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THE FORREST DIVORCE CASE. counse} the other ex- | retion for and insult exacted, I would warn al! | ne! arrived with committee mast Ree nae, | Sits aepeeeeerenass | eakerismenmrene tn, | fae arc ergeapaie eS oe Opp eae = ieee SSE oar. Fou ell pret sont tat that tho Shee sts te wee tet cs ag, too liste for aapladaraneminal war steered ‘Amrican Soneiss b Onsen Be taebe te oe ‘example of somie of them. decline toe: bastily a thicd’” There's —_ oe on The banger, is whet econ 2 at cscty ee A pone lh es pop he Nd one Wilanoon Ths “Topeprepheal © bo Mabout which’ peovle ‘ifier ae aa the ba es te ai a i U Fig, honored the oceasion by is preeenes. No It's, aa I have explained, on account of the or | neers, is ‘an escort goons aa tor Valno and merit of works of art. Nothing sbost | p,.. besoath American boat (proper) éntered the liste—our brome, a8 they it here, and rapa wa haa Lieat. in surveyiug @ road from Port Or- | which there is more room for discussion and honest <. 29.--The court room was, as om the previous nine American ‘no disposition to encqun- | ever here will corroberste. tell ford to main road from Oregon to the | difference of opinion. The Committee of Manage- | 446 of this case, well filled long before the hour for pro- ter the hi and b ib, aioe these Sh sees fine eae T orp em and the prospects of success in got- mons ia-conapeees of vunai-sne gentlemen, ose ceeding with the business. ‘The trial ie likely to lest for people always surround their saccppered bottom in: Stteap Goss. - ma different walks 0: ve pectat Tat val ode alos come bere an wine ibe ia eas been ublind ase coneran a a. st Port Orford in consider- | Ife, | They are not gzempt from the liability ‘olin wn ne pore: iagatcd oye practical results amalgamation of races “j 0 mistake which attaches to every man and ove: James xia bere, and I venture to Shey would fy in pnd ‘ans plan ix the mathe T hd ere ah woe States paged Barveying part ste body of twenty-one men, bes they are-no mor rr ee on baba egpety ore james rabareom, Scotland, 37 years. horror Ighttal ‘spotace moral | fall: ioned 0 rm ini al e than ir twenty-one, nor judges meral Term, on Saturday, = pile rates and physical degradation of J clog dod the hu- FrBbainme poner, ere is dull, though there have | the and of thet point, and have Selsell cue half oo mantis bitemesthen hove bed the iseued am order that the present trial term of the Bu. ‘Two Chimamen. One still-born. man race, formed in the of the Great Archi- | been very tmportations of goods from | completed a harbor. benefit of years of acquaintance, both with the | perior Court held by the Chief Justice, be continued ‘WYERMERTS IN SAN FRANCISCO, FOR THE WEEK ENDING | tect of the Universe, the most obstinate and Bt. Thomas. They are all for the Merids | Considerable has been felt by tho | wants of the Art Union and the character and ca- | unit Saturday next, and so much longer as be shall di- Nov. schism-ist that he who has so perfectly ordained i gio Gransdian markets. ores, 9 seamte detention of the Sea Gull, which was to have | pacities of the artists. Neverthelese, when the sect, M5: Perhied wan Gel UMMtenes, 15 tas Nov. 16H. Marous Upson, Coun, 44 years, the vast superstructure of the earth, that all a | and dear. | Now crop (sald to be short) is just coming | brought up supplies, and had not arrived when the | are obliged, out of fifty picturcs sent in as compet. es, & y » 3 Yim Barrows Youngs, Pertamouth, N.H., 909". | have their allotted place, has visited his divine best naeetek “one eae ee Heamer lee tors for purchase, to chovse five, they inevitably | Forrest entered the court shortly afterwards, accompa- sees Genpak, Dears a. $0. pleasure upon these creatures, for their worse | 100,000 quintals wore oxpon ence; this year the oro The Oregonian says thatthe weather has recently | incur the hazard of the displeasure 0! of the | mied by Mrs, N. P. Willis. ’ ws i puagend, than beastly violation of the laws ef nature and of | will not reach 75,000 q it is said. “No coffee a Srimacee ss Giaeee, one thata strong indication of | forty-five whose pictures they did not choo: id At 10 o'clock, the Chief Justice took his seat on the 18—Bo) Gline an 1. eres races. Disease, ceteemisy, ignorance and srime sare gue ‘oo nda ge AY ‘all comes from Santi, pels pest oka! ee ee os YY few natural for sab displeasure to ba . bench, the jury were called over, and all being present Francisco, 5 101 falera, Cristoval, Cucute. Balsam Novem! sence newspapers al instance of % ¢ Branco a youre on renee "Possessing the Boon climate in the world, $28 pet cargo of €0 Ihe: ides $10 por aula ary white feet. we ke i oe et himeef or ome trend who bol the pen of aready bet agronomic pal raecihey eae most us e intermediate | Stlted. These quotations UFFONC, mazon, which jast lo: writer and an unscrupulous abuser. Y 1 pL : ort Detwosn feo extn f the earth, a great pee 9 lg open OS SAN Fhe sreat | lumber, &e., for the San Francisco market, and | Is not this a sufficient answer to all the charges | crcse-examined by Mr. O'Conor, Q.—Are yoa Mr . Mass, 26. Bighway for nations, with every that agood, | Jan and February, Fustic, $7 @ $8 per quintal, in had dropped down 0; the cit; + got mn her | brought the Art Union on the score of ic- | Forrest's agent im pecuniary matters? A.—if agenf np Frets they prereset og make them | yond. "Aters re cri dey fall oe oie | anahers pile fon ole tarongh, her bottom, | udiloussletons of plctare! and Jet tis it 07 | meaneone who rosie compensation, I il anrver you i co) \- cat |. Her yn taken ou! urden ¢! com) 0! @ com: ei: if Bike! ‘ norton 9. lation of a people intheirphysical, walled | "p's pes othe Hora ate sold yousecan at | and will bo reshippod: It’ supposed ‘the vouel | planers: Ms-"Thomas: Doughty: ender his san | &--Be Se cine Ve., 2%. their moral, and horribly contaminated in their wabile auction, for account of whom it may concern, | Will be condemsen” We learn she is fully insured | signature, charges the committee with impudence, | Partly since “47. Q.— any other agent but a, 39. blood by their vices. Let thefalse philanthropist, Hein been ehetcanes ‘as unseaworthy and incapable | in Baltimore.— Oregonian. favoritism, chicanery, &c., &c., and for what ! “ge ee bg Bon od gee -y in the B. Johnson, N. ¥., 18. after viewing this condition of s people upon whom in | of repair (there being no facilities for sversel | E. D. Warbass, Esq., of the Cowlitz, has disco. | Why, because it has “for some cause or other re- ae cy regs 8H Eli Merriman, Bromswick, Me., 45. the days of divine wrath, » judgment of Sodam and | of her size here.) she was stripped ‘and sold in lots. Al- anon tel 1 a nin sre isser et disco: | fueedto purchase his pictures.” Well’ perhaps Bg Ge TRS (tory ad Gomorsah would have been return to our | together she produced some $1 00, The ous. | the best, quality, and very extensive. We under | Mz-Doughty is right in his estimate of the merit | ‘tri, hare an acco thing, for his mouey ie always ‘ 2 gloriews country, and , with lesson Soha ee es Gmended importation tia on the stand Me Wo wil ialices ‘an quanti at the | of bis werks, and perhaps the committe is wrong. ready for when he pin for it; I am not mortgage Boia, that has brought forth such renaitae '°MM® | charges Dat ie wal rnate,» Bile Sharing of dates | mouth ofthe Comite, om the Colutin at Gve do | Thats poruble, But I alo Tope a SE ESS Minrvisn uray Ban Franco, § days. Tomy © tay, tah he Gann tthe er | Eu evr endure Pies franc: | "sor the Catenin seer Genen Coax | era nha ses ot gay of learn | Rey maki: ree Serene vegas had w Tose severe shook, by the mdden | the amount slaimed will be paid under prott. ‘Thus, | 1otte's Island on Friday last.” “The expedition was | {2 be po A rear ee a ame gh at pa ee eee steer fog 4 £0 far, has ended the voyage o Horas 4 com rincipally ef men bel to Oregon, i: = neh ht Q.--How do you know? legislat: matter the sudde: > be thus: An American ves- P y > ‘Lhe simple ion is, have they a right to do a - VERY IRVERESTING FROM SOUTH ANERIOL. | pSigiogo code spon wish Nang al he at | tnt comebor nthe pri be Trina tn raytcaneg potas | tate ane, 0h Sy | Sneed fcr ee Sere Rey ee: 8 of war,” m from the statu i Mr. O'Conor said that that t evidence ; if there Our Rio Janeiro Correspondence, _| and substituting in their place. Our ships Heian, magrenoe of gold in large quantities on that | venturing upon so outrageous an act? was letter it could be produced ; if any cue else told U. 8. Stoop or War Piymourn, now sail without power to enforce those regula- sibas: whith, ome Ge But let us look at some of the other charges | you, he canbe fae upon the stand. Rio Janurno, Nov. 2, 1851. "y tions which a wise nation should alwaya make for foams ie why vane promises to against this committee, which fails to please every- a the Chiet dastice —I have no personal knowledge The Passage Out—The Spanish War Steamer Car ook Serer oe eee Seer mi scianed binisiees Why hava't they published thin sree ev annnal | “ToMr. Ooncr it was Mrs, Bedford (Underwood) thotica—State of the Cowntry—The Steamer Sus- Art | report of transactions, with a list of subscribers? who smenaie i PN ga a ciendiie tmptanh tn td y—A Re ; ? , year of the existence and vpera- | aly hl belt cnt - ppt col ie bin, very frequently ; aw overage, ‘use a week ; 3 rey quinn 25 4 Difficult losing | . wi getta—- Discipline in the Navy, ec. citisens, its shore ‘and to destro: its enemies. To ae bathe Seraerncdpogiakele ane per | Bulletin iseued to every subscriber, which you pn Msn poll be Bg. sometimes | might have eoruee in the time of it, and may | jong and sometimes ‘such as friends interchange; take place. The approach of this event, which is | pets and as for the current year, doubtless they k called frequently im she omnes very, Aone br a i il time. or hol 8; re simply the division by lot, among the subscribers for | be go “age the regular time comes, vis: at the ually ‘hen Mr. Forrest was not at home, as well as 1851, of the pictures purchased in their behalf, by | atzit Fisher complains of the plan of the institu- | Whem he was. Q.—Were your conversations feee, ccediel, the Coumittee of Management, and which have tion, which requires all pictures to be sent to the | Mie we po) er pomrs as well = wie 3 = adorned the walls of the free gallery during the | Art Union rooms, in Broadway, instead of allowing | fest at Twenty.second street ; Usually dined there 1 send you a few lines as to our progress on our Fender this force affective for bo Pi 8, & per- East India cruise. We arrived here on the 3lat | fect ores haat Tn ee im- ultimo, after a stoppage of ten days at the delight- tr ‘ dience—| great bye Suecess, fol island of Madeira. The agrecables and dis- {iC eet oan be called) toy ony cage agreeables (to make two words) of a long sea voy- | and achieve greatness the world—is the great ‘age, with ite storms and calms, head winds and fair, | lever by wl this is achieved. Strict obedience, . means ted-—1 ited ~The North American Ho: hich, it is ini i . | the 6 drawers to select purchase their own 4 1 from hot tediousness and ennwi, everybody is, im this age of ae i? muficiont ; rng if not hie bald, was repaired igoroughiy in Graces, cue ere,and | Past season, thus ministering to the delight of thou- | works, But this isthe fault, not of the committee, | on” pundeyy I Reve oun. Mss Bageses "MS. Godwin, steamers and clippers, familiar with; the dread of | respect ; respect kindly ea im, and the devo- | the captain, It is sald, 20 the bar. ‘The Governor | sands, before being soattered amonget the various but of the constitution. Alter that—abolish the | Mr. Wykell, Captain Howard, Mr. N. P. Willis at huge wave and fierce gale has vanished with the | tion and death for country, embodied in the order peated Ta Rag! he eee homes of their ultimate possessors, has been the free g Ig fool Ed artists (Sigs gpg ipo Srnce est Bove nat eve NE: Ores; L oa ae Tales of Shipwrecks” that once so plentifally | Which seys “‘die,” or commands the sacrifice of | joy “Ite advised the general government of the case, | Signal for a succession of cencerted and illnatured | 82 Le aged ae Wee eae oti ea rizea | have seem argh ee pny large pom pane ; Oe - life—follows after. To enforce perfest obedience, | and it seems that this latter resolved that the detention | attacks on the Art Union, ite offi a s , ai ‘was giver to Mr. MoCready and the other om deeked our circulating libraries. Our only move- | and to render it, punishmentsare proclaimed forthe ike 1 ishmént sufficient for the fault. The | ° ¢ Art Union, its officers, and manage- in inst ofa collection of pictures, and then pe <inde Gale an. aoe ment of note was the taking of » number of deep | bad and diso ; reward and honorfor the good, | captain wes Informed that he might g0; but be has not | ment, and everything connected therewith. you will have the improved system which this thoee two occasions, have you secu ladies seretoehaat ecean soundings by the new simple method, which, | Patriotic and subordinate. Take away, then, the | chosen todo so, and states that he cannot proceed on | ‘The columns of the HERALD, in particalar, “= Prefers. on A.—Yes, I bave seen Mrs. Godwin there, and Mis Noab, cate, ifthe people will it; but, for the sake of thecoun- | bis voyage, as the vessel is making e great deal of water | during the past week, have exhibited repeated n anonymous writter in the Hexaun wants to | of Albany: I rather think it was a rare thing to see ike everything else new, makes one wonder block- try’s honor, we beseech you give us a code by which | im consequence of having been at anchor some fifteen or i know whether “ the managers have not concealed js at dinner except those of the family. heads did not find it out sooner. We left Maderia | the service can be uphel ou gi discipline and its use- | twenty days in this calm pat, eeu days, instead | instances of these ebullitions, ina series of commu- from the subscribers, r an artful plea, the F—Was it the habit of Mr. Forrest to go ont to eve- onthe 27th September, at 12 M. A circumstance | fulness, that when ee uae aalich te maneiee enomy,| SE Meomn Ss semi --7. > BC) Sey sare aneeeey com: | nications, partly annonymous, partly avowed by mount of the sums paid for each work of ning partice, where ladies and gentlemen were aseem- aca A we may go forth joyfully and expectant, confident 4 tothe ea SI noe, me Gextt vik | their writers, all of whom are making themselves | *%¢'” | This question is not asked for informa- | bled | objected; amd the Chief Justice asked occurred that morning, of the importance of which | i1’oo, diseipline and loyalty. With sorrow we must | Precet Ns > tion, but to insinuate that, because the com- 10 . . government to give them a new: andalso the cay very uncomfortable at the grievous wronge which itiee ha t published the f ict Mr. 0’Conor the bearing of his question. we were then ignorant, but which now causes us, ia | confess, we cannot do so now. The American naval | fain all he asks and all that is asked for others. ni - tee bave not pul 1 gees every picture, | “ Mr. 0°Conor said that Mr. Forrest, though somewhat this ship, profound indignation. On that morning, | officer who loves his service, is rultiplied in the | cal, op-pose this iniquity. If the vessel was a bad one,the | the Art Union is infileting upon somebody, and | an item of information which would subserve no distinguished as an actor, was not, in other respect ; in the hearia of every one of us, and we look with profonnd | government cannot pay for it; and if it was agoodone,it | doing their best to make everybody who has 800d end, and is not desired by artiste or sub- | *stupeulshed ss ap, soter, wae not in other resy ® largo Spanish steamer appeared offing, 8P- | srief upen our present condition. (ive us laws-- | could not bave received so much damage is ffveen ‘or ted f body who has it, and | *cTibers, there is, therefore, an improper conceal- | lady, and was to mix ia that society to maintain proaching from the westward. After some hesits- | stringent laws upon officers and men—laws which | twenty deys that it has lain painted for it, everybody who has managed it, and | pent in'the matter under anariful plea, her husband’s high position, while he avoided these aseo- tation in her manc-uvres, she came in, and auchored | will construct a new service from the materials of | Showers or winds. We shall send this paper to ali the | everybody who has subscribed toit, as uncomfort- | Thecommittee inform their sabscribers how much | clations, even in his own house, ées of the government, to whom . i 5 Mr. Van Baren considered the question irrelevant, and close to the beach. An officer from our ship was | theold. Our army lies hearts of our citi- | {Eur cre mot foraighers; bt Veneruclans, whoate making | Sble\as themselves. oan | they Maye weld Be weeks of Set is WRASSE | | ek wertan gases et cuamnes tonoes at coe sent, according to aval etiquette, to wait upon her Fl ae yon Agcy pele venga Joave | this claim, and that he who is im ated in thismatterie | ‘Taking them together, and judging them by their | Twn onarscter, thet they, falsify the epoeat or a, |! captain, and tender the courtesies of our fig. The | the editor his sanctum, nor the farmer his plough; | another owner cf the vessl, ae * OF | Mords, (the last test we should seriously wish toapply | ceive their subscribers in, this respect. More than conduct of her captain and officers in their reception | and rush upon the quarter deck of a man of war to | Were we not fully acquainted with the honesty of | tothem,) these censorious critics would be very hard | this is not desired, nor . and . He did not think acq! “ > - | Senor Conde, Governor, should believe that this 5 i 5, | _“ Your receipts were less in 1850 than 1849 b: Mr. Forrest ber efhim was unusual and most reserved ; the only fi bee open, bata Oe gon the Sold of Mex. | Senoe Conde, (the : ey elie sarees cairn Rats hg mri hgrsc? with the Sommatitee of | 915,000,” anys encnymous; “out of your gallery of ly igh ip umm information he could obtain was that she was ‘‘H. | naval views; there h at home, no doubt, | **usht to be extracted from the poor government. janagement for buying eo many pictures; another | three hundred paintings, two hundred aro not | — Mr. O'Conor sald Mrs. Forrest C. M. steamer Isabella Catholica, seventeen days J : SOME FREQUENTERS OF THE WIIARF.* | for not buying more ; one puts the committee onthe | worthy of exhibition; it looks like » collection of | that Re Sg ecg s Exchange of Maracaibo. poor list, by calli upon it “to explain the pictures brought together by speculators. You | ried him, for it wesnot the same; he was rising every dey aA PT thousands, | im the world—rising in oe of reform; eben esac a few Our San Juan Correspondence. cause of its inextricable embarrassment this year;” | pty ay ee SR pp lem wor) ait were, lord, and consideration—not new, 5 a Pipe ape nal ea Bax Juan pei Nonre, Dec. 20,1851. | while another holds it up to reprobation as » purse- engraving department is & drain on your treasury, es Re American ‘and Progress of the Revolution in Nicaragua. proud corperation, “ porsessed of property which is gives you the means of damning some artists | quced except in reply to collect “ native Ameri: voptmmathiog slats that The recent rumor of new revolution turns out ‘comparatively immense,” and which the public | ®24exalting others. Finally, youssect yoqrorives relevant. of 1840. | It was corrupt and fell—but established | to be the second advent of the Pichengo party, at ought to take care that its officers ao not divide “Tilt asebtine. eee cea Gatien: \ We ae oe upon ® pure basis, it would be ef great utility. Leon, who already number eixteen hundred muskets, " : ‘that should cm themselves. 1 hy % In 1849, there were over 18,000 sal and in | Teason more \ 2d. A retired list for old officers, with pay to make a B to the esi and intend en a = i es og a eon i Troon bette 1 anvertiaeed, . Mee i. 3 1 3 E and nets their proclamation says) to Mlect @ total ebange in | 16,400, and in 1847 only 10,000; in 1851 there ma ee : within a! ata they pool GC iadaabn et pro se efaine of Nicaragua for Unset ind oper 4 ph oe be ene | be 16,600, bat in lag there s me ag And ee gee except ie others 5 4 each wr what does wu rove the Art | 4 te it for Mrs. Forrest's going to partie torture bey piaaiion of Maher arecee. the freedom of the feople end their release from the | object of their attacks. “The Art Union fs» co- Union, like every other institution depending on | without him" MT Forrest's - Fi gael 3 deepotic domination of vena] men. No warlike demon | losea) power;”’ “the institutions of art in this city subscriptions, has ite ups and downs in point of ‘The question was repeated. A ——So far as I know, We Ue Soa ee te are tary, of the Novy t | stration bor an yet been made. Thear proveediogs in thei~ | have jeriahed- wader ite-blightiog inflaenoe;” “ity | incuurg?ang tannot calctiote: toe corteiee tie | une Honetion wae repeated, A So fer on T know. often—(the constant aceession of new secretaries preliminary efforts to effect an organization are Reptn | agers exhibit gross and scandalous partiality;’ | extent of ite receipts. As to the gallery, itis made | he virited my house. Mr. Bryant's, Mr. Phelan’s ba corruption and weakness. ) profound); secret as those of ap inquisition Munoz ac- art rtfully framed, and has been artfully of the best which offered; the three hundred | #20 Mr. Godwin’s, though I am not sure | ever saw . Create » Commander in Chief for the line, | tually sold bimeelf to the Granadiaas, and they have | amenced;” “ite pretences aro an artful dodge;” po beg gs painted by the committee, but | im there; I cannot at present recall eny ctbore whose residence shall be at Washington, guiere danithed him to Honduras. sub rosa, for the term ef two | “iwo bur of its present pictures are unworthy | by American artiste Hear that in mind, and re. | &—How often have you .een him in mixed com- i the army. years, but we may soon expect him again at the headof | of public exhibition,” it i# un “impudent assum pany at Mr. Bryant's’ A--I have seen him several — <pegeremmernstc rd an he HL J. 5 op | member besiges, that if these, the cream of the |-timesto meet afew frien t no ; be bas been Our Maracaibo Correspondence. Bho ae tion to dictate in matters which it knows nothing | prefered results of the industry of our artists, show | at my house several times tue L dont plgh ley Manacaino, November 30, 1851. Later from Sydney, New Sonth Water, | SOU” “it resorts to contemptible ruses;” “St | your taste, what would be said by an equally sensi- | would sometimes spend fe minutse and vometines one His he tte al co hae The mining re in’ this district are sili fa- | ‘"Amples on the interests of artiste,” and it has | tive critic to the two hundred rejeeted pictures, and | hours with me; T suppose all my family would be presen:; vig Horatio—State of vorable. The Polynesian of Sept. lst says “Tne | crow! its “almost nefarious traffic” by turniag your own, Mr. Anonymous, among the rest ! T have seen him at dinner once et Mr. Phelan's; my sm- On the 27th ult., I addressed you @ detailed account of intelligence cgutaiaed tn the papers is not of special the ‘*cold shoulder’ oo one artiet who intends Then as to those artists ‘‘semt empty away:” yraie is that I bave seen bim there on other oveasiour; the causes leading to the detention here of the American importance. The mining reports still continue | P¢Ve? #gain to place himself in the humiliating at- | whose fault was it but thei » anybody but | wes atone party there; Mr. Forrest was out cf town, r itude of seeking aid from it;” aud, last of all, and ¥ he judges? Th ing de- | bUt Mrs. Forrest and Mrs Voorhics were there; I bought brig Horatio, of New York, bound to Philadelphia, with | favorable, and gold arrives in considerable quanti- | © ° : ‘ themselves being the judges! e engraving Fonthill for him after bis return England; are loet on all cargoes from the United States. | a valuable cargo of coffee, hides, &c.. on board As I | ties at Sydney” where it sells for £3 7s. Gd. per | MOTH Cf all, aiming ite envenomed sbafte ut Mr. | partment is the Ast care ofthe Art-Union, under ite it weson the 6th of Februsry, but I cant rescliee Thomas W. Whitley itat: d its noblest feat . Iti 5 4 om WecmcticenStacarteh hence for China, some | ‘BeDinformed you, the brig was detained here by the | ounce. ‘Thereisno diminution of arrivals at the | ‘This ie a specimen of the way in whieh the colors | Somstitation,and one of its noblest features. It is & | whether it was 1845 or 1846; he was in Savannah at the ths since, . ’ ry . ‘ : drain on the treasury just as the purchase of pic- | time They went to England im 1844 or Jan. 1845. M. having repaired her machinery and | Governor of the provinee, until he recelved orders from for E4,100 Se tne above peices star orton are jaid on in these delineations of the Art Union, | tures is, and the expense of the (sallery is, and no | impression is that they returned in the earume of tho new lower masts; eho has verified my predis- | th general government at Caracas, as to what further | 901.2 irae pounds a8 specimens. The total re- | 2°42 ® syecimen also of their taste and temper. | moreso. The publishing department is an indie | following year. If they went im January, 1845, then 1 " “ " The firet inquiry which they ruggest is, from what bl ili he Art-Uni iti be think they returned in October, 1846. My impression is tion of her failure, made last June; there is a fault | steps wereto be taken. A few days ago thie anewer ar ue for the quarter ending June 30th was £79,088, yy pensable auxiliary to the Art-Union as it is to the a iy here; and what makes it the more serious is, | rived, and was te the following effect, vis :~That the | against the same period in 1800 of £52,050, show. om tatshy nat toes ol dno of the pabite mt tango, | SPinen, imlonary Goslety, or any other body | USAtiZ cn aes than tenes: Tien oe ae me or ill success has caused & derogatory reflec | executive power, having examined into the case, found | ing a decrease of £2,642. But there is a net in- | ,..1,<7usinly not fom any one n favecite, above wag | Welch communicates with thousands of subscribers | of the second ‘year they ivturned. —I cosume they upon American workmanship, rt that the captain had been guilty of an infringement of | crease of the aggregate revenue for the first half of | Oe; incorporated body in existence, te cue keowe, | the midst of an intelligent community. As for | fcurned im the fall cf 1815; now, wasit witha g sect aged by the . The tects I " the year nearly £15,000, or more than eight per | 240%" becanee it interiores with ne eight damning and exalting artists” this is the old | after their return you purchased Fonthill’ A.—{ can't from an American t in this place, of the laws in sounding the bar, but that the executivecon- | 0057s edge; because it inter: ith no rights, abridges | story, without a low of foundation except in | speak positively, but my impression is it wasini§i7, ia , and intimate with the Ist fanotionas , | tldered bis detention sufficient punishment for his offence, — ho er joyments, provok opposition, contributes | jealousy er misapprehension. Lastly, it is not a | January, 1849, my impression is that the work at Fonthill It appears that, six months since, the and, therefore, he was to be allowed to proceed to sea Later frem the Sandwich Islands, | largely Lf nse gree femme » ishes an greea” | fair inference, becaxse the Committee of Manage- | was if on Brazillian government determined upon and | without further molestation.” Various ciroumstances, | From the Sandwich islands we have nothing of | Die resort for all, and harmonizes with the spirit of mage a wennecleotggy omgeypnrsemgee yl rt Rh a tall net clas, Mr. Tod sgh hit lafluenee with Sone | Rowever, prevented the possibility of the voyage, thus | importance. The Vandalia nad arrived at Hono- | Certainly not from the lover of art, who, through | lit of ‘managers who were not there five years a0, Mr. \an Buren objected. The defendant was net om hor Sinza, the Ministerfor Foreign Affairs, induced | wantonly interrupted ty the suthorities here, teem being | lulu, with despatches to the American Consul. _ the last eight months, has freqyen‘ed the gallery of | and every one of the Committee is, docbiloss as tral fer extrmvagance, the Minister ef Marine to consent to have two uf | commenced again at their bidding ; and it is to be hoped (From the San Francieco Courier } the Art Union, dayand evening without charge, and | ready to retire as he is determined not to be driven F gay GocoRet the question inadmissible, d in the United, the other two to the United States government will teach this peeudo | ‘The W., Capt. Ward, brings us one week's | there enjoyed not only the sight and study of the | out of his place of duty by anonymous slanders; | ‘Mr. \au urea sald chet if howe pee 4 be built in Great Britain. This would, as Mr. prose eon seeanine Wem on the subject oye later Saltigens? ie the Sandwich Islands. Our | latest products of American art, but also the best | and as forthe books, the Art-Union adopts no other | show for what Purposes this Duuding wesceasmenveh be Tod intended it, have opened to our shij their meroantile versels, | PFeVious dates wore to Ootober 25th. The Polyne- | indications of ite steady growth and permanent ad- | yule than that which prevails in all well regulated | would not object to the evidence of its cet, ders and machinists o fair field and | ‘DIY 4nd maliciously detaining their mer vessels. | sian of Nov. lat, is now before us. vance. organizations. They are always open to those | Mr. 0'Conor was not willing to admit evidence of de- ey to gain the name of superiority | 1 will now proceed to give you the reasons why the Ho- | ‘The prisoners ongaged in the revolt, an account | _ Certainly not from the subscriber of past years, | who have the right to see them, and always shut | ‘red good intentions. before the world; but, lo! the Susque ih, | ratio could not again commence the voyage, after its | of which we week or two ago, have been | in ey or country, who has received in return for | syainst impertinent curiosity. PA gem hae oe pan asia '40 ebout the same stato whose arrival hore was anxiously Tooked. for abrup: interruption, consequent on the misconduct of | examined before Mr. Justice Harris, and were | bis trifling outlay of $5 more than an fe pa vr So much, and perhaps too much, in reply to these Y trecee painting which ot be Anema oat u it. | Was fresco painting. which could not be discontinued, bound over for trial at the January term of the | the engravings produced by the institution, besides 8 and anonymous attacks upon the commi!- , coins kd heoteort fm ver har aunintee Superior Court. wd | the satisfaction of co-operating in the work of pro- ommittee. A word new about charges tena fimuabed; he intended it ase residense tor world, at last, after a long passage, arrived— __NavaL.—The sloop of war Vandalia, Capt. | moting the fine arts in this country, and thus refin- | ag; em as such, and also as indivi: whi broken down. ted her, rumor exag- William H. Gardiner, arrived on the 25th ult., in | ing and an taste of his countrymen. besides being sacermendy put forth. are reiterate faults. What matter twenty-nine days from Acapuleo. Lieut. Robert | tainly not the young artist, whose early | and re-echood by Mr ‘Thomas W. Whitby inthe | Mr. Van Buren objected. E. urns Vandalia, with despatches | efforts, stamped with the authentic seal of genius, | Jast brochureabout the Art Union which has com The Court would not rule one way or the otber till be aoe Washington regia L. Severenee: U.S. | but without the prestige of acquired ctabon to | under our pg ' vor heard the argument. : ¥: Commissioner, resident. help bim to a haser, have been liberally re- | Buying more pictures from @ non-resident and | _ MT. ©'Conor nad no ebjection to ite being reled ov ~ evived by the Art Union, and himself therob; as he was sure no gentleman on the jury but woul Stream Navieation amone tue Istanps.—On Y, » Y non-American artist thon from any one American understand it. the departure of Captain Howard for Sen Fran- mgt the way of self-support and success ; nor | artist, obtaining some ot the beet prizes afver they Mr. Van Buren—Suppose you don’t sum up yet entil cisco, on the 23d of August, he anticipated return- ‘om the maturer artist, who availed himeelfof | had been drawn, by corresponding with distant | j: ie all over. (Laughier ing in sixty days With the first stoemer, in fuldt. | market offered by the institution, and sold | subscribers who knew not their value, and the pos | Mr. 0'Conner—And I think you will then find that I ment of his contract with the government. That | Di# honestly painted pictures to it for an honest | sibility ef the committee Glling their peckets by | willecm itup (Laughter) 4 hac now elapsed, and the steamer is not price ; nor, most of from the honorable ar! | plundering the institution of ite property in case the Witness continued—I have visited Fonthill frequently forthcoming. This delay may have been occa- who, struggling with adverse circumstances, an mblic cease to support it, and it ceases to act. | With Mr. Forrest haps I was there half a dosen times soned by tne. on i th cml te | air at puskase at Pars suidSseand | ene ie yen geomnen penis aimee for | ESTSheoai is eae ihe vipa . 5 of pictures whic! wo wi Mr. itby sl ns e ly le, . . the S. broke down; Seuabon a aoa tons tip tabtortenee Gane | never ask a private Purchaser to ontrage his taste by | as he intimates, in present denune! lon, as ft has pg LK yd Bt ta the vilage; 1 ss served inher some | whom it may concern, to-morrow Ite —an unusually long run to’San Francisco. But | Dying, has found in the Art Union a friend wil been in part praise of the Art Union. And be- | I never was there on « 4th of July, G— let her leaving the United | that, on her passage out from New York hence, ae was | although not yet arrived, the contract of Captain | {© #tand by him as long as he was willing to cause the Committee of Maragement has not seen | May, 40, and Ist Dec. 49, where did Mr. Forrest live? experience { have bad | hove down by « hurricane, and received considerable | Howard will not be vitiated for non-exccution until >Y,himself, and afford himtimely assistagce, without | iit to descend to the level of its anonymous slan- | A --ile hed no home; he stopped a part of the time with correct opinion as | damage both in the hull and } the 20th of November, by which day, if his | be pelled to become almoners, and divert | derers, to explain and deny, their silence is twisted | me, part at Fonthill, and part in Philadelphia, st hie damag. rains were all repaired | steamer arrive in ‘any port in this kingdom, the room Ee a eey Ae Cn inte 0 cumenee of guile cy py of crimi- = rade ‘aan tee hh oy sen? rp d 3 contract will beeome ratified, so far as the first he B pant ’ inters—poor in pock- & themselves at the bar of public opinion. Forreet’s allowance was stopped: bre." Perneet ti a ion is concerned; otherwise, it abrogates it- n artistic merit. if the author of the last communication, or my house to see Mr. Forrest’ wh J Becereary. Thinking, however, that it could be done | Ws tare ot on experiment. tried, ta asset, include, not the enemies of the | anybody else, wishes an explicit answer to there | Kaew that she came by af “the inclined engine” | }i° pont ‘was all ready awaiting him in Maracaibe, and | Which Cap:ain |loward is engaged; but if, through te friends; hey are counted by | gross and calumnious charges against the com- | gt the interview between th. Forrest was stop- h acting upon the sha ts, | tngt he would meet with no de here, the captain | any untoward event he does not succeed, we have Seinen eth mee are in — prone Mert ad on a» A lg fing with Mrs, Voorhies in Great Jones attest; I may ; ‘ _ rue, mm to her to come; I invited Mr. Forrest to er ve TPE ck Gonsints tha wee Suh eanes ovaunet path om Oe to | Rave capital fey the undertaking, thet'they stand | 44 they have no interest in impeding the one or | first and last, from beginning to end” The Com: | ready to enter into it at once, upon a similar con- dy | de: peneing the other. mittee of Management of the Art Union have not that the Lake of Maracaibo is fresh | tract w which it could hardly are driven, then, to that class ef persone, al- | thought proper to notice them, because they carry and in that fresh water there are immense yuanti- So it appears = wate, 5 ‘ o be a pyrene | ports evn Ky this - ae on their face. But it is no ties of « peculiar kind of worm, which, in the course of a ‘ } te, where personal interests have in some | rial which these gentlemen want; that is evident settled that we shall have m navigation among | few weeks, will eat through the bottom of any vessel ‘arrangement now that ie not coppered, but more especially vessels planked | the islands, even should t © collision with the Art |'nion, the | enough. ‘Thi copper Were off, and » HO, tb time you ‘visited Mrs. Vorrest house, 7" ull Vebruary. 1860, did not Mr. Forrest sleep at mom which pervades their articles | your ‘house almost every night? AMO we; “T He wnership in her; that she was note of whose complaints is the echo of | is the wi able symptoms of private and | remember bim being in Philadelphia for’ ® con- inne carried the Brazil flag which she had fiy- | {Pine wood. Immediately eee eae ees a , real or fancied, and who, as | personal pique, not of a sincere desire for truth siderable time; Mr. Forrest made his’ wife an ing when she was eunk, not blown up, by the Cor | on her bottom,so apprehensive were they that she micht, Late from Oregon. with the public in Praising the | In conclusion, 2 word or two to the public, the | which wae arranged in May or June, 49 J t. ? even in a few days, bave received damage from the . inj Tb motive for trying to persuade the | fast friends of the Art Union. The institution ie | mired, and by his order I paid, $1,500 ‘be steamer New York lies here, disabled in her | worme, that they had « thorough eurvey held over her From Oregon we have encourag’ i news. he | public to agree it. A careful | worthy of your favor and of the popularity it hag | Test; he promierd it a the interview ull, from weakness. She was sold the other day, | by native ehip-carpenters and reepectable shipmasters, | difficulty between the whites and Coquille indians | examinaticn of the charges and attacks against the alweye bad. It presents this year unusual attrac- gine beneath wll ed ro Kg Ro = ae ‘or & trifling sum. who pronounced her perfectly sound, and then | has been brought toa close. A gang of horse institution, especially those recently forth, re- | tions to ite subscribers, and should have the aid of it ‘Santen near where she was accustomed to live, it was thieves hae discovered near Shasta plaine, ao to be the secret of their motive and their every lover o: and effectually broken up. and every friend to the interests The chief topic of Americans here is the ap- clase of men never to be con- vroaching trial of a young American for killing rome three story brick house that rente for $350; Now and then there may be a slashing | of American Mrs. Forrest it was impossible for her to paragraph or two from some enterprising writer, founded with thes ; 1 r P le and irritating few, who, | sup; house on $500 Mr. Forrest eald if she ae Lr 3 epmligaeh serired baritiny 94 [From the San Francisco Picayune, Dec 1 who engages in acrusade against this and all kin- | like many people in other departments of life, show | could could go board. and I advertised for board ; he Golden Gate, on his way to Califor He The P. M. S.'S. Company's steamship Columbia | dred bodies, out of pure love for opposition and de- | their want of wisdom by quarreling with thelr best | em:wers eived. but no price named, and Mr. Forrest ook up his at the Hotel Pharonh, at} " arrived from Mstorin yesterday a having pe nap ns = > ~~ stay flr aad and aoe. os = py a Ly wna pal om 0 " tion, | accomplished the e in 70 hours ihe brings | slander comes from the quarter just indicated. he jabors of the committee of management for oo ) in my bands & young Italian woman, | Carlos, ready for sea, to the day of her condemnation, | accomplished the passag rent | A few words of explunation'will show how it | tha prevent yearare just about closing, they arenew | P47 Mr. Ingham. with whom she boarded (Letter peo remarkable for her beauty, but to whom it is | fifty-five days clapred. Consequently, had there been no pT aes ers, a portion of whom sre from Port Ortor sito matter of course for young men who frequent | ther reason than her condition, she could not have gone . Messrs. Newell & Co. supplied us with the RE RAE Bastes We, 28 ) happens that the Art Union sometimes makes ene- | in advance to artiste, and the univerzal distraction Y i iniver Q —Ie this the letter you wrote announcing your rea- This ti to wea, as the authorities desired i 8. The news is of scarcely more than ordinary | mies and innocently provokes attack of the public inter fn the direction of Kossuth | ginces t . " my A jib toon asthe answer wan trond {rom Caracoas the ~ a : it wengaged in the baainess of promoting the | and Hungary, has interfered with the reseipts 0 ' ‘A—Vety likely; T know it ie my letter, Q.mtN6 whose all fighti in point of fact, town | Sumerian Consul her Sor seed, and thie ender | , Lhe Columbia left San Francitoo Nov. 20th. | fine arts, and necessarily is constantly purchasing | the month, and the old subsoribers need to be re- @id_you pay the November quarter! AT paid til ally The gentleman was mnch exasperated at | having been piven she hae Pm IC, ‘another eur. | Arrived off mouth of Columbia river 23d, at even- | pictures bang the committee of management, minded of the fact that they have only afew days | November, 1860; I never paid it after; m: ie be attentions paid his wife by our y: me vey by the same shi and masters beld ever ing ey swell on the bar, and no pilot out; lay | who are for this purpose the agents of the subseri- now in which to subscribe. The attac ¢ have oe a nee 1086, I be pe your ue. Soner’r) nan, by name Frederick Iteose, ofa good and old | her,cnd her bottom: wi from copper, | off and on till Wednesday morning, when the gale | bers at large responsible to them and to no body | been commenting upon may, perhaps, he fan call’ for it? AI think he called, soary oo T mily in Fumaespie, ane atan unguarded m fourd {o be completely homeycommbed Large pieces can be | moderated; entered North Channe! found at Asto- | elsein the world. 2 served this purpose in a great degree. If nton bis part, by the hand, and, no doubt, under the copper | ria brig Ann i. Maine, bound to Portland; brigan- The committee exercises ite taste, judgment and one good ‘teoule order as it waa written; he . dealt him rodigious | taken o P the same has bai " h wrote next day, sayin ppened; as thie worm, when once ¢ and bark Louisiana, r for sea. | discretion in the choice of the works of art presented the committee of management should roturn due ; low, which knocked him senseless, onese 7" it gets into a ship's wetcom, Raver stops antl it goes ‘all 5 peo of 27th: ran inte Pore fri ye them: some of them it pared fe ages, seme ot them thanks to the authors. cargo t isceee | m of 28th ; found all well ; t off fifteen declines. In domg 80 it is guided by rules ee Sead Teretearion cont tan RGR omsters, among whom were Mr. Harrison and | principles, which have stood the test of experience, Poltticnl Intelligence. vicinity of the pumps; but nad it not been for the exces. Mr Lawron, of the Coast Survey. Frem the former | and have met the approval of the institution. It | 4 call bes been jenued for a Union Btate Convention in tively calm harbor and continusl pumping that has bem | we learn that the troops under command of Colonel acts in this matter according to its best judgment | Alabama. In the call, the convention is termed » kept up, the Horatio would have sunk at her | Casey, have had an engagement with the Coquille and information, and gives account of its doings to | ,2cathere Rights Usion State Convention,” and it ie anchors two weeks ago, so honeycombed are Indians, in which eeveral of the latter were ite constituenta, and it is of meddiesome in- | set forth that the members of the constitutional Union of her om. Bhe has been contemmed es and the rest reed. It will be remembered that | terference on part of any body, he be, | Party deem it advisable to cali a convention of those upeeaworthy, her cargo landed and stored for these Indlanradtacked the party of Me. ‘T'Vaaly, | to undertake to tall the thee of Manage | coe ore Wases, Se anise ie te compremise este of jon, | BLSSabisase feo ccevent ef whom i ee tome | sad. me All bat two, and the troops were seni | ment to account, beeause it #0 happens that the Morey enten, aat Wee on all / . | Thus you will pereelve that the voyage bea boos 07 Gen. to chastise them, Col. Cassy | bought this pictare and doclined To sa te eke on the ‘conteines fa. tae vara mii! | irae Ramin estua co sert | hen Sig caren Pat | Sopp a TPN Sls | Seah eee ey r on rived to the oustry, Suytbing 10 0 wits ber, more tray hep of a | Weire and neta, number of canoes, whieh | some one artist, and half a dozen of sion wip cation take bappy afnir. Tne | mulatto pilet at tam Carlon. if thie Je not severely | will doubtless ee oe a them. | friends, and in re: f couple of bandred, the | im ‘randidetee for the eneyiog Presilential 000 bas been rained by eubsoription, by | t#ken vp by the American gcrernment, apd full repe- 4 Just before tbe departure of the Cole b number of offences is proportionably im | serten, A