The New York Herald Newspaper, September 18, 1851, Page 6

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ITE L { : ‘vote Bouck for on INTERESTING LETTERS. | pice, Pegtoss Hehe Sune mt Hew York Politics—The Democratic State | {2 table, was an ezact reversal of the original pos Convention, hunker ‘and put on the barnburner side, would OUR CANANDAIGUA CORRESPONDENCE. In Otsego, we have three, with (ieorge Only three more were neces- a ‘nanebion fo tuo prin aud esion to the hunkera, as maintained in 1417, Bis, of 1860, and the necessities from an nd decire accomplish we which Cananpaiova, September 13, 1451. ‘Whe Hunkers and their M wements —Some considerable Fuggling— Hunker Concessions— Sale of Principles by the Barnburners—Splendid Tactics of John Van compromise measures? and if it does Sit'bs exboverated tom all obligasioe te. seest its nominations '—that the is rence golely to the bray oD stood sirce 1910" But to this it be | that eo Baltimore Convention do endorse the com se meas they H py Wah Doren, | them in the same bre thempelves to a su; i of the of 1852. Xo that whetherthe Baltimore Convention | Buren—Not altogether Suceessful—Def ut of Bale mands certain by ‘rowlses, intheir own mao gn eae Ua tid ee een te | Carats a pipe eanind. | Cecil weet a tr eaned tae for Cass, ere » a i od the of Con oof ‘nadie pats ea ‘There was still ped Bo item—and that is,aco- gidates—a plodg which has, of course, precisely the eeeennere Convention sl Fou: uaa: Goa # of which, 1 suppose, | value of their political faith and integrity, and no Deep-laid policy of John Van » Cause ryker, Timothy Ji | more. But whether they keep it or not, the obtain- Co.—Minute Analysis of the H hole Business, he one side, ond Jobe | = equally remains on record, 68.8 signal iiumph ? other, are the high oon- | of t! sers in this convention over oppo: Ear eegrligey EF boom on foot for some | nents of 15.3; and is unequivocal tentimony of he Sendance upon the Democratic State Convention, ‘an Tecsentas latter, j a eenrrepr a ay See co cde to gs an observer, | thought I would put on paper, for Shops have been onhand advertise the domocrscy in other States that their ‘your widely circulated and independent journal, a of the convention, at- «choo! had control of this convention. , however trifling, in- 1 will lesve it wholly to others to reconcile the few thoughts suggested by what | saw and heard most dogged agsiduity. inconsistency invely this decisive nomination there. It was, in many respects, « remarkable con- Robert Halsey—of Tompkins, of Judge Wright. it ip true thas Judge Wright is cs Vention, and cannot faiito be the subject of much Speculation aud commont, in and beyond the Sta:o of Now York. It closed its labora at half-past 5 clock, this morning ; and it really appeared to moe, that from 9 o'clock the previous evening, when the work of nominations commenced, to the hour of 5 this morning, when they were concluded, the Proceedings were far more like a bear garden, than those which should characterize a deliberative as- Pembly, consulting to promote the highest financial and pecuniary interests of a great people. Visor der, uproariouzness and confusion, were the order Of the night. Butte that | am indifferent, as ro- | to him in a high de, ‘ne 56 or 53 votes were sulta only are of permanent interest. 1 have | to be the consideration, im somo cases, aid, aad no “Miss Naney” objections to the manner in | the principle, in others. That bo:h wore adroitly whieh things are dono, deeming is of most | used, wo have the very best evidence in the charac- ers barnburnors of m 188, took it into see how much could be made on this occasion, by tackling to men who had already trampled on him. He was chosen to the conveo- tion as a hunker, but played the amiable to the bamburers, to the detriment of the plans of his quondam fi 3 and supporters, in a style most sie t0 con whe like myself, is a mere looker not versed in the my: of political I'fe. came to that convention, was some 56 or 58 burning dele; ; the principles mulgated from the Bafiie’ platform’ ani in which he rro- fessed to believe ; aud the talent, tact, and political skill which | sup) man is ready to award e he res vroduced—in the nominati 0 Miiacignan, tp this’ seapoch ‘tins thane’ angnged | 205. of thy Yor hace Caan me teen MBould be suited with themselves. ut there are Boers dn, sacqeesion to wis ee 8. Ramo, of matters connosted with the practical fasts of that rare va Boas poe po gy ny @eavention, too curious, interesting, important, and, | Wheaton, the abolitionist,) for Canal Commis- I may sey, remarkable, to ve passed over in sileace. | sioner; Levi S. Chatfield, for Atsorney General ; ‘The democratic and the whig conventions, both pre- | 8d Benjamin Weleh, jr., Cove of the Baifalo Bent, in some respec's, exiraordinary features and Se SS re ee peel pelt] extraordinary contrasts; and they will be widely | never think, twoof them at least, of bestowiag pa- commented on Both derive their interest from | tronoge upon any man whose mind led him to po- tae stirring events, whieh will transpive in 1852, | litical conelusions varying ashade from their own. and their bearing on those events. | barnburrer press so illiberal, so censorious, so The Democratic Uonvention, of course, met os- vindictive, and so bitterly proscriptive, as the Baf- tensibly with the view to give berth to a ticket Slo Paevernes Set was ae S aaa) which the democracy could elect in Novomber. | nations, /all ina row, and immediately snoceeding But the first stage of labor, was a ‘‘bad preseata- | the first nomination—-that of Judge Wright, for tion.” As to its probable effect upon the health nd life of the child whiek was delivered of that , mesemblage, this morning, i will express no opinion. to Syracuse. were used adroitly—that is to say, with | prudence aud -kill. And what is the testimony of I will content myself with reeownting facts, and | other results? The coalition were victorious in _ such io: ° ve arisen | tbe choize of temporary chairman— ‘though he was z eter eeerennan tn tna a8 hive setae | yoo a genset their gong 3 Rianne B. é Shepherd was their man ou, man The national democrats, or hunkers, or Cass | ther elected anf rr Me a Te esha: it tmen, held a prelimiaary caucus on Wednesday —_ a Bro ramme the bunkers had A " ine 0} morning, attended by about sixty-eight dele | pen "Their next triumph was wates—a decided mojority of the comventioa— tion of General Halsey, the temporary chairman, including Thomas 2. Mitchell, Rcbert Halsey, as president of the convention, over Governor D. A. Ogden, &¢, &c. I believe the law | Bouck, by a vote, | believe, of seventy-two to fifty. of political caucusss, ex necessitate rei, is, that six. Tho next wi secariug the appointment of ar the committee of sixteen on resolutions, by the each individual, so tar asthe open aad ayowodob- | J’reeident, instead of their appointment by the jects of that caucus are concerued, is bound by the decisions of the mejority; anil that good faith re- | quires that they should be carried out. Otherwise, , & caucus would bz worse than a farce. It was the intention of some of the leading men of that cau- cus, to nominate ltalsey for temporary chairman of Wright, Orville Clarke, snd Henry C. Marphy, the convention. but, when inyuired of as to what | while they fully Sat ~ ee of Sf = i t d < ig. | solution, de not regard its adoption, under the 1 ses Mea not deemel satis: | Ceeurzefances, and’in view of the obaracter of the factory, and they d report of the Committee on Resolations, necessary minated Hon. Thowas | | to the vindication of those principles, and therefore was nominated by ny But, still, it was @ partial triamph votes, and Mitebell a ren coalition. The next was in , i : g the izotion made aud advocated by David pentagon ger, of Oneida, end Mr. Birdsall, of Broome, their best to secure hisnomination by the causus; | to nominate the candidates by a viva voce vote— they failed, as ota had failed before them; } that is, to have each delegate, as his namo shold Mitchell's nominat sclared unanimous, and | ¢ called, openly name bis candidate fo: nomina- ll was supposed tion was in stor tionals. Their next step was in iaying on the tablo the resolution offered by Mr. Maurice, as aa addi- tion to the report of the Committee on Resolutions, by a vote almost exactly similar to that by which Governor Bouck was defeated. This triumph was not of the same character as the others; for Judge upport him, and no- Miteheil. tion. The cbject was, of course, that wed man at what a revola- | might show bis hand, that the members of the men! Ioless than | vention, and his constituents, might know hew he ention, Lorenzo B voted; and whether, by aay bargains made at con- “2 “nr “f vention, be represented or misrepresented those who 1) received GY votes; | senthim thee it wa urged by Mr. Wager—a votes; and Robert JIal- | veteran domoerss d Layer Ey a! bey 9 votes, for temporary chairman. It was like a trong talent—that tac fed i | a te and sovereign capacity, elep ib gpormes in . clear “7, - the ma. | br) ~ yA eo ing tng a rig, ne being jority an hoar etore ; aa 2 an in- le to ne one for the exercise of the power | stant, debauched and demoralized that con- | it gare; at open Seagate wat eee at venation, possible wel Th | Usp, ie power jonging to Past all possible redemption, The | Of Gdhers, ‘aud that, therefore, his acts should be iret act of tha: convention, therefore, was @ ile fortified big argument open to their inspection by stacing that the appointments made by the Le- lature, in the samo capacity as representatives, dw be openly made. But all this was ‘The neccssitios of the arrangements, | made prior to the opsning of the Possible to cecape from the imputation of punic | quired the shield of secrecy to the other side, as in the eave of the ballot for temporary chairman, and that the de het —, ey dapsone the — lelegates were not | which then werkod so well. So this was voted bound to go into coucas; that they were elected | down. And their next avd final triumphs wero in by independent constituencies. Granted. Tuose | the nomination of their own candidates for Secro- taine men, anil soame who did net vote, could have | ‘ary.of State, Canal Commissioner, Attorney \ene- into the bainbucser caucus, could havo re | Tél; Treasurer, avd Judge of the Court of Appeals font se into any, aud then have sect their | —there being no contest for the offices of State i:n- accounts with theis constituents as best they might. | Sinecr, and Inspector < _— though the nomi- Ther veluntectie a bees are men o ser stripe. ated the canditete of their | he: oteae Staats ly the Choice, got for him al! the votes they could, and Were beaten in au open and manly fight. It nooded RO reeolution to bind them to the result of that . To men who would not observe the Obligation of fe t+ like ‘hese, a resolution on paper, Or & verbal resolution alup'ca pro forma, woala be triumph of bed faich Mitchell, and the nine The fifty-two votes for for Halsey—sixty-one in| & all—an hour before, by ll ue honor that can biad | *) @ politician, were pledged for Mitchell. it is im- the The triumphs oo nationals--though fow, were still decisive and i:m- portant. ‘The first, was scouring the appoiatment | of the State central committee «by the convention, instead of by the President thereof. This secures to them, as! atu informed, nine of the sixtoon— —or a clear majority of two—which, in times like Much as the green withes were on gon. [am | these, is not unimportant in its bearing on practical @ware that there ire nose who believe that ‘aij | Tetulte. The next—and that, | suppose, was the Is fair in polities; that honor, good faith, the ro- | be mest cherished—was the adoption of an out | of tae dew of rigat, work no mie | 8nd out hunker or national tform, and which tro believe. Mr. Maurico | subsequent period, dis- he did not so was 20 totally repudiated, when Mr. Van Buren i for President, at Buffalo, in 1548. | the naticnal democrats—those, [ mean, who have uniformly been such—I am aware ‘this was the polnt of honor—the point of first and | ance. ‘Ihe next was in deciding which | hould be Gret nominated. On this ques- | ¢ triumphed by @ vote of seventy- , at tea o'clock on Friday evening — chievous results. | a Wethe conventiun to understand ui not believe it w work good results. | do not believe i: will. | Louove, notwithstanding we bear 20 much spout political corruption—not- withstanding there i © much political eor- i boner, fidelity and good ed in & political assoc as it was on this occasion, without pro pd of three ep ohne pod ner ben ied disastrous love te ey nominally oec “will be a is anne iminary caucus. Mr. Waterbury, {t will teach wil! be # striking one, and tha: is the yeason why I speak of cic transaction with eo much tucularity. 50 far tivm tae effects of that delibo- ion of the obligations of plighted faith n of Robert Halsey, t Presiden: of that Con Vention, and the appoimsment of a few committecs, | ‘those who tak: trouble te trace efleets to their | footpriate of that act of delibe- | y impressed on the history of of the district of New York. bara | burner, moved that the candidate for Judge of the of Ie rst nominated ; then accepted t, that the Secretary of State be the der then it was propoted and insisted eneral Nye and others, on that side of the | that the candidates should be put in nomina- | in the election notice 5 o this it was simply , on, by \ tion in the order they ocecuy b ecreiary of State Ne Kk for 1°51 and LSG2, and | Teplied, that the office of Comptroller was by far the resulting nayihing promt reg in wn beng | moet imp t political ‘flee on the list, which ‘The lesson wil! teach plainly that the “hg was reaso ugh why the nomination should F he adage, ‘‘hunor emmeng thieves, ie not @ more rhetorical phantacy. | first be made. (ieneral Nye demanded and insisted Good isthe vital breata of all associations of | oD the aye s, and they were — The men. When taat is cous ritality ie gone. By the | object of oovement by the hunkers, was Geliberate treachery of the obligations of plighted | te tecere. at all hazards, the nomina’ of Judge the power to control rceults was changed. | Wreht. They have this nomina- that hour, the copvention porsesed only the | tion, whieh w ance, more chorith of life. | ed than an: er, embarre: inany way. if a ‘Bat how was such a result brought abow! and barnbarner or hunker Juige of A , and & han what was subserved by it! [twas brought | ker Secretary of State had been first nominated, | about by # sale by the barnburnors of ail the prin. | following the order of the notice of the Secretary of ciples from the hour they ascended the | State, ii would bave been urged by the barnburners . This, of course, mightily pleased | that they must take, a s matter of fairness, if 20% abe brethren among the bunkers—-men who | of course, the office of Comptroller. If any han- really believe that all the professions of John Van | kere wished to dedge they could use this as ® pre- Buren & Co., at ail times, mean precisely whatthey | nd others might thus have been befogged, ex on their face. T say, they were filled wiih andthe bernburners have secured the nomination Bent and gratitude at the idea thas “so vile a for that Jeading oflice, so much coveted by them. ae : leaner” rn; and they Willing to do | The reewls vindicated the wiedom of the policy Sonething tee toons Py lariag of, pra ani adopted by We beak ; The bersionenees cubes cre} ; | tonominate Ir. John }’. Beckman, inderhoo! tbaokegiving. “Ch, we areal ope, now,” says John; special atd intimate political and personal ‘and these simple ones would rub their Lands with delight. The Over go delegation consisted of three amen, chosen as national democrats, and pro the friend of Martin Van Boren. But this project, by the engacity of the hunkers, failed; and with it, half the profit to resuls (rom the wholesale barter Soma to ot, tational demoenals, a by the harabarseee of ei, rotemed, pet iplos. ended And with the nomination of Judge ya one Lay soncaedinian majority of pine, ended the triumphs of the party Chatield for Attorney General—Mr. | which, on Wednesday morning last, was in « nom). , if not a native of Otsego, having «pent | nal majority of ten oF sng aire onthe his carly manhood there. At all events, this was | Democratic State Sand decisive triumph of the the ruling purpose of oll theit operations, from be- | | One other si but Which should not ginning to oud, a vas chown last night. ‘They | huckors I sce I have omitted) but hints atm a Svared the nomination of Horace Wheaton—e | fail to be epecialiy m 5 Co» that they barnburner—for Cansi Commissioner, over l-lisha | torted from Van Buran, Cagger Ot Co 9 ihe thoy [h Sanith, @ho hae oxce beens candidate of the | will support the Baltimore nomdesions Mon. 18 ry for this office, @ really fit and excellent | all ‘beings — Frog avcndarey of Van Bu lace. sistent, yet easy and | nemin bors whined « hapker. I'bey did this to get votes tens, by the nomi mn of De. nnn) AE wet re id. Now, a8 one of this dviegation, | for Comptroller, this is by forthe most beet Delt et Teonge Clarke, son of the late George Clarke, the | it ie a full confession that the the ‘lisenaite of Uteego Lake vicinity, towk occasion | 1544 was merely o personal lad secatted 10 my prociaim, ina very loud rotee, in “~ ones i Fog LM and Blairs ies Case in he was a hunker to the 7 the sudaciow: oc the served 207, aid vote nothing but baoker | being « candidate for nomination. For ie 4 principles, ‘under any contingency. You ci ‘ata | ciple, tbo Van Burens and Piairs could not suppor c 248, nd cam the same mon glance ¢) a cet d three men, representing a single commen on Fe ny what grow A L~ ig in perfest concert ¢ouid a ad on 9 jor tay atu EG ‘convention, 1 petleve, - Be 1#52, in principle, be changed from that of ISI | Crt crt tu > barnburners — 128 being the fall dole | Who anticipates any su eg yg Ay nai gh? that the Baltimore Go way onderse the on, The stock in trade with which John Van Buren | | I suppose there is not to be found in the State, a | Comptroller, is, of itself, sufficient proof that the two | eloments of power with which John Van Buren went | roceedings at this con- | in the elec- | judicial district delegations, as moved by the na- , con- | convention, ro- | /a man of sbili it, ti- cal, and most rezponsible station, er superior to , Jonn tk beckman, who has ng excellence that [know of, save that be is @ gentleman, and politically as true to the Van ns as the wea- thercock - the gale. It bee garth em ow ere A eat, that John was so wary, 80 persevering | his attempt to secure Beekman’s nomination on Friday night. Beekman is quite extensively known ' to political men throughout the Union, as the shadow of the Van Burens; and hence his nomiua. tion wonld have been regarded by them, and not | without show of reagon, as the sign manual of Mar- | tin Van Suren upon the ticket nominated by the New York Lemocratic State Convention of 1851; in other words, the signet of the restoration of the | Van Duren dynasty in the State of Now York, after its rout, ic 1547, in tne person of his represen- | tative, A.C. Flagg, and his own formal abdica- tion, at Buffalo, in IMS. Such, infact, was the | position which the nomination of John P. Beekman, | ef hinderheck, as Comptroller of New York, oc- cupied in tho councils of father and son, at Linden- | wald; but it was an ugly and unsafe mi to | divulge to men who, as the supporters of Case, in 1845, bitterly contemned, and as bit- terly denounced, the course then Cag mag by both father and son. For over 70 of the 128 de- legates te tho convention ssiperten General ) Case in IMS; and to reveal this pur to them, wight break the enchantment and destroy all; as few, if any, had expectations of personal randiszem¢ nt from the existing mis-alliauce. it might break the spell at once ; therefore the risk wag, that all might be lost, and so it was not ha- carded. Butthw view renders plain o h tho reasons why, with # coolness equalled only by Lo- pez, before the garrote at Havana, John Van Buren marched on to tke platform, prepared by the sup- porters of Cass, and there openly **laid down the weapons of his rebellion.”” And. ‘o make things worse for hii, there stood Judge Wright, a talented, energetic, well informed business man ; in his whole course inconventioa, in temper, word, and act, ob- viously promoting the bond of real party union, and true tical frate! . Io all these respects, Le was from objection. He was a firm supporter of Cass and Butler in 1848, and his competitor an equally frm supporter of Mr. Van Buren. May it net have oceu: choice of temporary President, disregarded the ob- ligations of the caucus in which they had partic pated, that here was an issue very plain—standing out in bold relief, from the fast that the question was unembarrassed by any previous nominations; and that so bold, palpable, ascertainable and inex- cusable defection, would not only place them ina disreputa dle, bat unprofitable, attitude before their constituents ! Such are some of the suggestions which arise in my miad in yiow of the very extraordinary action of the coalition. J irst, in permitting the nomina- tion of Judge Wright, and in i+ so signal a defeat of Van Buren, Cagger & Co.; and then, afterwards, ia the nomination of their own candidates for the four next officer, not only acting in utter disregard of the poeition and rights of the nationals, and in seeming denial of all obligations of equity and foirness, but, apparently in greater contempt, if that wore possible, of even a desire for the success of the ticket, which, on such principles and on such impulses, they were a (ee opin- jon is, that if, by any means, John P. Beekman could have been nominated, an entire change of programme, for all the performances of the night, after that event, would have been uced. That the huvkers could bave nawed their man for Secre- tary of State, for Canal Commissioner, and for 3 Engineer; and, also, that from the hour the ination of John P. Beckman should have been announced, the action of some men in that con- vention would not have been as it appears to have been after the nomination of Judge Wright, such as to lead to the belief that they Were quite indif- ferent, and if not indifferent, adverse to the suo- ces, of the ticket they were helping tomake. And my opinion is founded on the tacts 1 have sta:ed, | and on what I saw and heard in the Syracuse Mar- ket all, between eight o'clock on Friday night and five o'clock on Saturday morning. In plain Lnglish, was suecess at the election this fall, for State officers, Jobn \ en Buren had in view he spent at this convention ? is, and will be, a secondary consideration altogether. The one, single, steeples purpose of Van Buren, Cagger & Co., inal their movements ia 1851, is ascendancy in 1s52, and that ascendancy to be de- | Yeloped in the control of the Now York delegation | to the Baltimore National Convention. That | point—the fact of control in this State—in any way made apparent, this frm are then indifferent ag to | whig or d: moeratic control at the polls in Novem- ber. The frst act in this drama, for 1551, was the notable resignation of twelve Senators and the flight of anotber, in April last. By that bold and | revolutionary act—by the inimitable and unequal- led farce, by which t gery have len ey ta bs i and then marched down be recognized as those who were to ss to the ‘Tolley tthe democracy of New in other words, in the classic language principals in the firm, they supposed by that move- iment they had ‘*got the d——d hunters by the nose.” The issue of that demonstration “ope proved that they Lad merely fastened a ring in their ‘The next wae, of course, to carry the majority of the tate Convention. Failing intha:, to barter the remains of the Buffalo p votes suflicient for that contre upon fhe strong and salient with their centre broken, the next, andonly ing position, wa. tute a ticket, a whole, from comparative weakness and hould secure the over wof the coluran upon which they were not permitted to place the capital, and then charge the inevitable consequence of their own work, upon this alleged dereliction by the jonals—Van Bure » ru r to come to the re jear domo people of New York, and in execution of that patriotic purpose, secure the Baltimore delegation. Such is the gramme. !tonly remains to be scon how successtul 1¢ will prove in the last act. Jon sTHAaN uring the vhree days With him it was, and crati Our Canadian Correspondenee. Torowro, ©. W., Sept. 12, 1951. The Great Colored Convintion— Provincial Polittes and Journals—Toronto and Gudph Raiiroad— Railroad Matters—The Mayor awit the Corpora- tom in Bostow—Criticism in Canada, §c. A body, assuming to itself the appellation of “The Great Colored Convention of North Ame- rica,” is now asserabled in this city, with the nomi- nal object of considering the question of colonization as applicable to the colored population of the con- tinent, slave and free. The sittings commenced yesterday, and were attended by a goodly number f the sable brotherhood; the majority from diifer- nt parts of this province, others—though but fow— from Now York and the Northern States. '/p to this poi nothing doverving of notioe has ocourred; nor ia it likely that onything will transpire worthy of being chronicled in your colamns. The sboli- tionists, as a party, appear to have no comnection with the proceedings, in whish nobody of note has yet taken part. As fur as my information goes, one of the matters to be considered is the location of fugitive sieves in this province more particalarly in the Southwest section, where the Elgin Associa tion has a settioment of the kind. The abolition ists’ organ, in this city, is now publishing # series of letters by a Baptiet clergyman, of Woodstock, ia reference to the colonizaticn of these people in Ja maica. ty *.] moans, let them hasten thither— any where, ia fact. rather than to Canada, which is | already mongril enough for the taste of any decent mud and confusion—with a very remote chance of egaining quiet and transparency. Preparations for the ensuing elections g-ow apace, but in a manner sing ulerly vegve and vadefined. The boasted ‘anion of reformers” drags on its existence with a won- mount of actual vitality. The terms & reeret. I believs that udiourly left open, in order to a Se eeepienen to the revue ef theelections. ‘The fact that secresy is pretervedt and justified ex- cites a dogroe of suspicion, which sundry mal to some of the nine, who, ia the | eer objzet which | yare laboring hard to turn to accouat. The tents wpionists refer to the “well tried” charactor of 3 while the dissentionts snap their fingers and ory “ treason.” Tae Globe—tho mouth- e of the wnaleontents—Is laboring hard to pack a ele ities into a rutahell, and that nutshell tick- | “ apti-State churebism ;” and on this ground sowing the sceds of dissension as widely a3 pos | sible. It is amusing to notice the very righteous | airs which this journal assumes, alshough, but the | other coy, tho unscrupulous advocate of every ey je perreiseted by the present ministry. Ministers discarded the ¢ilole, cut off the supplies, and transferred patronago (o other quarters. Forth- with the Globe became patriotic, and now deals largely in religious tervor, and very irceligious in- sinuations; while its opponents, the#aanuner andthe North American, show themselves quite a match for it in the way of }, hearty abuse. Cne of these, the other day, hinted that during tho term of office of the it ministry, the (lobe has pocketed $40,100 In one form oranother of public plunder. The Glote retorts that the editor of the L'xaminer“ratted” for $1,200 a year for three years, which he has not | received; and the editor of the simerican got half | thst sum for one year, which he has received. 1 am sav isfied that ‘ali theeo allegations in the shape in which they are urg which prompts or permits their utterance may be | taken as a sample of the morality and principle | which pervade Canadian politics. “ There is some satiafactionin being s led and bamboozled in England, where the politicians are peers and pimps; | andeven at Washington, where corruption is on | large enough to be respectable. But hero— | Sur peliticians are pedlars,who fight like dogs | about as many dollars as a genuino man of the world could spend in a month. Canada has had its wholesnte plunder and plunderers, it is true, but those days are over; and now-a-days hungry ex- | pectants are “thankful for small mercies;” they would cut a man’s throat for $1,000 per annum, | paid quarterly. - I wili give you another peer behind the curtain. The Petrict—the only daily paper in Toronto—is | | devoting itself te writing down Dr. John Rolph, | | who is one of the leaders, if not the leader, of tho | | mysterious “Union of Reformers.” The Patriot ails Dr. beg in torms of unmeasured abuse, | acterizing Lim as an “impersonation of treason, | raping, revolution, and republicanism.” All this, | forsooth, because Dr. Ralph cast a friendly eye up- | on the rebellion of 1437—as rightoous ‘arebellion as | history records. Now, what is the key to the Patriot's jive hostility! Why this—that Dr. Rolph is the P ipal of a very efficient medical school in this city, andin this capacity is a formidable rival tothe <jae and soy, medical school of the University, of which, Dr. O’Brien, the political editor of the Patriot, is ove of the professors. Dr. O’Brien can- not stand his ground against Dr. Ri ii fessional point of view; and so Dr. satisfaction to himeelf by thundering forth columns of patriotic abuse against his more successful rival. Small work; isn’t it? There is little doubt that the Toronto and Guelph | railroad will shortly be commenced, with a cer- | tainty of being extended, at no distant day, to Goderich, on Lake Jiuron. A meeting to promote the project was held at Georgetown on Wednesday, and Toronto is prepared to render to it substan- | tial support. The truth is, that Toronto is jealous of the advantage which Hamilton expects to gain | from the Great Weetern Railway, and will strain every nerve to divert some of the traffic from that retty and rising place. A line from Goderich to ‘oronto will drain a fertile region, which would otherwise be tributary to the Great Western; but it seems to me that it will also divert tratlic to a large extent from the Northern road, via Lake | Simeoe to the Nottawasnga river, to which the Cor- | poration of Toronto have rendered eubstantial as- sistance. Hamilton and the Great Western folks are very sore upon the subject, but, after all, they cannot cowplaia. Toronto is but playing the game , which Hamilton tried to play against the Brantford and Buffalo line; for the closing days of the Darlia- men left no doubt of the desire of Sir A. McNab, and the friends of the Great Western, to * burke” that line, if possible. Toronto and Brantford win, Hamilton loses, and must now try to bear the loss with Christian resignation. | Arrangements had been made for tho commence- | ment of the Northern railroad on Wednesday. A | silver mete, costing some $160, had been provided | for Lord Ligio, who was to turn the first sod, but the event bas been postponed until after the return of; | his lordship from the railway festivities, at Boston. | A city paper hints, to-day, that the directors of | this railroad contemplate dispensing with tho ser- vices of Mr. Capreol, the author, manager, trea- | surer, and general factotum of the whole ailair. No doubt Mr. Capreol’s connection with the schemg , has operated projudicially to it, in public ostima- | tion, in this locality; but the arrangements been completed, nevertheless, it would be too 5 to throw overboard a man who has certainly la- bored hard, for y 0 give effect to the creation | of his own brain. ayor and Cerporation of Toronto start on Monday, | faney, ior Boston, where they are to be entertained as public guests | during tho @ rntiroed jubilee.” If is hoped that | our city magnate? will return with proper notions | of the manner in which affairs of this kind should | be conducted. If the ‘< of Boston has a spico | of waggery in him, he will leave the Toronto cele brities to ‘pay their own cab-hire, after the fashion of the Torontonians on the occasion of the famous Buffalo visit of last year. | One word as to that memorable “interchango | of ef between Puifalo and Toreato, which | took pl n the summer of 1850. ‘The hospitality | of the great folks of Toronto on that occasion was | = thronghout the Union, aad certain of the jeading men were nted with soulf boxe: by | the Bulfal: sians. ‘et, to this day, a = Frokee tion of the dcbt incurred in copnes ion wi 0 To | ronto festival, is stillupaid. Toronto “ big guns” | reaped the honors; Torento traivamen pay the | piper. | : Taare say you have noticed the sbuse with which the Hamilvon Sjectator honors the Herald, and especially my humble correzpondenee. In my last | letter, the printer made me t k of Canada “ epjoying the fortunes” of the >(ates, instead of “onvying.” 7 us Spectalor failed to tise | phony! i § ‘under, and wrote a soleran article to ex: | poand hi jew of the expression. At first, ho praised the Jéeraid, and abused my letters ; now ho ‘ngs bard words t both of us. is will probably be the last letter I shall ad, dress to you hence for some time. rt eouth- ward to-day. ANoLo-AMERCAN. | Montrual, Sept. 15, 1951. Movements of the Canadians to Bostm—Sir W. Dor=The Weather, &c. At four o'clock, this morning, the first train left for Boston, to convey the advanced guard of the | grand army of Canadians invited thither, to parti- cipate in the jabilation to be held in that city. At Il o'clock the main body proceed, attended | by Mr. Daly, the ageat for the Vermont Central line of railway. This body will consist of several ! hundred citizens from the cities of Quebec and Montreal, including the civic dignitaries, judges, | prothonotaries, and swarms of cilieers belonging to the regiments stationed in Canada. ‘he Mayor of Montreal will doubtless «port his ‘collar of | gold,” a piece of civic taste procured at a cost of $1,000. ‘The links are composed of che rose, eham- tock, thistle and maplo leaf, iatertwined wit) rather an odd idea, considering St. Pa- trick’s antipathy to snakes, and his legacy of the shamrock a4 evidence thereof. Me. Wilson is ous Mayor—a very ree pectable gdealer in the hardware line, and an active partwan of the French portion of the ministry Sir W. Den is yet in town. Ho gave a perform- ance last week, aud bas be ell received. ‘The cholera has ‘led since our cold weather com- | wenced The atmospheric changes hare been strongly marked of iste. Un the Meh Fahrenbeit’s therao- | tweter stood at “5 de, at noon, and 70 at mid- | night. On the 12th instant it fellto 55 at soon, | and 40 at midnight. Since tien we havo ha! | slight frosts B. | Woonsrock, C. W , Sept. % 1851 Diparture from Toromto—Gred Western Radresd, to conmect with the Contral Michigan--Hamilton— | Brantford—Railroat from Bertie to Brant/orl— | indian Vilage— The Moheorks— Wood stock —ite | of Confirmation. 1 left Toronto on Wednesday noon, and in about four hours was landed at Ha- milton, a thriving town, situated on Barlington | bey, the western termination of Lake Oatario, and | where is to be the terminus of the Cireat Woatern | Kiwilrond, which is to conneot that place with Wind- | opposite Letroit ‘The capital stock of the gompany is siz millions | of dollars, divided into one hundred dollar shatce, of which three millions Imve been takoa ap in the ; United States by pariics locally interested, aud in Canada two milliop: are to be raised on bonds so cured by the Camadian government; and the re- last, in the after- maining million efforts are being made to obtain tn | England—friting in which, it will be subseribed ia the United States, whore parties aro ready to sub- seribe tha amount, the only obstacle at presont bo- ing the gnuge that shall be adopted, it being desira- ve to Sick the same, as that whieh has peon tert fed on for the ¢ from Kingston, tarcage ‘Torento to Hamilten, and wtimately from Mon- tia ({uebee to It alitax Parties are at wor. on the line from tear Woodsteck, sixty miles from ount inthe aggrerate to nearly five thos ud men; but owing 'o the divenses incident Ingersol, are Ties; but the temper | bi | Great | book ofthe Church of Kagland translated into their | lang | trimony, and the burial of the dead. } | of three tribes—the Tortoise, the Bear, and the | took upon themselves thove reepe | the 15th inst., at 4 o'vloek, ?. Hamilton, , summer, the number actual: empl ed at any one cbably does thee toe rit Rese ponte te sated the Une fo ave power to ox! ine from Hatallton to sho ar , the catire length Falls of ee Sen. wae poins to Sete mlb river — nr ad): wenby-cight miles, sing t] the most end “fertile rtion of Cai and connecting the Central Nallroad of Michigan and the Upper Lakes with Lake Ontario, and the numerous lines of railroad through ths State of New York, and ultimately with that from (g lens be, Bes Boston, or via Montreal to Portland. ‘There is at present a large amount of travelling from Detroit, thre Canada, to Now York, a boat running from that city to Chatham, en the river Thames, which falls into Lake St, Clair, the distance between the two places being fifty-four miles. From Chatham, a line of stage coaches runs daily to London, distant sixty-seven miles ; from which to J’ort Stanley, on Lake i:rie, ts taventy- seven, whence boats run to Buffalo every Monday and ‘Thursday—the time occupied in going from London to Buffalo being fourteen hours, and the fare two dollars and a half. Hamilton was laid out in 1813, Lut made little Bec gress until a canal was opened through tho sapd-bank which crogses the entrance of Burlington ay, sine which it bas rapidly increased, and in 1850 the number of inhabitants excceded ten thou- sand souls. ‘The town is situated about a milo from tho shoro of Burlington bay, whore passengers mAuegis the steamboats, which run twice a day from To- ronto, and every afternoon for Niagara, find cabs and omnibuscs from the hotels, one of which ean peo cae forty passengers, awaiting their val. Not only is Hamilton thus remote from the bay, but it lies directly under a high range of mountains, that cxtends from the Falls of ‘ara, south of the town, and then trends away to northward, and ultimately terminates at Quebec. This posi- tion renders it extremely hot there during the summer months, and communicates to a stranger a tense of confinement, which I cannet describe. I never visit Hamilton without thinking of Sterne’s starling, when confined in the cage, and recalling | te mind the exclamation of the captive bird—* can’t get out.” a After tossing about in bed the entire night of my arrival, | awoke feverish and unrefreshed, with a | slight headache, and poy availed myself of the first coach that offered for Brantford, some twenty- three miles distant. ‘The first hour and a half was oceupied in climb- ing the range of hille, which furms the most dificult and expensive portion of the iine of raiirsad; and the remainder of the route was through a recently settled portion of the country, with ranges of mountains in every direction; that of Flamborough, to the northward, bein; egearenily well cultivated, | along which rune one oj sectioas of the railway on which parties are employed. | ‘The only object of interest we encountered, da- | ring this tedious ride in oppressive heat, was a | large bear, which made its appearance about forty yards from the road, and not more than five miles | frem Brantford. Thore was a small house near by, | and we Jearned from its inmates that this animal, | with her cub, had been seen by a boy some four or five days befere. 1 observe, by the papers, that bears have this eummer made their opreennen at no great distance from Quekec; and | was subse- quently informed that, last week, three of these galleoe walked through a toll-gate in the town- ship of London, the gatokeeper deeming it tho | better pert of valor to retreat into the house, and | allow the party to pass on, which they did very un- concernedjy and at their leisure. We arrived at Brantford about six in the after- | noon, where the coach was to wait till twelve, for | the passengers by the boat, which leaves ‘Toronto | at half past two; and | made up my mind te remain | till the following day, and then take another, which leaves at noon. About three miles from | Brastford, we ee a handsome brick cottage, recently Built y Peter Jones, an Indian chic! This isthe person who made seme noise about fifteen years since, having married an accomplished young Jady in Ingland, at the: retired Methodist missionary, with a means. The situation he has cho: debgbtful view of (irand river, level valley beyond it; and he d the extended 1 coupied, during the evening of his days, in laying cut and orna- menting the grounds that surround his dwelling. | Brantford, named after a chief of the Mohawk tribe, contains a population of about four thousand | souls, and isa place of much business. It is gite- | ated on a rasge of highlands that skirts Grand | river, down which steamers descend twice a week, et present, Lut usuany four times, ty Buflalo—a | distance of fifty miles; and it communicates, through | the Welland Canal, with Lake Ontario. The $yrnle of Brantford were desirous that the estern Railroad should touh it; bat this | 8 opposed by those of Hamilton, who were justi apprebensive that it would divert the tray alling ant conveyance of produce from the latter place, down Grand River and across Lake Erie to Bullalo ; and consequently tho nearest point at which it no- roaches is Paris, a beautiful village, seven miles rom Brantford. An application was made to the Legislature last year, by a company, for a charter, whove object is to conduct @ railroad trom lertia, nearly opposite Buflelo, which failed however, through the Necee- mentality of Sir Allan MeNab, who represents Hamilton in the Provincial Parliament. But a eneral law hae inadvertently been passed, the ‘rantford and Buflalo company availed themselves of its provisions, and every effort was made by Sir Allen, during the late session, to have, the law re- pealed before the company went into operation, or even had a legal existence. lie Moy boty gs ‘de- | tained from hia parliamentary attendance by a fit of iliness, vatil a late period in the session; and Mch.enzic and two or three other members, having | determined to speak against time, to the exclusion | of ail other publie business, the Inspector General | introduced a reservation in favor of the Brantford a and the line from hertie will probably top the Great Western Railway at Paris, whenever the main trunk line shall have bven completed. About « mile and a half from brentford is si! ated the Mohawk village, called ** The institu at which about forty different lodian tribevare eda- cated, and where tho boys are taught various trades Here Js situated the first church that was croctod in Canada West, to the walls of which are affixed | the armorial bearings of (Lueen Anne; and the In- | diane possess & communion secyive of stiver, with on inveription deseribing it av having been presented to that tribe by her Majesty. | The Mahewks have alsa a ortion of the prayer: | e, comprising the morning and evenin, the litany and elect paseages from the Old and Testaments; aleo the offices of baptiem, ma- ey consist sore | yice, New Wolf; and at the closo of the American levolu- tion, proferring to remain under the British govern ment, they declined the offer made by the Sonccas, ofa tract of land in the Genesee valley, and received ® grant of land on the Grand Liver, where the Mohawks have since remained; and where @ monu- ment bas smce been erected to the memory of * Joseph ey Fag chief and warrior of the | Six Nations Indians, by his fellow subjects, ad- | mirers of his fidelity and attachment to the Dritish | crewn ;” and another to his son, Joseph Brant, who distinguished himsel/in the war of 1*12-15, and who died last year. ‘ ‘The Indian name of the former obief was Thay- endanegea, wyo was born on the danks of the Ohio, in 1742, and was the son of Tehowehengaragh’kwin, bicoded Mohawk of the Woi! tribe ; that of | or was Pi Neem a 4 On Friday | started in the coach for Woodstock, twenty-six miles distant, the road lying through better settled tract of country, aithough nothing like what | expected to find it, and where we ar _ rived aboud sunset. This is an extended village— probably two miles in length—having an immmeonre ail, Noiently large to contain a! the debtors and als in the province. Tho country around Woodstoc's is extremely fertile, an 4 in its vieinity a rumber of English gentiemen of Sortune have fixed | their residence, and constitut ‘ery select society. | On the Sunday “pty ae Toronto | be! @ confirmation at the Episcopal Church, which was taninly crected through tho .vetrumentality of | John Geo. Vansitart, Es, the proprietor of the Biitish Americ, the only paper published at | Woodstock, and in which iss marble monumen' erected by their son, to the memory of Rear Admi ral Yansitart and his lady, who were enon the | carly settlers in this part of the province. About | fifty of the youth of the village and its noighbor- hood partock of thie interes ite, in which they — nai bilities ee } which | ty | i | vi others at their baptism, in administerin, the 2 ‘was assisted by the Kector of Toronto, and t! eetor of Woodstoek: the lattor of whom | wat formerly an officer in the army, and was town | Mayor at jssels when the British troops took | their departure frem that city, to encounter the | legiows of France on the field of Waterloo. Ammuicanrs. Daatu or Hon. Seta ib. Siut.—We ro a iniul duty in recording the death of ifon. Seth Hily Sill, one of the Judges of the Supreme Court of the Kighth Judicial d'striet of this State, who answered to the dread mossenger, death, yesterday after @ very brief and painfud illness of three da. His disease, we | urderstard, was a ecogestive fever of the most ma- Vigront type. Lie was bern in the town of Mora Sarat of here his parents now reside, on and was 42 years 3 monthe dey of bis derth. He com- w with the Hon. Orville completed his legal e came to the bar int! ie of the law, a first | n ander e re employed, when, at the the new constitution, he wo by the Kiguth + Judicial distriet, one of th ceo the Supreras Court, whieh position be h the tige 0€ jis Buffalo Erpres, Sat | man for Secereaee, by education and 7, ve | TR whale valley is | mand high prices | articles in proportion. | Sagar @ur Syracuse Correspondence. Syracuss, August 20, 1851. Population of Syracuse—Its Increase—Silt Works -- Onondaga Indians—Death of an old Chief A Beautiful Squaw—Robinson ani Elired’s Civeus—The Bloomer Costume. ‘The present population of Syracuse is upwards of twenty-two thousand; in 184) it was only about six thourand five hundred—showing an inorease ef ebout rixteen thousand. The manufacture cf salt, from salt is very extensively carried on in this city, In 1850 the quantity made was two millions two hundred and sixty-eight thousand nine hundred and nineteen bushels. Up to this date there has been o largo increase in 185] over the corresponding time in laat year. ‘The sait eprings abound in the immediate vicinity of the shores of Onondaga luke. The water i evaporated, in some of tho establishments, by the sun; but more generally by means of artificial heat. T visited one of the manufactorics, and was struck with the beautiful appearance presented by the sale pure, white, and eparkiing, as it stood heaped in large baekots over the iron kettles, having been taken out long enough to become dry. The Onondaga Indians reside seven miles from this oity. They number about four hundred. Their ccttlement is oalled ‘the Castle.” Their tpasitary, comprises seven or oight thoaeand acres of land. They are divided into two parties—the Pagan and Christian. The Pagans are the most numereus; they worship the (ireat Spirit, accord- ing to the old Indian custom. : temperance society bas been established amongst the Onondagus, and already includes amongét its members a considers ble portion of both oe Sarton and Pagan “parties,” as they are called. The Indian, an intelligent, gontlemanly Unoaa, from whom 1 obtained nee fT my information, bas a son who attends the deaf and dumb school in New York city. hie boy is now at home on a visit. I wrote on a slate, and asked him how he liked liviog in New York. He imme- diately wrote in reply: ‘1 like living in New York ; 1 will not live in Mexico.” What he meant by the latccr remark, or, rather, what occasion he had to make it, | do not know. ** Old Captain Jones,” as he was cailed, one of the chiefs of the Onondagas, died at six o’clock last Sunday evening. He is said to have reached the extraérdinary age of one hundrnd and seventeen or ore hanarad a8 eighteen Faery ata io most intoresti 13 308 amongst the Teenie te told, On Monday atternoon, accompanied by om, I drove out on tho plank road, tho direstion the Castle. We soon overtook a small party of indians, and one amongst them has left an’ im- pression on 1ay memory, Which must endure as long as the tablet on which it is graven. For the firat time in my life the idea which I had formod, from the accounts of Pocahontas, and of other Indian beauties, given by the historiens, of the early set- ters in Virgivia, was fullyrealized. The personifi- cation cf this bright vision was a young maiden of sixteen or seventeen years, belonging to the Oneida tribe. She reaides at Green Bay; and, aceompanied by her futher, and a fow others of ple, is now on a visit to the Onondagas, I et soon many beautiful women, and am not insensibie to their charms, but I never beheld another human form so perfect in its developemeat and proportions; 80 dignified, majestic, aud graceful in its move- ments as hers. Unsophisticated child of nature and of the forest! Sho bas awakoned emotions in | my heart which belong to the days of youth and poetry, and which I had thought that nought on anty could pa gens ger at homeo how in- adequate wou! @ any description in la: of hor real, living, transcerdant tay, — “Who heth pot proved how feebly words essay To fix one epark of barry ae-thag d ray? Who doth not feel, until his failing sight Paints into dimness with its own deright, is changing check his sinking heart, confess mnight—the majesty of loveliness ’? Large numbers of the Indians came into tho on Monday, to witness the performances at Kobin- ton & Fldred’s circus, with which they, 9s well as the whites, were highly grasified. The almost unlimited capacity of the physical Xu 4 trainin is beautifully illustrated by the feats of some of the riders belonging to this company. Mr. Robinson, Senior, rides four horses at a time, on a fast gal- Jop, and peiforms wonders which would seem to bs unsurpassablo, were they not followed by some- x g still more extraordinary on the part of Master ames. Madame Robingon’s skilful management of bor dancing horee was loudly applanded; and Made moiselic Henrivtta’s elegant and graceful part ia tho performances commanded universal admiration. 1 have gecn four or five ladies in the street here, dracsed, or wadecesed, in tho Bloomer ecostw They atirasted no particular attention. city Gur Uteh Correspondences Guear Sart Laxe Crry, Utah Te "Twly 31, 101 t The Nav Territorial Oficers—Aparance of the City—Trout and Agricviture—Swlphur Baths— The Mormons— The Delegate to Congress, §e. The efficors appointed for this territory are all here, excopt Judge Brochus, and Mr. Holman, In- dian Agent. They arc composed of the Hon. Chief Justice Brandebury, Judge Snow, Secretary Iarris, sub-Indian Agonis H.R. Day and 8. B. Rose, all about entering upon their duties. They were oor- dially received by bis Excellency tho Governor and suite, and regaled with a sumptuous dinner onthe 2th instant, the anniversary of the first arrival of the Mermon people in thie valley. A stranger coming down the mountain, and enst- or this city, and Uh ¢ 0) toa, will be Siesek WHA tonbatie _ airation, The streets are laid out very wide, with rows of Woe panes yy the side: walks; the buildings, in style of architecture and comfort, will compare with some of the finest in the Htater. Lach occupant of a house has one and a | quarter acres of Jand, under fence, with a fine flower gerden, ard upon which he also raises the largest nd best vegetables | have ever seen. Pure, cool veams of spring water run taroagh cach street, on either side, av well as through every lot. Fine trout are = in some of them; and in the Jor- dan, one mitie from theeity, they are it, aod equal to any in the East. heir th tercd im the manner [ stated above Tbe crops, this year, are abundant. ‘The wheat fieids are the best { hare lave sent # sample of cach kind to the ise sioner of Patents. It is composed of the seven- head, Egy pian, smooth white Toure, and red ditto. ! would fend you # sample, if t wero not for the postage. There are two breweries here, im full operation. In the north part of the city ro located hot sul- phur baths, whieh you can enjeyforonedime. Could and salt water bathing is convenient to the ity The city ie overstocked with goods, but t! Money is very searee. worth fiitcon eents per pou selling at forty conte Lan F see) Cor ie is sugar and coflee are nd: wad other leading » fifteen to twenty-five r ton; weod, ten to twelve dollars per cerd, and rather a short cord at that. The average yield dotlars at wheat 18 sixty to seventy bushels per acre; « much larger quantity has been raized. There are some few truit trees here, doing well. ‘There are some twenty bands of Indians in thie territory, seme of whem are very troublesome to tho settiors. They stoal cattle and horses whenever on opportunity offers. Most of them are wild, bag Indians. A military post is mach neoded in this region. ‘The Mormons are, from all I have seen, « quiet, industrious people. ‘There i not a coffee house im the city. No spirituous liquors are allowed to be eold in the territory. ‘Ihe emigration will be large —suppered te be from five to ten thousand. It is the present impression of the officers ap- pointed by the government for this territory, that their ealaries will not enable them to meet their ex- | penges, even with the most rigid economy. Other territorial oMieers get much isrger salaries, and where it does not cost as much to live,by twenty-five to fifty per cent. pay ie unequal. Will not the éc iments and Congress look to this master! | B Lr. John M. Bernhisel is voony cei in eg and will be elected, the dele gate from this territory. ife will make an able and indefatigable de! 5 ‘The people here seem much pleased with what Con- rese and the administration have done for them. hey fpeak in the highest terms of encomium of the present adwinistration. jf Prosident Fillmore’s re-cleetion depended upon this , ho would recelve a almost unanimous yote. J a —_ friends ~ oo Lae ye he the Committee on Territories, Sppro- bation of the whole territory. Thoy look upon the “little giact’ as ome ef their best—very bost— friends. . next, | shall endeavor to give you a few of i valley. Iron ove ia , and @ furnace I! soon be established. will cheetly be made frou the beet; the build- ing ie nearly xeady. All kinds of mechanical arts will be im course of operation, ashort tims | shall give you, hereatver, a b of all that trans pires, that reill ‘ve of interest to your Hg 2 ai plentin Domestte Miscetiany. There was 8 Lg fred at Hartford. el the pight of the Hts inet, Nearly the whole O¢ the tobacco crip is desyroged,

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