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ed _ A ST, LT NTERF’ been longer assovlated with Prof. K. thaa | Letter o& ‘Thos. Jefferson Suther- th criminal jurisprudence; and the Judge bore | Taxation of United States Property pted by law, are yards, churches 4 STING LETTERS, | ber am except Prof. Silliman, and he 1 tan ngs in Nebraska. dowe “te ha upon the fraternity of lawyers, of (From the National Intelligencer, July 22.) and Soenes corpheatiearts testes hadite- . 1 nnn ‘ask permission to express his ready ‘concurrence in | Feev Kesany, whom this city porsesses an over-ubundant supply, A practioo has for many years prevailed in many | ‘Things in the service the people or 7 Vale College Commencement. the tribute of affection and respect paid to this be amass Texgitory, July 10, 1851. } | dlwase exeveding the demand by about one-hult | of the States of levying taxes on the property never specially mentioned, or exce in any aot Clim NEW HAVEN CORRESPONDENCE loved friend. For more than forty years he had a Ri Fut Ki y za How they live, if a standing problem in common | the general government, used in its ordimary | imposing taxes, because the ‘abouralty of auch ‘sa R ONE oo. ak, boon # witness ofbis asiduous investigation and jf" Sidra iver — Fu ‘euray--Army Ez- | law and quity, insoluble by any known process of | functions operations, sush as navy yards, | application of their terms could never be antivi- ew Haven, July 30,1851. | OS" st the communication of truth.” Professor | pse>—Pawnee Indians—Grawl Island--Pawnee | vatiocivation. 1 once yentured’ to propound this | was ko. puted. Can the assessor of Dauphin county demands. ‘the regular exercises of commencement begad | \ingsloy never did anything for display. ‘This col- Purciases, votice having been attempted recently | county, poor, or read tax on the public b with the concio ad clerum, delivered last evening by | leetaeee something more substantial than noise |)... ps 5 eeceepallh »swered me, without charging a {ce for the infor- | by ‘ eer collectors of the State of Foamy Harrisburg!’ Have the pul ie wus ine in Atwater, on the subject proposed by the | andshow; and Professor K. had contributed y sha bd ion, that they live by suction. Judge Warden, | Vania, ¢ eman ‘aving been made on the } phia ever boen taxed for e, city, or county pur- Dr. Lyman 5 ject proposed by full share of iabor to sustain its characterand p Siri take the occasion to communicate afew | i: his charge, sald the most contemptible creature, | officers in command of the several military estab- | poses? Do the county jails and court-houses Beneral association, + Justifivation by Faith.” 2 | gress, His example of accuracy, fidelity, eatnest- | more observations upon this very interesting sec- | the most amischievous, who required the most to be | lishments in that State, the officers were directed | taxes for the suppert of the boroughs within wi mday evening, however, Dr. Bushnell addressed | ness and sonad judgment, in supporting the aimin- | 45. o¢ country. guarded against, wise lawyer who interferes with | to refuse payment, and to enjoin the process insti- | they aro situated? Yetthese aro all included in the Beethoven Society, in the Colloge Chapel. We | istration of this college, had contribute: arent Stour : i | the defences that were to be made, tracing che | tuted to enforce it. A copy of the opinion recently | tho comprehensive term “real estate; but “they Society, ie Chaps iq itssuccess, To him, the community and the college | ‘The Nebraska (or Platte) river, is one of the | whole jail to get into every ease pending between | delivered by Judge Grier, in the Circuit Court of | are exempted or foro-prized from the provisions of Wish wo had room tor an extended report ; we could Vory indebted for an amount of labor of akindnever | largest tributaricé of the Missouri. Itrises by two | the Siate and partios arraigned; and he indig- | the Lastern District of Pennsylvania, upon this | 1),¢ statue by the law of reason,” and because. Bot do such a production justice in an abstract. It to be known. His talents at sells had been | branches, called the North and South Forks, in the | ™ntly frowned dewn all such proceedings on. bis paid, having reached ourl hands, We aye fodused, would be absurd to suppose that’an act to raisesy- @as replete with interesting and original thought, | mentioned. The speaker would say, what he often py. Mountains. After the union of the two | Part, Feare for » timo wore edtertained that they | oy te grees int Hacer fe branches of | venus from private property for public pu 5 : imed | bad before, that he would rather receive a whipping | 7 7 e | would arrest the court for # contempt of the bar; government, making it important that itsiould | ghou!d be construed to embrace propireateeke Bad, while it was good in every part, contained | Fr Lay other man than Professor Kingsley, be- | forks of the river, which is formod aboat four hun- | hut the excitement has passed away. We have | be generally known, to place it before our readers. | Gedicated to public use, or purobased er phid for by lawyer of my acquaintance, and he Bome passages of extraordinary beauty. cause he was sure he could never get over it. dred miles distant from their sources, the watersof | here what might be called an inclined plany of | OP!NON OF JUVOR GRIERONTUERIGHT OF THE STALE } public moncy. tof “ Viator,” in Hon. Juius Rock WELL was mn to speak : we lawyers, figuratively spoaking, morally and mon " TO TAX UNITED STATES PROVERTY. The cases of Piper ¥3. Singer, (Sorg. We beg to correct she statement 0 | «Phe reminiscences: of college | the Nebraska flew eastwardly the distance of about | ABT. gured Tay osterted'purts of the plage, | _, The United Statos vs, George Welse—In Citeult | o54}'a0n Sehupliall Bridge ve, eas ray eemley , »yen Society was | on the sentiment, “ The - Se , h ‘ Y 4 8 BK livered on the occasion of its twenty-fifth anniver- | 4Xet former | latitude. The mouth of the Nebraska is about 5 h » | Sits tee am kedeanesion ‘emiiaas ie rmsin the tax laws refer caly to private property oar gaa Wiese Lage at She date of ee fens pote ~ had ressiainome etd ‘Mtetore j pros hanéred miles from fhe, Micsienpet river, poids nape art ho ae ie Kd bear reapondent i colletor of faxes Fe casita pt ery mE folie site eee ray hen og eg 1 Gente di ged on tha justice to | measaring the meanders of the Missourt, wit) | of our cit; he tees, too, are generally upon the | county, who has seized upon the property of the | tion, though ial 6 Kind. The society nas just procured a very supe- | on that account, for he could do no justice to the | its waters are embraced; ant st ite mouth f sd ave adiasied t0.ths ad Sal overiiment and her officers, intendie, to sellit, for | “op; though not spec! rior organ, from the uimnufuctory of the Messrs. | subject, As hissubject was reminiscenecs of college Tt ig about six hundred yards wide; but, above it, Paper ae Cor es Stour lamyers | the purposo of leving certain taxes assessed against | age people of Pen xempted. ia are also citizens of overnment of the United Bost: ion fi od music | life, he th it he should be allowed to make just ; USM M08 Pe “ i e a , 4 ¢ peek ae ane i, AANA si such a speech as he should have made in colloge, | sprees ou) inte Den fbi ed ie me setually received a s foe of Ancairste coats for d de- “ae a ee garrison” or barracks, nearthe | States is no alien here; it cannot be ignored or Ubere 1s, a8 usual, a great connonese. SC Ann : Abe that tod aaa s poonee Pfatelt mene, Us | (which at this place is from ope anda Rail inane bescr ae Rn apa it oe As the parties prefer that the complainants CB lr bhi hap Pd men the fim the city, aud the ; teipal hotels are cro ; young 8 | miles wide,) may be forded st almoct any place. | Wich’ cannot be suid of everything in the mar. | ehouldhave their remedy, (if entitled to sny,) in pecit rod Pe ir pba per apersenenag 1 vening, the extensive accom- | such a3 were made in his class. Le would refer, | rt ¢ Ui on A Thal New Haven Hotel were all ‘Piers there was some personal allusion in it to | Its principal tributary agen - the ik Born ket. i this form of action, rather than by action of tres- people of Ponnsylvania, and may truly bo oallod taken up, and they were obliged to refuse someap- | & presilent of the institution—to the professor of | 4nd the Loup Fork, both running fiom the mostly | "Mz. fumsden, one of our citizens, a respectable | Pass, no question has been made as to ite-prepriety. | publio property. Stato laws, laying taxes on private —— This bone jek wan Walle ee falions hemistry, and the professor of rhetoric and ora- | the former having its oon nance * a one td and ingenious mechanic, published yesterday a chal- Thore are no fasts mB Aspate in the case, and it | property for public uses, hould? not, from mere expressly for Mr. Ives, a gentleman too well known | tory. “The suffered no young man to pass through | #D4 the mee net de ro ~~ aa te lenge to the whole world, and the rest of mankind, | bas therefore beensubmitted onthe bill and answor. | general or vague phraseology, be construed to in- fo the travelling public to need recommendation | college without receiving the impress of their cha- | the North anna nee best ‘paceage 18 obteined | oflering to stake $10,000 thut certain articles of | Tho respondent presented the following arsossmont | elude the Freperty of the United Stator. “A State hhere—was inten Ld te ok class hotel, and ex- | racter. There was a rebellion in the college— | phe nnuens ee Hae POR ge 18 obtwined | A crican manufacture, exhibited in thie city in | or bill of taxes to the officers of the garrison :— ought pot to be presumed to intend tho exouse of a nse was hot spared to make it one. It is inevory something shout the commons, something about | S¢Tye t rikccat once aes ens <0 eae 1648, at the Ohio Mechanics’ Fair, are erate. 10 Coase (RTE Ooo Tee ws rie Unless such intention is pl eet t euch @ house, and t ‘ine the ect ant potatoes. e speaker was A any that can roduced by the whole wor! ie | Yo . oe forth. en an officer ¢! & right, ee Saetileetinc ie ths ; re | in the Nebraska river is scarcely moro than that of | Ge cisions to heneaa by twelve judges, six of whom | State tax authority, to arrest the somata aia atin length acknowled, i | one of mitt wait upon the president, and fous of the pablis. Bore emenies fe the | wa disarmed by ‘tts kindoees and senaibi manner relmesy a rates Lacey sy Spall te be Americans, s six European ; 7 pola Total Uses cae ie seize the horses and arms of the About sixty were admi: , | Por the first ti in his life he felt that the warp | (\°" bs P . ~ chullenge 1s made in consequence of an insultin, 10 Officers and soldiers, (as in this case. + a ange prong Kon out of his woof, | tho sun is reaticg upon it, thore is presented tho | SHice hich appearcd inthe London Times, the | Carlisle, J be sure that he has’ the authority ef ‘tho Sterns ie on Monday and Tur: Sor i 3 | was tak t of his woof, and they gave the best | °° a 4 E . Usual, were rejected. yy ee Teport they sould. to Lee clash an eee ee eens: tay vissericen’ temcae ie ot organ of she Batak marudaczurrs in the World's area (pack parmeni, the, Fi spel pe SOOO ad he a i “ Yale leeted that has epared, as he thought, | " od tat he ‘ir, Which you perhaps have published, speakin, e le" ind seize upo iu am pleased to at the Logislat the oe tes for admi-sion to Yale are not se- | lected that eee ing Ottoe Indian name, signifying broad and shallow, in ham qetnoalenpinons tereseof odrmantt one the government, and the military officers, then oceu- Penuayivanis has not enumerated either oye i 2 5 {afi 1 essay for speakin, The professor ae pe ed aim ratuer to make scholars than = aon ot a nf pon ed ‘Geodrict,) ane eter tere cr oe cuentas ror ager ohh on a | 0W on exhibition there. His challange is made in | Poin ie ere G barrac! RS nary yard, arsenal, foite, or any other Prgperey adhe meoting of the Alumni took place this morn | ‘old huh to writs a politcal one; lle would R826 | able of lad fom une ands aif ts ime milessouth | Kod feith, and the gentleman's pecuuiaty respon: | 1h, hee following questions hare boon bre: | held fer the publle boned of the United Stale ing, under 5 ¢ library. iman—long may he | of the right bauk of tho Nebraska river, astant two | “Ou postmaster saye that the business at his | ty the case before us:— authorize her officers to interfere with the general interest.ng exercise of commencement one now absent, Professor S 4 Greck, and we shall mivea protty full report of this | Live to enjoy (he gratitude of thousands upon thou. | hundred and thirty miles west from the Missouri, | opice hus in-reased at least fifty per cent since the | J. Has the State power to tax tho forts, navy | government in the exercise of its constitutional gad of tho dinner, tor worrow, leaving to other oo! | sands who bave enjoyed his instructions. He spoke of | D3, Meneuisment apen the Rigtowrions ett. We | law, establishing the low rates of postage, went into | Yards, custom-house, mint, garrisons, or other prop- | powers. If it is the will of the people of Peansyl- Tespondents the *sooiwty anniversaries, theological | the professor who had just pemaee the best ex- | (Old Fort Kearny, and ‘cis at the head of a cluster | operation. This ie gratifying, and epeake volumes | erty of the United States, used for the necessary | yanin to insist upon the still doubtful right of tax- Commencement, meeting of the Alumni of the Law | ample ofiafluence without pro: ession, and of power Of islands in the Nebraska river, scattered along a | vr the wisdom of Congrest in thus bringing about | purpores and operations of government ? ing the few acres of land used by the general School, and the exercises of Phi Beta Kappa. bir out eee Be pcos Gand Oke ce the | Stretch of sixty miles, called Grand Island. "Arse. | cheap Sorreipn eats to the rlilion. Public busi: ae a See iat oe has oe wel haa vernment for the public benefit, fh veil | easy q of the Alamni was brought to order | professor who, week after week.fgave them instrace > hi ness 1s greatly facilitated, education largely bene- | right, can it be enforce levying and seizing the | ¢} zegi-lature to express such intention in plain Sve oy far ‘= cond table ot land rises above the ono on which the | £102) afin closer intimmey is thus eflecteds by: ane | personal property of the United States, und their language Meh Caan be ouuemeenned oat the by the Hon. A. N. skivner, and was organized by | tion from the fountian of all instruction What- noah ines Gaan-annantaeny | : an 2 t e Sie enpiniman oon, Koger armas Hately | ey uaa caus myc lw Par | Tnongh rmdir prane ne | ier the erard ogres of he | SRT A re aytraninanthoredthe | See te Genes Pathe meta a : br ae 7 i | place is without furtifications of any kind. Tho | Ori Vion J.J. Crittenden and Gen. Persifor F. | assosément of taxes on such property ? A ee sheald S. N.S. Dutton, Secretaries. Pi was offered | tury not one diebelieved the Bible. fldi ( one ers’ quai and townsbip assessors and collectors shot by Rev. Thoophitas Sash. The report ofthe last | rece Livivs C ibe’ - ye spoke =. hs \ Staite bares: a naa ita oo the oe | faa ye be ie city the past K eek, ~ their way | eat vt fe fo saeen pceeret Mel born Tetvain from making Gemaanda which they hare ae i i Mr. _ | next sentiment —** The effect of American industr: e be ” a to thei , the i e subje muel r 4 30 . 4 Dy ge oe a 2 inant’ econ pl areca, uk | ey fms Ress ad OE | a alec het ce Rap en Se Uak | eee tga rh sme re rhe half f the Coll was then | on American mind and American literature.” He cei ae 7 aaeplated, aod ‘the course Of gesduates was | thought ira little significant that he should be calte | of Wood. There is’alto @ guard house, which is | '*T) TL Due rappers, who have been here, laying | ted states, but remains undecided; and as the pre- ea i jj , built of wood; and a commissary’s storehouse, of 4 ji “ e! s be decided without expressii ny locat greater than ever before known. ‘They made a | ed upon to speak of the connection between the toil | “ a heavy tax upon our city for some month or two, | Sent case can be deci without ox ing my ‘The people of Pennsylvania feel that the location gorious jubileo, and more than a thousand walked of the world of business with learning. |The same | apt tegen y Bed he fre | tothe great joy of all the weak-headed men and | opinion upon this point, I prefer to remain uncom: | ofthe mint, navy Seat ka iwithin thals tertiary the procession to the church. reverend Professor who bad directed nis friend who fA! separate, ones oecupied by non-commissioned | BAuDIes, are about to remove the pounding appa- pobre Ae ny . beh’ the Of it, C Rte is a benefit and not a burden. A power to tax is @ The recerd of obituary notices of those who had ear pate rg mo ponies. = indi pea 50 ese officers; and this is all there is of Fort Kearny, | Tvs, and set it in motion in Dayton, a town about fa tt efore the Suprome Cor power to destroy, For allthat can bo gained b Gied during the year was read. It embraced the ie great poe res ini “ey faded | exclusive of the troop: and their military attiral— | ‘9 milee in the interior. Ie is said they took in Tibae been asus Chemiones daaiaed tka: Otake the exercise of ‘this power, it will hardly be wort! names of deceased graduates, beginning with the | that period, he had reflected upon the great ordina- Dito eee consists of the fractions of two com- | #»eut eighty dollare a day, and called up from the he igh Aang while to contest the right or insist ona demand elaas of 1777, and ex nine to the last class of 1850. | tion of Providence, that man is to labor; that the vasty deep a large number of spirits, “from whose | governments have no right to tax any of the con- | which implies a power, if not a wish, to expel these sources of national wealth and national prosperity Tee sone be “peal i poe eal goals bourne no traveller returns,” unless a dollar is paid Stitutional means 4 pe by the government of | institutions from her borders. Lot the injunction log ou tncladed Tadge Galdwis, ties. Datid Dag. | soductive labor. The gentleman uowed the Union to execute its constitutional me gett, pany one Ee eiehe oe. | cane: Eoeth, fo. ene Pi nge sasiehs Rewit eee the maneng oe r. Noe — others Ge He port gyre’ citizens are in ecstacies at this time, in (See MeCullough vs. Maryland; 4 Whoaton, : 16; awe ise It'was stated that Daniel Reed, of the class of manufactures and commerce of New Eugland, 70 lise Dichtenant Ionseledr Ob Ente ota | View of the prospect which appears in the future, | Warton vs. the City Council of Chasleston, 2 Pe- ‘The Lumber Trade of Chicago, far distant, that thi ill be blessed with | ters, 49.) That the mint, navy yards, arsenals, {From the Chicago (Ili.) Tribune, July 9.} ® public peck "The city commoll have at lave mads &e., are “means or instruments” of this deserip- | | ‘The lumber trade o chien nes erone. te bo a movement in that direction, and appointed a ce. cannot Fe Gentes ita mnoesenntly that | one of 4 most im) nt Rape of our beet Viving grad: r e committee to purchase grounds sufficiently large for | & tax imposed upon these instruments, ormeans, as | merce. Its increase is ene oi the strongest proo! Monson, of New Haven, and Rev, Ir. Nott, of | chinery. More and more he appreciated the be- | order among the Indians; yet. the expense of t the purpose The fact is, the steps your eity have | such, by i Fw ag be illegal. But it iscontend | that can be adduced of tho rapid growth and dove- . Franklin, Ct. Dr. Noct is understood to be in the | nefits which science was conferring on labor. Every post to the public treasury of the Baited States is of taken to secure such a magnificeat public park, bas | ed that, although a State cannot tax a ‘mint or | lopement of the State. Since t opening atthe ws} i ‘ discov inci is 8, : . i ' < i al, and tho completion of the rai 0 Fox Binety-eighth year of his age. | newly discovered principle is applied to the arts, bo inconsiderablo amount. For transportation of | awakened our citizens from their slumber of years | navy yard” of the United States, eo nomine, yet | canal, and b 2 of th ‘A resolution was passed, thanking Professor , and the most learned scholars are employed, at high | 7 ’ | on the subject. | that, where the jurisdiction over the land on which | river, the increase in this business has beea truly as- Kingsley and EC. Herrick, for cod dacdnath | compengation, in business establishments. ee er ee tar te gle oe yom ype There le great complaint throughout the city of | they are erected has not been ceded, it still remains tonishing. Its character has also undergone & mi bad been read. | Mr. s xER said that he had expested a distin- | en been purchased at as high a rate as @4 60 per | the great ecarcity of silver. As high as 2} per cent | subject to all the duties and burdens to which it is | marked change. }'rom a precarious retail business, Dr. Itobins, of the class of 1796, Librarian of the | — legal gentleman bs Phage ee sagged bushel pr! pena nt $4; and fam informed by ono | Fenian is now paid for it to our banks for city ex. Hanes he See Seen ca Ligne be ee e tiaras ye bay Socie e ! t sentiment. was not here, but he . 5 iness. It e . d 0) TTMAnNc! s \- Historical ty uf Hartford, made some remarks | upon the next scntimen! ' of the quartermarters ofthe army that they now a, a pl by gy al occas | follow, as a necessary conse, oe that whore a | ber-yards bave fon established io the interior, as i i i i i would call m a divine of the same city, Dr. . BO BCarci Bpon the importance of obtaining information with for call upot bs y have a contract extending forthe next two years; | pede ody rebel a oneshave not yet announced. | State has ley imposed a tax on lands used for | far west as the railroad has penetrated, and along 1778, and Jeremiah Bradford, of class of 1779, were _ evabled hor to sustain a population so much il 4, Si and, if aduate not living— eater than her own soil would feed; and how the Spagna ecg | Bod the probability io tout they are not—the oldcet | fughest principles of mechanics, mathematics, and | ihe military forces stationed here are not of the uates, of the class of 1730, are—lir. | chemistry, had been appiied to jor saving ma- — cor of emigrants, or for the purpose of preserving a Tegard to deceased aluwni. Adams. to be furnished with t 9225 bushel “ge n 5 Beethoven Sx i Dr. Apams said, be confessed to some em- £0 06 furn heal —— ie et | Thee serew loose somewh the bali | forts, &»., that ent of such tax may be on- | the canal and Illinois river, which are supplied 6} beautiful poor owe son doares ose the Sellewing { Maceumes tn "speakiig, ‘without & resolution, Which, at a distance of 289 miles, can be purchased — isola somebody. Sens oe forced by dist: oe zure of the ptocn pro- | our city dealors at wholesale rates ; oo that instond ee sscehoned | int of debate. Le felt an awe in the for 25 cents per bushel, or for one-ninth of the cost 7 4 ty ofthe United States government or ite of |< gut lumbar ns heretefore by the wage Beneath the-e excred shades, or 8 age % d a t inet ml ces - Hie of the same to the government at this place. Ano | whe Wianw Sees | se Sp 0 Unies © 6 * Pp we wong, Ve hago Ry the wegen, ee tevered hearta unite | presence of those i had 1 om Dy ther item of expense is the amount paid for the | Wig ‘Arusmont Case, ae : load, it is dispos¢ ~ CATZO, Cana. voatAna car tempting future remembered an excellent rule of the Profes station of mail for th to and from a _[From the Cincinnati tte July 2.) 7 . “The government of the Union is emphati- | load. : : “te | On Sucturday morning, Judes Tilden resumed his | cally andtruly a government of the people. In| We have no date at hand whereby to trace this noe cach month; | is | y t ; x : + argument before Judge Waruen, in this euit for ali- ' form and in substance it emanates from them. Its | branch of our commeres from its siall beginni jer ong ll He bad no subject sulqnet him; he would turn to , —— od a pe ov to the ua oipon taghod goal mouy, in which the celebrated Fanny Wright is | powers are granted by them, andaro te be executed up to its present magnitude. We apled ie =~ ed { the reminiscences of college life. It is a saying, | foedas ter Ho ‘ions ty O1.500 per. ana of complainant. She is a woman of remarkable pre- | directly on them and for their benefit”—“ and this man for information, who has resided here since PE esas ‘hime. young men think old men to be fools; oldmenknow {Tage f fibres) i iolee cong AB Lag ward | Senee—an amazon in physical siructure—but evi- | government, though limited in its powers, is su- | 1883, but he could give us no figures. ile well re- Raapan i taanl one en ‘oung men to be fools. Iwas a fool in college. | bs my im rates aie we a gy ot ad vai deutly in the decade of life. She has listened with | preme within its sphere of action” If the several | membered the tite, however, that when a lumber Fp ee ; ould that I could impress upon the young men— | ast of bog Ee Eesaaes Oh —— veure ‘the | repecttul attention to the protracted, but uble and wers entrusted to and exercised by the United | vessel would rench Chicago, thore was a general upon my sons—the iinportance of their college U edie a wpe hepa gas ieee tet ths be © | ingemous argument of the adverse counsel, al- | States and State goverments were executed by one | rush for hor decks, and almost an indiscriminate | course. The speaker remembered the follies of Pp Cy ag ya oat of ied Pro | though palpably suffering from some severe bodily | sovereign or govornment, it would be an absurdity | fight for tho distribution of her cargo; those who college life. He had pages ne orapgreaincr Pr am Lean, ask tore before oot forth, is on infirmity. Mr. 'Arusmont, the defeadant, we | to tax the public Property, or means used to exe- | were fortunate enough to get any persion of it, vory o1 opr -, i ing cc But that purwose, which | prised cf Gve hundred islands, or more, forming » | lunctions to support ano- hoertully, paving at the rate’ of forty dollars per Over suln.y clime, to say, to say it, and never to speak unless we ba Office on the Missouri riv ‘The past alone cvems bright eor of lhetoric: whenever wo had any Big | post Hat and had been one Each broken band grievances of his o! 6 Z . ; thority could rot break, was dissolved by | ‘bain which stretches along for sixty mil heve, at this time in France. | cute one of its powers or cos, |. Pbis is a suit instituted by Fanny Wright l/'Arus- | ther. What would be gained by taxing a mint or | houson | mont againet her late husband for alimony. In fortification, built and sustained Sy public taxes, in Times have altered somewhat since then; and be ‘sien aut agpeane~s enc, when the venerable president put himself ‘rom this post. ‘The largest of these isluads ianot tho couse of the pleadings on Saturday morning, | order to build a court house or other public build- | now. along both the north and south branches of Ta throng cur joyous beurts io tho place of (a father, 7 bless oa for i ee eee th, haute, Mad from, two to | Judge ‘Tilden, counsel for the defence, went into x | ug or institution erceted andeustained by the eamo | the river, for more. than a iuile from the lake, are an Some & Sunneaet yeas mony influence over us in college. He remem- | 100% Sith cotton wood and willow, acd scm up| deeply interesting history of thie rewarkable wo- | means? It is more reasonable that such a confict | ranged huge piles of lumber, aad it is not an un- (Finve pecans epeans, Was about lowered uzgiments of thet professor who | them are of rich eolly and well adapted for cultiva- | @&"- Sheis the daughter of a Dundee merchant | of taxation should exist where tho people have | usual thing, when the wind is fair, for a fleet of And arches rang Davies Featiknat that tees, siete tla | tion, in Scotland. She received a large patrimonial in- | distributed these sovereign powers to two distinct | 6m fiftceu to twenty siti frow the lumber regions Not all, not all are here sy lle owe C H , ens | Campbell, whe died onthe “field of honor and of olerated that either of these sovereigns, to whom | ment of the year 1844, ax is woll known to the read- are egain in geverations of echelars. There were other | Ctded by Henry L. Elleworth, commissioner on victory.” Having early imbibed some peculiar ; th powers were entrusted, should treat the | er of the “Z'rilwne, wo commenced publishiog re- ‘hat one | gular weekly, montbly, and arnual statementa, @ mere private corporation? Some rivep ‘neath functad dower recollections of kindly and le intl the part of the United States, with the chiefs and | |; ji Where fails the mourner’s tear. | . 0 ly and gentle infuences—per- ° views relating to society, politics, and religion, and | othe: And weep the evening akewers ME ek ‘kiend wim whem we have Jonceaved pead mea of melee Bag: enyan fy nd oo | Smctog the Usived State's better Sold for promal- | should sels, distaias or iets on the public pre. | Sct ccly efts, but ofeiery portion of ous rapidly PB ny ed touched wit te a cain oe the grave | States “all their right Bom A ‘and title in aud to | Sting hor views, she came hither in ISIS, bringing | pert in possession and used by the other? ‘That | growing commerce. Jor the years 1849, 1850, and et every beart ‘ * sanctity. How good to call | St ight, . with ber, and investing in this couatry, a large | the United States should tax ‘the State House at | upto the present time in 1551, we have, by refer- all th mount of property... Herrisburg, and seize the furniture, if it wero in | ence to our files, full statistics of the lumber teade Soon after her residence here she became inter- | use by the Legislature of Pennsylvania? Or that | of the city, from whieh we propose to show its in- «d in the condition of the slaves at the South. | a county or township tax collector should levy on | cPease during that period. up to the first of November, as Its love hupart these memories back, and nourish resolutions | lend lying touth of the Platte (Nebraska) To Him on high. of better life. Ie ‘would speak,of the happy | which cession included the lands between ‘The Ion. Asa Bacon wus callod upon to respond | influence of large and central universities, suoa | tv¢ Rocky Mountains and the Ottoe lands, that ex- | to che sentiment, “The memery of the departed as this had preeminently been, upon national t¢2dabout one hundred miles west from the Mis- dead.” ile said. tha: since be bad been within this | character. He Noped the young men from Maiac, | *0Url, lying along the south side vf the Nebrark: circle, he bad been applied to, for the first time, to | and from Georgia, cad fren Mastachnaetts, #0d those lands, 66 ceded by the Pawnees, have a Make some observations on that sentiment. He | would continue to meet together here. It was breadth of not less than one hundred miles. B: was willing to do anything for the honor of the | a good place to rub off the sharp edges of a man’s | the treaty named, it was agreed that the iands id be open to the Pawnees as a hunting € Jomerous publications were mode, explaining her | the cannon in a fort, the bullion in the mint, or the in the year 1 Views upon this important subject. Not satisicd soldiers’ horse and arms! What an absurd conflict | we learn from the t#\les prepared by the late Judge netrument in the prosecution of her | would thus be exhibited, where one ann of power, | 'homas, under a resolution of the Harbor and “took the stump,” traversing the prin- | exorcised for the benefit of the people, should thus | Kiver Convention held in this city, there was re- of the Union, woaking speeches and | be employed to paralyze another ? ceived at this port the following amount of lamber- during the pleasure of the President” | OFtions in defence of her project for the eradic: Whatever, therefore, may be tho power and right | Plank, boards, &c., feet. see He referred to Judge Ungyett. Many of them had | In after life, if a graduate broached any novel | his on 7 Pawhoe cession in question; and tion of slavery, and finally settled in Tennesse: of # State to tax all land within her territory, and read the elegant abd refined sarmon of Mr. Dutton, | theory, who would know the man better, and feel | Within this tract there are included some of the b¢F? she purchased about thirty negeoes and took | make it contribute to the burdens of the State, it ached on that oconsion, and be could adil ndthing | more confidence that all would come out right, than | fincet Jande in the world them to St- Domingo, where sho1made suitable pro- | cannot enforce the payment of them from the United Olt. He spoke of Judge Baldwin, not a man of | bis claes wates ! He couldfuardly realrse that it | the 6tb of August, 1818, another treaty was Yiton# for them. | She soon aft:rwards became in- | States, Sages th ged eeseannth ay so be = gmp brillisat talenss, but of sound jedgment, andan | was twenty years nce clase bad left these . eRtered into by Lieut Colonel Ludwell £. Powell, terested in some school of soririists, of wh used by the general government in performance of ned during thot year, there can be no aerial administrator of justice. He spoke of | halls. Tho students now seemed younger than | bees Arey Mounted Volunteers in the service econ con % Sapest one? was brent a Bong po ae oy ae ~g Me te oe oo tor ip pg ator ag ose ye mgen {nerease over on. ENenr Goodric co, | ofthe Ui ead, , « atterwards, from | to it. To en wors grante . i car as wr olrich, & man of aa much science, | when be was in college. In conelutie.., he repeated | ited States, and tho chiefs wad head mon | Some cause, removed to New Harmon , Indiana, | United States are sovereign, nod conten be trend | nd by referonce to our files, the quantity received with this society, except to disgrace bimeclf personally, which | character, as a pebble is . | ceded sI be ehould do if he undertook to poh ws a set epecch. | it was well for Peay to kuew ence alee BO ner | ground, Renive and judgment, we be had known. His | the sontiment of the Roman moralist, thac We can | Cf the said four confederated bands of Pawnee i Sounsels wers of oa pel o Ro " * Indians, whereby tb ‘dod Hy where Robert Dale Owen, the son of Robert, was | by the States as a mere ration, a citizon, or | at this port had increased to the following amount: e grest weight in the Congress of | grow old not only gracefully, but joyoully—tuct | the United akse wall their ight, [ony te yet engaged in the new experiment, and there sho | a stranger, and eubjectod to distress and oxecution | Lumber, feo... +++. +++ ” Fis250,s08 057,758 the United states The speaker would only add | there is ho ell his bumble culogy to what bad becn said. Prof, Ponern valled for John C, Young, Presi- | cstin And to all that tract of Jaad described as fol Presidens Weolsy followed. He said it bad | dent of Kentucky College, to speak to the senti. | lows, viz: Commensing on thoouth side of the established a pres, of which Robert Dale Owen | for claims, real or pretended, by every county and | Shingles, number... Pie Se eee aon specimens geovias a | towne); eee, ppm era he ns tinea rare, pines ** re sh bee ’ " v le » i bree ° 1 y ., 4 fy fuilare, the ye and mate were shipped to any just demands againet ¢ tovernment ofthe | Shingle bo ords ° 66 sley, tk Py" oa , eg robot dy ing biped Tir conete r ace sai“thdle Almal | poet ore cae {et sey Scand poy pee New Orlenne ana from thence to Not’ York, a States for the use of Bia, recourse may | Tins shows an inereage of over one hal ro # place, ard in neserdaace thet long | | stock ee ee os. aun Te ithe blaile north oth caid Platte river; thenes | Wher it was oupposed # better field was opened for | be had to Congress, to whour an appeal for justice | twenty-five per cent for two years. During the ained purpose. he bis topdered bis roricum | Now ldferd cad themes 2 eat, Elbridge, of ® vlufie north of th» caid Piatte river: thonee the successful ultimacion of her schemes. ‘This | can be succesfully made, eepecialty when the ap- | same sear (S19) there wa@-shippod by canal the o the corporation. [he board adopted the | (nitor ut’ 4nd Thomas &.. Bayne, 1:ey., of New pry cae Fy thew a od ta ha abratarnty Paper was called the Free Ingutrer, and has long | pellant is a State of the Union. ‘There is no neces- | following quantity following reso ution :— ; \ stants thence seuth to the southern ahore ce tice Vanished from the newspaperial world. All | sity for this humiliating spectacle of petty officers | Tuber, fect .« Fewived, That this bound entert tivers thenes weet nnd along the scuth. 21 the Various projects of this extraordinary woman, | of a State distraining or levying on the public pro- | Shingle-, number Ges ORCS WEN ANS ANNE RO SOLD | however, tempered as they may have [ As with | perty of the general government, and treoting fas Lath, piocos..«.. © sonvulsed the audience with his high ond grate. orvier of the emineat aad var ow ern shore of avid Platte river to the place of bogin- bas rendered to the college du re. ; » ‘ i porati insol ‘The 8 } ‘ is and sage thes ee .— easor Olmsted, the prosent off | — ; sens — # alip of land sixty pola tare Gees te | sy corporation or an insolvent or abeconding pos dong hat by railroad the bee ry Seb wo Dr epesint oes bi pote: | a to a old cBionel ese eaters of AEME | sheet ietie eerie teat ees mming up of thet Bntory aoe Te Pe this reason alone, the court would feel justi- | Shogies ouabir “A500 S00 escived, What Prot K be reverted to condinge in | ioncd books, was sung, and the society adjourced, | of tuo timbered lands of the neighborhood: and it. 2% one of Fanny Wright's visits to Paris, she | fied in deorecing the injunetion in this case to be | Hath, piccot.....-.-s.e0..5 vee 243/200 tay conbealingh Dsante. Ge poee Seite ry ad) Congress will provide for the settlement of this Mae the acquaintance of her late husband, Mr. | made perpetual: but we deem it proper to vindi- | | The following tabics will sew the ineroase of Tesolved. That Prof. Ko be esrnestly requested Our Dolht Correspondence. trac’, by liberal donations of lands, the teoo D’Arusmont. Between them there must have hoon | cate the State of Ponnsylyania from the charge of | the lumber (rade of IS@ovoer that of 1849. It willl the history of thin eviiege, | Ep Sen. Sas tioned here may be removed, the post broke & poworful intellectual syrapathy, Mr. D'Arus- | having authorized any of her officers to assume | bo aon that ibe incrcave in receipts is over thirty- may allew | Ganton Mores, Daun, und the government saved the expenditure of 'q ™0'. it appears, like his wife, had early imbibed | the pewer which the respondent claims arighs to | three nt, in shipmonts by canal over fifty per Preciden'y is but the Ulster, Greene avd Delaware Counties | targe cum of money annual whkh fe and evor | StT°S, republican tendencies, and bed come tothe execute cent i'n emount forwarded by railroad over fre ago, that he Deli—The Avti-Rent District must be supplied by fords , Then from tho bard United > sas carly as the year 1805, and had . The fact that the Legiskature of Penneylva- | hundred pcr cent hb ment, &., Fe earnings of the people of this repablio, here legally declared his iatention to beeome a per- | nia ever intended to authoc'7s the taxation of the | Received by Lake) | ft The Pawnee Indians aro a very civil but indolent “enent resdent. Ie was the son of a Judge of one | few acres of ground vecupied aud used by the go- | Lumber, fet : te | Fora few ¢ of beings—er harales:, except when provincial courts ip the south of France, and | vernment of the United States, for mint, cus- i umber . Oreeeee ; | end valleys of Ulster, Green, and Delaw, ven | d with The ace * erasy waters” of the 9 %tion f one of the old foucdat families, and of the | tom. lrouse, nary yard, arsenal, and | cracks, | wee 5 lege though the scascn was fate, aad verot white man, or wben gorded by ineult end injury feigning and influential pc!:tival aristosracy. He | has heretofore beca assumed, but, to my mil, hav Would speek f the eve afec'ion which : - pi ote | There whe Jn civilived. Are wee edu ion of the law, and is | not been satisfactorily proved. It is true, it will all the faeulty had entertsined for him. in stasting, all hinds of ¢ with pero ceeble por ia Of “lnet-ownen” sat “o nid to e8 extraordinary attainments. {| nder | not suffier for me to cay that I do not believe (as 1 y yoars ag the tote p of Prot. K. bad | Mah foe » are looking Fory vro- | workers” Joc > enoy Wright's patronage long before the colee | do not) that euch an intention ever entered into the beer. ~ se and be spenler had received the + * h ane — qo . my would do the: fort tom whieh bration of their marr ooo Tr. D’Arusmont, whe | mind of any member of the Le islatures who enact- Rotem ship of Greek, on i that time, ifang- | a pod ’ cH . athe | and e@bich cen ne dore by government VS on 8 temporary to his family in France, | ed there tax laws. The intention of tho law-maker ing unpleasant bad occurred Letween them, tho r the support abitante. | school teachers and mission rics sent among them, | Telerned to the United States and participated in | ie to be discovered only from tho face of the statute, feult was fairly the speaker's own. Ho was not about these lenth anufactories Very reepect! ae : al the pursuits to whieh wo have made reference. Ho | aud by a fair and liberal construction of its torms. | Lumber, foot aware that there had been anything unpleasan' f thrift and prosperity; still, the i Tw. Jerranson Secnencct in 1530, & in the same year The act of 15th of April, IN34, for laying county | Sbingles, number It bad been one of bis bighest pleaeurce to have the + @ boing depressed by on eae ried to Fanny Wright,,in aris, by one of | rates and levies, and that of 29h ef April, 1844, | Lath, tee friendship of Prof. Le unwanufactured as compared Our Ctncinontt Correspontence. the municipal efficers of the city. General Lafay- | whieh makes provision for a State tax, do not differ | Shingle bolts, Professor Tuacuce eprhe next, and prosonted of the manuinetured article, wnat, Jaly 2, 1851 ette woe present at the nuptial coremonies. One | very materially in tboir enumeration of the subjects OUR.) COPED. vores crerorerereree 6 Some resolutions frum the fecul'y, complimentary nished to find Col. Pratt, Panny Wriates £ Rath citebiidch of the papers filed in the present suit by Madame | ef taxation. But, ar the latter is evidently in- Of the humber shipped by canal in 1250, the fol- t0 Professor Kingsley. He ead that Professor K hanies’ Institute, among the ) 4%" é ee Satt—Criminal Mutters— | 1 Arusmont, states that the chief eause of this ro- | tonded to be the most stringent and comprehen- | lowing quantities renebed the Illinois river, the been an officer of the college for half a ceutary esved a ee > wet - hisown county, | Cwrictes Lawwers--dnercase of Post Office Basie | tmorkable alliance was a — n on her part to | sive, it will be eufficient if weean show that it does | balance «topping at diferent points on the canal :— ie week bo had helped to seg wae | cocias, ort, oh oe tebe i A. products of | css, & wrke an honorable pecuniary provision fur Mr. | not, on proper construction of its lauguago, | Lumber, feet epee 9" 32,745,702 Bowe [ip fr was estripling pupil of his in » skill steno, at = ‘atk. The Madame D’Arasuest, totter keown te sew @ D'Aru- mont, who was without means. necessarily include lands used by the United States | Shingles, numbe Oreee 98,271,170 . How rarely can it be avid that one man was ving fine health and spirits, rayne reameger r ka0Wn he your city After the marriage, the parties came to the | forthe public bonefit, as means of executing the | Tat, pieces... secsesceecceee 10,083,370 the instructor of three generations. When I’rc veing im gy tater athere gs ae Frances Wright, who was assoviated with United St Madame D*Arusmont itincrated | powers entrusted to them by the people. ly tke above table shingie bolie are reduced to fessor K commenced, he took ebarge of the sophe- | t - to the World's Fair | R in the publication ofthe Pree fnguirer, in the proseention of her original plans, and her The terms of thie act are: ‘ All real estate, to | hingle:, at the rate of seven thousand per cord more class, and instructed them in goog > the farmers give most of | soe twenty ¢ eebaee, te cow fe this ott doa, hurband wae occupied in the management of the | Wit, houses, lands, lots of prone nae eee ronts, Tho lumber trade of the present season bids arithmetic, end Horace, and. on Monday wm yrnings, a : ot ma turing of butter : . . Cty, aden estate, and in the evolvement of sore plans fortheir | mille, manufactories of all kinds, furnaces, forges, ; fair to maintain tho usutl rate of increase. Three Greek testetment, which did not, however, covt the | : sheep. Indecd, batter and woot are | voring to procure a ~ from her hussand, M eneation of youth, which be had commensed in | bloomeries, distilleries, sugar-houses, malt houses, | of tho t months of navigation have passed, and Students mach or, for they bad xtranrlation. { *!most the only articles of product that are sent out L"Arusmont, # Frenehtonn, whom che married rarce, but find been compelied to abandon from | breweries, tan-yarde, fishorics, and ferries, wharves, | this dopartment of our commerce foots as follows ‘ntoring oolloge were no’ then nsiderable uantities whilst che war engeged in writing and epeald the annoyance of the police. Under the patron- | nnd all other real estate not exempt by law from | hee ake to Suly 1, VN. ; , ssantest falend villages to A etoren: cpeeki°8 age of. Mr Macolure, a man of fortune in Seot- | texation.” | Lamber, fect. beeen nee ones MISS U8 dhe orations pat Cataling, and four books | '° * The inhabitants are int as oe ° Todame land, Mr. D’Araemort pursued his experiments Now, it cannot be denied that the mint, the navy | Shingles, number. of the A koow what is required to day ustly noted eG Chis enty Z rn e'sborating and putting eto practical operation | yard, garrison, &c., are ‘real estate,” and that the | J.ath, piecor.... ‘ for asm The it ich wn inctitu- | “ strangers Mt h hie theory of eduestion. Puoils were secured, and | word land, in its widest legal acceptation, might ; “hingle bolts, cords : Som chould 1 uffored » 2 ’ th was opened in Vhiladetpbia, was after: | include thom. ButI need not cite eases to show Shipped by Canal to « ; = rdity that would often ariso | Tnmbor, fect inte verde removed to New Harmony, and finally to | the injustice and a! ie t, & eto) uti-rent ex where letters patent were granted by tho | from construing word of a statute in ite abeo- 8 tributed m " emerit was hore that th al of €. ale ad lot vernment, and the achoo! | Inte or Jargest cer ot that the preambic, the | Lath, pieces. rir college ha Liat band of dexperadoce, who cruelly put death | | Which he wnakes the sent base. Mr. 1’ Arasmont hae devoted a | ot matter, chject, aim, policy, and Bpirit of | ped by eanal du to de } @ an ome ar of ju ties io in — net of ex oy ‘ f that nye to these ednc ul is, wo | the whole act, should be and the letter as as follows: introce the civil Inws 9 and, was held terday f * vent enga zed in hi any cular sects orsave ae his f visite d the saonuu >t edto his memory. T with abandoning ber dor prinety 1 Sew ender i his been t mple bat expre inseript tell tho disgra s- ecomirg & monarchist M t | earlicst rule of eonatrn stion, that nth spoke 8 ' nce | ful tule iu a few words: ’ " v are made, there ate Tt \ of ciepiany, & , ® ns a om. nd reprised rad - wae kee ' } ; : t oxpres ¢ 4 f iu Wi Kh. nd the of me i wil. 13, be | vale a } ¥ 1 White $a the dite fn When gene t this i crea . be Avgert 7, 198 a 7 b pebe pe 4 nui : ¥ “ f : A ben Ne n party, Jefferson being the father . . ante t had bh 7 J . i s - air. now elisa ab } : nat ¢ shad se the ake " ° il t ie If thie eollege j wey woean vode his bee t , imina no - d Intra ns it hes b t ' ' ; rte, i ito hy 1. ' a ' vente’ er ath ad ‘ f ‘ esun if h rn r "a t peritown th ty for the Inst siz. months. ine gave & worning. Judge Walker, on the part of the poth ave pow ® oe te b any oEpee: (© = nyvel charge to tho Grand Jury. It contains many {j follows th ument Jud i nt cv orb os r \ bhi : A ; ite had | 5 . . ° jonor, follo ho argument of Judge Jildoa— r ew tha i i Ga! Was Welcumed with great epi hear irom we egela, L eos ol peculiar mnlervet fo the public, im @oanection Cyncinmat: Gatette, 2, vate property. The property retyer as vm 7 Only be taemeured by the y of ouppy