aout th ing of thia and who doubts tt now ? law ads howe cau sell fortheith ata profit. If it be considered | omhcr wound. he Bul, in its missiou of do- | « Thalaba,” with the usual distinguished cast. Seats | ty, one and all; that they sucked in lborty with thelr | doult, or particle uf edoubt, about the meaning a lonbta tt mow t.ho leu ecimbtine 3 A sa vhat very many must gel! at rates reduced from the cond Premio ‘with it parts of both, interior po egestas naar sili lecapinn this aba cinien| fe-ek egremee rh smorneonenesiegrentmarely ites aay ott [Abend ade fpr average ped or is tet ihely chore Mil tevone ees z Why, thore a market through pressure of circumstances in such @ | jlayy hones. “It then passed out through the under HabieieclG Guviel-Ltnile! epietne hi as their daily contemplation and watchful thought, Thoy can’t (elt, 1 bave seen many such exhibitions tet a man in the United Stotes so stupid ax pot to see goramunity, and that such sales will find their Wa¥ | part of hor chin, ani entered hor neck, passing | ments ccmmenoe with tho comedictta, of “Delicate | 8 Men of & very ringular quality of condition for s Lag orl tvsang gc pees. apr ag 26 Ae mates, Siend ene Hei a, See eee nto the journals as part of day's transactions, 1 | {yrough the windpipe, and taking a slanting direc: | Ground,” with Mz. Walcot asCltizen Sengftold, and Miles | million ands half of people. They are mee around us, he truth But there ig no man who ean road stry, aud that it was oniy eatculsted to irritate amd will cease to be wondered at that extreme fluctua | 45 ve f i 5 D, i - ho constitution of tho United States, and offend. And Lam not one who ia disposed to create pesca 7 om tion towards tho loft side, whore it finally lodged | Mary Taylor as Paulino. This wili be succeeded by @ | and here before ua, who till their own soils with their d imperative. “No on. the irritation, or ive offence to our brothors, or to break. <ions iu prices at short intervals ehould exist, or, | geaiuat the first rib. With eucl a wound, it will | S¥is¥ Pas de Deus ty Mille Duos-Barre and Mr. Smith. Saintes niin t veut site stevissce inher teens Binie, | fratvenat ftisetsblp, without Savas. The Unedien wae be quoted for daily information to our commucity, | n5t be supposed that the suffering of the victiin was | Ab0, an Irish Lit by Mr. Fletcher and Aliss ‘Tayleure, | 7 bunds; and others who carn their own livelihood | comsliuti tr one ag er grt agg ty A mg Fo nee ge woe ee snd, sbrough theso daily quotations, go to ott | Groat-—u few struggles —n fe ps for breath -a | The enteriainnents will terminate with the exseadiagty | by thelr own labor, with me means beyond Cheir own in- | oi de op ‘May inte an’ terlation thereia, be dis- | Mesico or Utah. ‘There ls 00 slavery. ‘cacao nak tae ports &3 accounts curren? of the state of our market. | heavy fall--and che vas d ‘Among her com- ey ceed gg Soe tol Pee tase th coe dustry, and thelr own independence, and thelr own wile | churced frum vay auch service ot labor, but shali be de- shining face of an African there, Lt is utterly imprac- We hardly know what to say about money. ‘To- | ranidns, tho decoased was known b; 01 ' i h ticablo, and utterly ridiculoy it sy . Y m4 sy the name of Ma t é Lingness to labor. These are the men who constitute, to | livered mp om the claim of the party to whom euch ser- ical utterly suloms to enppose it, ant po one, day it ie very plenty, and loans can be effected Eien Philips, though, wo are inforsed, that tho | mma sis Loa as tho. Raby, Ghose, Ore eree: | no great an extent, tho people of Westera New York, | Yic# or labor may bedue.” Why, you aro told by forty | who does not mean to agitate, will urge It vory inecusiderable rates, ag our market stands. | name was an assumod one. Hor rcal matden | tractive features are presented, 1t Ls no wonder that the ) Tut the echcol-housss I thnks: Bdleoks |: Seteeeey ena cpebem seevlenasiepa uameaans tees dee eee tantcead ak VE Pen cian Lies Tomorrow, tho chances aro, that the interest holds : jut the echeol-Louses I know aro among thom. Kduea- | Syricwe, nnd elsewhere, the noolored man came here the country—some connected with the press; some, Lame. tion is among them, They tend, aud write and think, | be cameasa freewan; that i, anan sequifer. If became sorry to ray, counected with the learned professions. ae a fugitive from labor, the coustitution enys he is nota They rgltate—their Iveliocd consists tn agitating— freeman, aid that he shall be delivered up to his owners their freehold, their copyhold, thelr eapital, their all and - “ ; me was Catherino » She was born in | Lycoum should be crowded every night. Brougham is ut bnt little less than half the re We hav uiverpool, England; bas lived for somo time in Now | ¥ory settye, persevering, miei man-—be is never seen the per centage nmap et pe atl per cont. in | York, whore sho was married, and for the last two | ibe is siways busily’ eugaged. either in dramatizing | And hero are the fair sex—educated, reQood, and Intel- the morying, and less than Sai hss ~ ig taken ia | years has been a resident of this city, where she has aes ¢ day, or playing at night. His company is ox: | ligent ; and hero are men who know the history of their | who are entitled to his services, Now, gentlemen, sil, depends on the excttomont of the public mla@ > the exexing 5 the sceuritios being equal. We havo | now a child of some four years of age, and rola- | {fiicn, the scanery beautiful apd the doorkewpers atten: | country, and the laws of thelr country, and'the institu. | that ix ilo comstitution of the United States. Gen- -men, theae thinga went on at the commencement seen 2 per cent demanded of onc for the caro of his | tions who occupy respectable positions in so- | focal! commiy’ wily be premier entitled’ the Cilume | tions. of their country; and men, in my opinion, lovers of m, do we, oF do we not, mran to execate Year 1850.” There were two geoat questions before money or dust on deposit, ten minutes afterwards | ciety, In consequence of these fucts, we do | Bock of Leanty” presented, entitled, the “ilome : nae SeeeeNY that part of the constitution a4 well ae the rest of the public, There wns the quortion te we have soon 2 por cont allowed on deposit to aa | net give the frail one’s name in full. The cir- aicepegss liberty, and they are yet lovers of liberty under the con- | ji? IT suppose there are before me here members of dary. and of # government for other, At thiscorner of the street a heavy shave | oumatances of Catherin t than ever. | stitution of the country, and whe mean to maintein that | Congress, Isuppose there are bore membres of tho State Which I consider as one question ; than half those rates has been all.that was domand: | o'clock, last night, Abrabam Parker, pilot of the | afternoon and evening, The afternoon performance is | (Great applause) I hope these obseevations will satisfy | New York, exceutivo oflocrs, assessors, euperviwrs, jus- something tosay. Toxas,as you know, established hee rg yg : low ii | steamboat C. 1. Watking, nccompaniod by 2 friend | for the special neeommodation of Indios and children. you that I know where Lam, wuder what responsibility I | tices of the peace, and constables, before me. Allow my independence of Mexico, by her revolution and the snd give, by cur representations, anything lik® & | of his, culled at the Louse in which decensed cccou- | Fr:z0%e' Miveraria axn New Onisane Seatnaoens | speax,and before whom Lappeur; and Ihave nodesire that | 1° ey. Reuslemen, that there is mot—that there canng | Pattle of San Jecinto, which mate her esovercign power. rolisble wceou Money is plenty here. “It has picd apartments, and after romaining till ‘noarly | nro honored with crowded assemblages nighuy. They : 7 : be any One of these cifioers im tals ansombinge, or ole. 1 have already stated ‘to you what I hevo sateipated been plenty always; but our bankers and other | one o'clock ho rose to depart. The reputed Eliza | give tro pe ances this aflerncom and evening, | OY Word T shall sey this day, shall be withhoiden from | where, whe has not, sccording to the farm of hie oblige- trom the movement, that she would ask to come into the Cumrst werRnis are more aitract! The usual choice selection of songs, dam What cau wo say of such a money mark who happen to havea fow dollars in their coffers, | phillips was in the act of handing him his wate Those who can enjoy goed vooal and instrumental music | YOu or your children, or your neighbors, or the whole | tion, bound himadf by ® solemn oath, befor God, Union as nelave State, Weatmitted her in 1845, and choose Lo uso it as na article of imorchandise, sub which“eobe had previously put peerage | when doing | oC® hearty leugh, s Fiud visit Peilows? Musical Hall. world. Because [speak s0 before you and before my | 1 serpert tbe constlution. They have taken their oaths ve ao od ae BT nb tang aitted hei e =? on tho Holy Evangelists of Almighty God, or by uplifted 1546 band, as thie case may be,or by & solemn naweveration member that. She elstived by conquest oll thet territory is Une pructhe in sotwe eases. atone and all of them, | which was commonly called New Mexico, enst of the Rio there is not & maa who hokla, nor is there any man wh) | Grande, She claimed xlso by (hese Limits what ean hold any office inthe giM of the titution had declared aud established as the in this Slave, or in any other State, who Hnilte of Texas. This was he bound, by the solemn obligation of an oath d into (he United Sta that bo will support the ooustivution of the United States bee territory, Th ¥ is be to iumpor wiih that? Is he to falter! | We took «eho defined ber own limits, and with the ject to an enormous profit. . ;. | 80, fet it fall and knocked the outer caso off. ‘Trorion Hait.—Professor Venst Von Heeringen wil | country, and if It ia not too solemn to say a0, bufore God Of course no objection can be made to the im- | ynap who was in the next room said, “dawn her, if ‘and concert, ou Twosday evvning next, to illus- i but we cannot heipask- | she'd let my wateh fall, I'd slap hoz down.” wow sytem ag abe ot tanec mon, Why should heavy | g-nmbled some about the watch, and on examining J.B. Scorr.—-Tho friends of this celebrated actor | entlemen, there ls but one question in this country bmitted tot ‘There is : fis pookets, said that he missed’ a tea dollar Ten- | ¥° are informed, ar about giving bim a benctit a& the | BOW; oF if there be others, the others aro but secon- usury should rule 0 high os | nesseo bill, and aceused his frail companion of har- | Bowery Thentre dary, or so subordinate, that they are all shsorbed ia The silly enactment of a were : ing stolen it. Eliza protested hor innocence, de- | ionopy.~A grand Sunday conoert willbe given | that great and leading question; aud that is neither ure, elected by accident and acting by impuly ing that she bad no money but what he tnd | St the above spactous and magnificent public resort 0- | more nor less than this : that we can preserve the unio, € vipoesd upon us a legal rate of usury of 0 per cent : ea diate | morrow evening, om Which occasion the grand orchestra mitieg are ax much matters of | power of making thre additional slave ‘States. 1 any pee ie al n be piven b Thereupon Parker became exocodiag- | Cetin talina Opers, unde ‘Utootion of Max Maret. | of the States, not by ecercion—not by military power— | conscienew ae ny sacred dotmestio | * we,” but I dia got always remember that, Now, tm z ; ly b ‘ous, and exclaimed— od d—n you, 1 ties, oor most onde things. let as back to 10. What wae re ne more 2ok, will divcamwse rome of the newest and most deanciful | not by angry controremies. Tut ean wo of this genera- Tation and comelen- | You don't give me the money I'll shoot you,” and | ainsi, The garden {4 onen ove e 2500 i. in the next reom here told Parker to put up bis pis- | cultivation of health, by inhaling a datioious sca breeze, | @ 86 preserve the union of the United States by the ol, remarking, at the same time, that he was too | also an ex nt view of the shipping in the bay, and the | administration of the powers of the constitution, av ready in the vse of it. Parker then immediately ng SCODETY thal give content and satisfaction to all who live under esented th ol at } lira hae he Bo fatal it, and draw us together, not by wilitery power, but by kus and Gavia, and ane the silken cords of mutual, fraternal, patriotic ailee. | the back yard. Watchman Ryan, whe heard the | tion? That ts the question, and oo other. Gentieamen fi I believe in party distinctions. I am a party man report of th and the scream, broke into the | house and followed Parker into the yard. He found, | There are questions belonging to party in which | em r concerned, and there arc opinions entertained by other ate of things in 1540? There was Texas claim vitles Woe emer tuto under the allthat,or a great part of that which the United ‘The bonds cf politionl ck bad acquired from Mexico, as New Mexico. Bhe hold ws togetherfrom stated that it belongs! to her by conquest and by wmen, thet 1* the main her sdminvon into the United States, and she wae ofthe United States onthe ques: ready to enforce hor elsims by the foree of arms, Re ca,l contend. and have always collect that ls not all, A mau must be ignorant of the after the adoption of the coustitatioa, — Listory of the country whe does not know, that at the gorernment ealeulate! to bring slave | commencement of 1800, there was a great agitadon yivto the United States, was beyond the powor threughout the whole South. Whe does not kaow thas netitiion, and against ite provisions That is six or seven of the langest States of tho South had already ways has been my ( It was | (nken moneores for separation—were preparing for dis= er thought to be so, fur t eulon in They concurred with Texas, for the eubject for con: tous Gueharge than constitution of the Ux uc0 of po alaw with prope: dignity, we m humi We thi t of our mone} or 7 por cont per ar veater domand than neo nt ur rendert that theta they embody the most diftteait chs shakespeare, & iueredible. Do not take our words wm. To-day a pleasant bill ia last apponrance. They take he Tie bankers only cars to make out of the uations of the maucke wover, that the murderer had climbed the pal- | hola any (fice, cr take any ohaze in the p titicn niry! Lantinians was vame eutitled to her re ; 0 hat, boots, sud pi od, I wilt pay A. | Ceyianation inmediag Jon is pees 1 of the arrested. Aa diately took place; the story OD KER C+ mnities those matters are governed | ings aud escaped. Parker's hat, coat and pistol rome, in Jefferson's time, to atinch Loute renaring town ore) her rights by public opinion and public action, and such were found inthe yard. A short time after this, parties which I repudiate; but what of that? If a | United States, A treaty with France was force ofarmus. Troops were enllstod, and tou’? you tememie q sense teually rates money at what iti feu 3 sav a i wa P 4 house be divid . 3 rT 1, J purpose. But Jofferse ‘ jon at that moment T. jpontie that st this state of Chings how many thom » ty worth. Ts moury rated at what it fe Tieus. Hughes say « man running down Poydess | xen ayp Sitpncrion.—We have beon informed, | rey bog ed against iteeif, it will fall, aad crush | Toh ihat na alteration of th Htation vax acoswary —eand persows, iu the Bouth were disaffoewd towarts the worth in thi here moy b enw: street hatloss,bootiow, ual apparently much oxaited. | 1... seiative of the young woman, whose name wo orybody init, Woe must eve that wo maintaia the | to enadie it to be dong, In considering what I wilt nob ion, or were conirons fur brow! ‘aeh of th: ak ob acet teaae ont | ‘Thinkiag that the chroumstance wad indicative of | supprees, of the following partioulars of a recont | E°Terament over us, Woe murt veo that we uphold the Hat opiaion was abandoned wit Loalsante —to join ber mak much “dg: nb p nt fueling @ something wrong, be arrested tho man, and on tak- | SUDPTION fm ot ryyn ds the tamale & at constitution, and wo must do «0 without regard to party y provision or altoration to estabilsh the Pighta of fo the watgeme lnaity of our public monetary ae ) ing him to the wateh-house, met Ryan there, with | tinge w y . ‘Sen, be rs - in the conetituilon. At that tw, 1 waa tw young to 00? The public mind wasdteturbed. Thy tion. | }of thi e give merely the plain facts in the | Now, how did this question ati? Tho question iy fur- and (hounds ready to joln Texas. Now, alt the ox y. <i will only state that the friends of the girl | ever mlastated, I dare ray if you kaow mach of ms, or wat- | of the murder was related; the prisoner was ascmedy against the ind toeerians ee | aud leched en’ 40 La meer oh | statoments are truo,) ina criminal action for adal. ’ - ak a \ acre: | - . is =v Be ¢ blood mined in rcletion | sry, x crime whieb our statutes mako fulony. We | mths, you have heard of my attending Union meet 0 his midnight dood of bi taco that there § “ + agerg. | ings, and ef my fervent demonstrations at Union meet mney, money i# | this morning held an inquest on the body ° wo that there is any “abduction,” * aggre | 06 ) no money ena bo badteom | prurdered woran ob a post mortern ox the matte Jt evoms that | ings. Well, what was the otject of that? What was he borrower; and its to pay it hawked | amination was made by Dr, Lemonior, develop y young woman who receatly | the purpose of that? The oljoct and purpos were do eb avminal tats. Te | eed With the deatty be A with her mother at the South Kind, 4 | dhgelllig 42 Givaghitenty wietepresaied, Thad 0a. fe- whols, a large eperous city un- dece sdibly im years of age, rather coquettish, aad is pos- tation to go Union mee t fe it cannot pay in | formed, hud followed b r vg Bin Byars derable beauty and musical talent, | “istics te Go toe Union meoting in the cousty of Weet d with its peo- | but for the ebort period of thie mouth wie it Californian Sone montiss since, | chester; Tcould not go but wrote » letter. Well, some " | “Oriene Bote, Bike © acquainted with a uxan named M——, | wise manof the east sald he did no! think it was very all these trans Aud -“ ue exbibition of a pa ucomenry to Wold Union meetings, He did not think there hing featare | porform at the exbi | were many divunionints avout Tarrytowa. And so here be an inex- — loft the city with the | ip erery partof New York, there i¢a total misapprehon. ; it is this, an open ist. Tho exhibition of successful sseuraption of great wealth and tm a continued in the towns and cities in | “°P Of the purpose and object of t ee thal trime South at this time was disaileeted tywards the Unicon These very men were in a condition to fall inte a inciple ofa mixed bass. Fiori sflerwards ny course of things thet should be violent and destruc edmitied Then, too, I was out cf ¢ had been tive. Well them, ceotiomen, what wae to be done again, br tt onee, bot} had nothi odo with the Vlemdatreaty ts far as Texas was concerned! low me to my, geatie or the admicsion of Fioridn, My opinion rmoains ua men, there are two corte of foresight. There is a imilite- changed, that it waa not in the original sooye or design ry foresight, which sons what wis the reeult of a due ot the ¢ t jon to admit new Stat appeal to arma, oud there ts also @ etatceman-like fore territory, and that for one, | never w con might, whieh looks not ot the result of batues and cate ne matter what may be rakiat the Syracuse 09 nage. but through the result of politiont distarbanoes, tien, or any oth rt ge of insane per: the volence of faction cxtried tote mibtary operations, never a Te ct bo one foot and the borrors attendant on civil war, of shave territer, ¢ old thirteen States 1 pever bad a doubt. gentiomen, that if the adminis bad at the tinac the Union. Never, tration of Geaerai Teylor had gone to war. oad hat seas never. ‘The man can't show hia face to me and say he troops into New Mexico, that he woald have wiy can prove that f over de I from that doctrine. He then ins week, The power om one mide Was far aap ner wey, aod ay.or hice & mercenary 0 sil the power ou the other. Bat what then Wat nig lit conary spostate from if Texan troops aesisted by thousands of voluatecms Daniel Webster haa become. (Laugater and — fim the divaffroted states, had g Mexieg, Our Staic neys. * Value x i. $100, om demand.” The o ed, and Mr. A. I of my couree of public conduct fir the last fourteen Coroner Sp Ne mk INpiaN Derrepattons in T) 8 from two Las of that | ir wo of them named Villimere, it, about the 1th of inst month, two persons the panor rtance. Wo soberly and bon ask the ob- | fron Ma ioe ms 4 | he vicinity. It is stated that Every one knows there ix nota country, oracity, OF 8 | cheers) ile knows bimeeif to bea bypoorite wud faldi- and bad been defeated and tarned back, would that have rote of money transactions to look at the follow. hw mg Bong — pc “y mage exhibitor and the pianist lived tog bawiet, in the State of New York, that is ready to go | ter. But tlanen, 1 was in puluic lif when the . settled the boundary question ? Now, cenilemen, I wi ing table, and 7 whether they think surprised and attacked by the savagee—tw MAt'y | wite. although it isnot deniod tbat out of the Union, Theres uoman so insane ia the whole | [teresition to wanes "Texas to the Unlied Siateg was Lbnd tan thousand vote wis 1 eval drow acvuet together right in our money nd two Mexicans—on thoir way to tho Rio | 2 ther wife in New York. It ie said that ho toll | grates, oateide » lunatic 1m, a8 to wish It, But cht forward. You knew the revolnuom in Touma, me th ie people of the United States—eud L wim vided that country from Mexico, was ta the , covld mabe them ail hear what T now declare iu my oem or’ M. 1 saw, then—and { don't kaow (nat it | ¢ Mecienee, before the Power who site on bigh, and whe required any porter foresight—that i would Wil jadge you snd me Lereafter, ae my eowmu belie, ry xt thing to bring Texna, whieh was thot if thie Lena comirorersy hod not voen settled by designed to be 9 slavolerdlog ” tnt this Union, | Congress in the m the sujastnent measures, on to proshein my civil war would usned—bloot, American bt ure, and Ld stern ave boep hed, nad who evo tall what else # to the laat, Now. gentle Lie consequence? Coutiomen, fr an bowor ve your wife stion, E aur eure t a foreign fue invade weit on have belore spoken in the 1 was in this ity tu th fi ber that be would get a divorce from his wile sud marry her. Ilo left the exhibition and the pairpro- ceeded to New York, and the lady was introduced to the wife of M——; in his house she remained fur emontha, when bor friends in Boston sent an York, who brought her back to £ hore and repaired to the howe ol . to purchase stock. te Ameri xiean fell, at the first fire of the and | Indians, sreed wita“urrows, and the other two of the party were wounded at the samo time, but not se Realy | but that they were able to make such resittance a+ | { | state Ponds, r cent tate Warrsate . . ity Ser ip, Cold i vity Serip, (re egeweee c. Money ver aut, but, for want of that in not it. We all know thet every man aad every Deighbor hood, and all ec of Now York, is attached to the Union, aud has no {doa of with Grawing fromit, Rut that i not the polut—that ia not the polut. The question. fellow visizens—and I put It ny's mother. Iti Gah to epee eta the | 208 HOF ie oral etertien ihe qaatios b, cheer natrances of her friends, sho clings to him, and , JOU and the rest of the people of the great State of 3 it Indiaas were secon, but | 284 followed him to Portland, where, wo are in- | York, and of all the States, will eo adbere to the | it is supposed there wore about fifteen in the party. | formed, they remained two weeks. Tho strangest | constitution—will ro enact and maintain Isws to prom Ono of them ventured boldly into the town of San | part of the whole affair ix, that he is now staying at . thet you wilt not only remaia porations, in the § doses in seourition, tight ¢ pn oxists to iM: | t) put the savages to flight—not, however veet. Very little paper i od at best seou | they had aucceoded in driving of s mare, valued at szity. Kintes rule fiom 4 9 t per cont per month on | 910. ‘This auimal, however, by some moans o4 at clase weouritice ed fre . emptible assumption of dignity without worth, and J of wealbe Without means, constitutes the whole of it. nl was recovered en the | myreif, 1 hop clurnad are young, and willing ch to offer Inst drop of their Sane r cae ani Patricto, and snecveded in capt valeas the hous of the girl's mother, and gallate his ion ores nee beetheten te wile regard = exprers che berror I fort at oh Lert Agee he alligdy esterday eve | nirse belonging to Mr. Carragaa. Mr aisable | + yiotim ” (2) to the differwat places of nmusoment. ea me ea eee L went out of my way, controvoryy betwoon op «(th ning, em the pleasure of shaking the hand o All this, it appears, is under the eye of the mother, | Temelm init, and carry it on? That is the ques of showing what f anticipated im iment of the Cailved States, heesuse lve ta ' wie, ce pene te |e comastornae ne's Depart See Sheth | hg ag Salen og 1 locs not protest against it. We leave thia ou concur In measures necessary to malntain the Ane Ae 8 Aluve territory, amd mnid i Ci Heaven, « dieemp: (thew ties Shed make asm ment di cot from rt ararale _The eptasn re tnd be was compeliea to Twente | statement of facts to the judgwont of our oF will you oppose such measures! That is the NN ee | I ee Ce. aun quite bee Ape, ben ‘oan tis ae oa pean ah ho } of anrees. he party earprised, aod two of | hetrpcig o - x Raven? eben ua tne! bers of Congress from New York—you have your pro | deo he pron ya ABR asin Ky envugh of nd thet was the matter of the Maine to Fort Loavenwort! toch | Whom were killed, are supposed to be from the | Pot NeW, So b orion in the United States Senate, We have | m et that 1 took pains to step outof Fig one aay © wire Ghee, Se aceset the Ttains he Hort Leavenworth, in seventeen | Coltads. ‘The Atmerioea’ that Woe fatally stise | Biting Communication upon the subject. —Rosion P he gy esto ate ve nate | ing way to denounce in advance the aonexation of | Under the provisions of the eanituison, In tener rnd a half days. On the route the; encountered two * | Times, May 21. many members of Congrers from Now Finglaod Texas ax slave territory to the United States, [raid om | Washington's administeetion, to the year 17%}, thane vorysevers snow storms, which sroatly impeded their | ¢XC!#imed, as he fell, “O, my poor wife and oliil- Weil, they maintain the laws th od law for th on of fugitive | m dren!” which cir wane r - : ell, maintain the laws that are par war paeed & law for the rostetation rea Aor A _ * . - . . yoegensed, " 0 lave! h - 1 > a zs Ponasee "The Capials mate them cose seo: telsing go in gold. ‘The othor American also To THX EDcTOR or ne ™ ¥. ROtiD, spect the rights of the Beuth, eo that the Union may voeatay } ent T ant wots a ecllaveholding | ciry the constitution Into elicet—th> great men Of cots of tobaceo, and was treated kindly by thom. ad gly Rold, seoreted in the same way. jut ‘ y 22, . beheld together; and not only that we may net go out | itoyness to do anything that ehell extend the | New bnginad and New York all concurred in tt avery of the African on thie continent, or add passed, and answered all cho purposes expected from 16 egiousiy humbuggod in | v¢ i¢ ourceives, which wa wre not inclined to do, The fest train Of emigrants was mt by the Cap- the savages seemed more intent upon the acqui- | The newspaper are se7 of tain’ fay, on of horass t! ld or silvor, er oven of | TRerd to this subject, so far as this locality is con- 1 te other slavehokding Simtes to the Union. ‘Whea § | til about the year 184] or i842 cho Sentes interfered the Tate Blues and from that pole, ‘enti he ps, for on thia « a they Toft ‘thele Victims | cersed. Ono paper says, * they are too commonly | Put that by ssoertaining and maintaining the | itty T rgnrded slivery aa gevat mot. and poll | to make enactments 19 opps 5 5 irtlwed at the froolicr, he mat them. almost oveey | ithout any other traces of their barburity than | Worn there to attract attention more than say othor rights of others, they may also remain in the Umiom. | og) evil, | only wesc latycuage that bas boos adopted by | etre salt that Stare magistrates might etesute the dation distinguished men, thomacives citirens of slavebolding | of the law States, Lrball do nothing, therefore, to extend or en- imposing courage ita further extension. We have slavery already the law— amouget Ws, The constitution found it amongat aa Tt | carry tho low into Ca EY |. generally, at the com- recognised it, and gave it volomn guarauties, To the fall | ineneement of the year 18 was absolately—t extent of there guaranties wo ate all bound in bone in) am ae ie te oa . be a 4 a nt . amd by the eon tutiow. All the stipulstions | 4 in rn ~ prow aneen ta tee eomaavel [Nehold. | tion of the constitution, or oles give up that inal day. ‘The mai f * ‘ the wounds inflicted by the arrows by which they | dro#s.”” Another says, “ the most reapecta- | Now, gentlemen, permit me to «ay that I epesk of no com. Lake. be main ody’ of emigration wap for Sik were tranefixed. 4 “i “ { ble and feshionabe la in Syracuse have adoptod | cosstovs, If the South wih any conrerlon from ma, wies for Califorgia. Thoy wore c\ting slong vary rE - them.” Now, thisis all shoer nonsense. Tho feos they won't get It; mot @ hair's breadth of it. If they woll. The past season at Fors Laramie had. been |. THe Orarao Coury Baws Rongrey.—Barton | ts, but hive Indies in this olty have, nt any. tne | cae to my house for It, thay will not Ant it If they do ners than usually diy, but litte rain having fallen | 894 Larned, arrested on chargo of the robbery, | *ppeared in public a la Twrk. One is the wife of @ | 1 atte , t . luring the winter or sprit ‘The report of the In- | ore brought before Jndgo Hydo, on Thursday | 2% echool minister, another tho wife of an itine- concede nothing. But I ray that f will maintain for Jiang #rd traders at the fort waa, that the euow in | Morning. Mr. Barton was discharged, Lovause the | Tat temperanoe, abolition lecturer, and the third | them, ae will maintain for you, to the atmont of my the mourtuins was very heavy. At one period he people were not ready with their wituessos, who re | #2 Aarietant hor ia one of our common echoois. | power, and in the face of ail danger, thoir rights under | ing States which ars alceady in the Union, ought to be | tutionentirely, ‘That was the question, 1 was ia Com sfore le Kft tho fort, there had beon a bonsidera: | Sido out of the State. raed waived an oxamink Whother their exampls is followed remsina to be | the constitution, and your tighia under the soussitution, | feliilied, and,o far aa depends on tao, shall bo Callie tn | Slee. t baa \dveas poovooes 2 aiteoces tomy Pune the falimens of their spirit, and to t Rea ey the sities bagond | ofepinion that*a eumimary trial bys jury micht be the weak cE Uongran it te the soncorn ef the | bad, which would eatiefy the prejudices of the pee Mtates themecives. They hate never cubtuitted it to | ple; but T lef the Beuate and went to ancther ste- blo rise fa the be sie ta ry Unity owing to the suescoding | Hots and was committed ¢ Mr. Barton is an | 80¢u, ‘Two or three othor Indios have “ tried them dent ahele 0 Dai elderly persou, of roapectable appearance, and h: Wut have not appeared in pabdlie, aad rumor ut tee ey aete Pisin’ | always surcsined @ good character. Isis anid co | S078 thoy will not. ‘The attompled innovation (Cries of" Good, Good," er) And God forvake me aot my } chitdven, if I ever be found to fhiter in one of the ostier, ‘ive t t = i “ is @ (Tremendous applewe,) Tt ie obvious to erery one a across the PL be » man of wealth and influenow. He assorts | hath this extent, and no more BS Copsrean, aad Ocengrnee hae ne right of power over | tow before the law war paseed, The Inw of 183 Git Be the Moron trans Tor ane Bane ioe, eptire innocence, and say4 ho will hold himself tn Vive ta Heneawo, [and we all know it, that the orgie of (he gre ee eee ee eee ae ee een ne Incasnee, | passed. Now I undertake, as 4 lawyer, and on my pro a few traius for Califor . 0 adiness for trial at any ve he People may de oie mony een me oy May 29.) ditarbance which agitates the cowetry is the ea | or 2, no indieation of purpose, wich shall | poy" caren) wear i “ oan, ae Mo.) Aepmetican, Mey VU, mad C1 stown CN. ¥.) Journal, May 17) A young lad, reeeod in the new coxtumo, ne 0 ¢ "7 Staten; ; in . or threaten to interfors with the oxele | of 4 ly more favorable to the 4 Mo.) Ren fey Me wert YE) Oe a woatthed somo ot our staid cltizons yesterday, bat | Utcnee <f avery tn erme or the Stairs; bay wo muse | iyo authority of the several Staten over the subject of | Gendral Washington's law of 17a: ami I tei Rawaxe nD IN ALADAMA.—-Tho Month | agene, x ,, | wo must say, (het in our opinion, It Waa e most bo | mee Ms Must consider it; wo must deal with | iveey, ns it existe within their roxpoutive limits, AM | In the first place, the prosens i ens the qomery aud West Point wl, in, Alabame, Mentixa ov mim Marve Lxorstatvaa.—The J Wis appears to me to be a matter of perative | in much higher haude—in the haute of tndependeat Logislntore of Maine congcned mt Augusta on the | TOm/D8 diced. Boantifal feet handsomely encased | '» ernestly, Boneetiy, and juny: frou the mouth or an oxtent of rinely 1 av Tut whon *e come to epenk af aimiitiog new | judqea cf the Fupreme and Cirewit Coorts aod Hive the vivert acumes # hew and entirely different | Coarta and Commlsloners, who are appointe Cited wpect, Orr right and our datice ato thon both differ. | { F thelr law learning, Every fugitive v vrony ent, The sree Btater snd all the Slates ary then at | a tribunal of high cherseter eminent abtitiy, Of tae liberty tow or teject. When it le propeeed to bei Tespeetabls station, Well, fre riemters inte thie poiltical partoceship, he ad wr mers bar {get to rey on what terms wel pare | York to say that Joa, i* finally finished, n half patont leathers; the pantaloons were of | the 8%. Jobue to the contnes of Fiotide, there oxiesed tn ark of the hind “cee completed in | MR inst. No quorum of the, Svuate appoared. | iced twood material similar to the dreasy Tull and | the seer of grace roventers hundted sod rerruty-tve nie. it haa alroady, it ta sid, poured inte asap, porarily | buttoned at the mokio; » large cape and dashing | thiriern colonies, of origin, planted atd ferent Mobile the recery and colion tracic of larga nua. elected President, Albort H. Sinall, (dom.,) of | os aq bat com plated ine coctume ot tho! wh thse aed cowane fromm tiderent rea OF Hnogland, bring ber of convtis IN Georgia and Alubama, ond bas | NO*%, Scorvtacy. The Uouse waa organiced by | Yas’ edenely ot ‘and traveller yt 9 | ix with hewn vorions Mabite. aad retabllsting. each for Tone more for Molle than ail other sus Bat to Se choice of George Fe Sewell firrasoloe:) of OF | socae time Eves, bun whe thin (he lncevenice “atl ag AON am atid | Aig. eek, Me 1 Spee. y . ) (dow 4 7 they wore jnglish origin ‘ ‘ = y's, Lae Clerk. we | dally encered Fugilch woyuoge wes thei; bbak rare aad Milven were A stow B hw ram cers are to owe it, fugitive from sarvies, of labor, . And what Chey ary to bring Tih (hm fe my opialon, the prople af the vated riage Sim hime 9 foSerk oC Ge coun EM EE EEE Ee

Other pages from this issue: