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The Demirican Movement. Mursoro.itan Horst, Nov. 4, 1852. TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. Tbave noticed, in your paper of this date, an ar- idle copied from the Turks Islands Gazette, of Avgust 25, in which it ir asserted that an assosia- tien has been formed, of which I and my son are Parteors, for the purpow of fitting out a pewerful eupedition from the United States “for the pur- pose of invading Cuna;” that we “ project the Ottablishment of a foothold in St. Domingo, where the expedition might assomble, and thence concert thelr attacks more conveniently upon Cuba” The Gazette proeceds to intimate that the effect Of this contempiated movement will be, that Spain WH “be compelled to take possession of St Domingo,” which rhe would have every right to do, as she has never relinquished, by any formal act her domizion over tno eastera portion of the ” It ia with reluctance «bat I feel myself called upon at this time to sxy one word which may seem to ast censure on Mr Webs er; but It is due to my- Bell, te tho history of the past, and to the people of the United States, that the truth be told, and the esponsibility placeo were it should properly rest. Whea Mr. Ulayrou came into the State Depart- mont, I placed in bis bauds some important papers Bn relation to 5c D- mingo, and called his attentioa to others on file 1 the State Department. He Goomod it expedient to send a special agent to as- Cortaim the condiion of the Dominican republic, the result of who © wves:igation induced Mr. Clay- ton te urge upon the Committee of Forcign Relations of the Senate the recogut ion of the independence ef the Dominican 1 public, and a proposition from Bhat committes, intexaed to accomplish it, was sub” mitted to the Senate, aud would have been unani- mously adopted by that body, had it not been ope posed by Mr Webster The death of General Taylor, and the appoint- mont of Mr. Wetster to the State Department, which ovsourred imwewiately thereafter, defeated the movement. Believing that Mr. Webster was induced to oppose the recognition of the indepen- Gonce of the Dominican republic, by representations made to him by cortain merchants in this city aad in Boston, who had i«rge contracts with Soulouque for Ships, aims, and miiary supplies I called upon Pao Presidens, anc urz-d hin to examine the papers @a filo in the State Department, proving beyond Question that coisa n p1soo8 mn the United States Wire oO Operaveg #i.n the British and French go- Verpmenta to crou'e 9 1egro empire in the West fis: Gies—that Soulougue bet ergauized his government With the expects: a iat he would be aided by England anc ! weve to eooqucr the Dominisans, that be woud ulamece ox Cuba und the orber West Incr telavos 1 protested eainst his permitting Mr Weboier to sacrifice the Dominicana, y withbolaing the secogattion of their indepen- Gowge—Aid aiuimg Seuiougve to conquer the whites, by forpisbing . 2. sd aunitions of war for tine ‘nat he aw him, > prom Latterwar! be poeGlt Of hie inqniries wag lis part vo recognize both the Hayticn ad Jogivwan governments. I told im that 1 ier ov never would consent to reoog- nine the Haytien yovrrnwen', and gave him ce that 1 would obiaw » contract from the Domi government for colovizanon as the best means of Biding the Dominioxns wo defend themselves against Bouvlovque, ard of aeteating the purpose of Hagland god France, of butluing ops black empire in the Woast Inoies. Ths brvugas up the question of how far it would be his duty to interfere to pre- @ willingnes t the proposd colonization, and he ad mitted, that if we proceeded under contract | with the Dominican government, he could | wot legally ivterfere wo prevent it.’ Under these ciroumstunces se 01 the State Depart Beat took sides with th or, and acted fn concert with Big! propositions Sor 8 colonization ou rect were sent to a confiden ! person in St. I o Our letters were iater- copied by the age the Freack goverament, Bud poblished in Paris, aud some of the abolition of the Unied Sia es, with comments in Weuded to meke an impression that they had been Feceivea apd pubusbed by tae Dominican govern- moet. : Subsequent information satisfied me that our let- | ters be ootained, and that i E i ie l z i i i & Fe ; i f | is 5 i : E | EH! iH i ; af § FER 7 & ; i t I i ae i they may be concerned before the tidunslsof the other party; and such agents sball have free access to be pre- sent at the proceedings in such cases. and at the taki of all examinations and evidence which may be exhibited in the said trials, It shall be lawfal for all and siogular the subjects of hie Catholic Majesty. and the citizens, people, sud ia habitants of the United States to salt their chips, with ali manner of liberty and recurity. no dé tinction being made who are the proprietors of the merchandise laden from any port to the places of thow who now are, cr hereafter shall be atenmiry with his Catholic Majesty and the United Stat: ful for the subjects and 11 the ships and merchandise with the same liberty and ecurity from the places. ports and havens of thore who are enemies of both or either party, without any opposition or distucbsmes whateoever, not only directly from the places of the enemy afore mentioned to neutral ploces. vut alto from one place be- lopging to an enemy to another place belanging to am enemy, whether they be under the jurisdiction of the same prince or under several. And ‘it is hereby stipu- lated thut free ships shall aleo give rreedom to goods, and thateverything shall be deemrd free and exeupt which shall be Tound on board the ships belonging to the su jects of either of the oontracting parties, although the tothe enemies of either contraband goods being alway excepted, It is also agreed that the samo liberty be ex- tended to persona who are on board a free ship. 89, al- though they be enemits to either party, they shall not be made prisoners, or taken out of that treo ship, unless they are soldiers, and in actual service of the enemies, struction and bearing of Article 7. indirectly, relates to the matter in quostion. It fences, of any character whatever, is coucerne racter be based ments! act, whose nature and foundation we have rights of sovereignty, we can only discover a g' tizens or subjects of the country. So certain is the truth of what we advance, that Mr. Webster, (by no means slow in puttin pretensions that + bave a sbadow of s tion,) bas clearly seme. His words, taken from an official cor- Tespondence on another event of recent oc. cunence in our island, admit that ‘ Article 7 eannot be understood as confe enjoy, for it is pot customary with nations to con- too, when carefully perused, we recommend to all sophists, and to which we may porhaps again have occasion to refer plicit renunciation of general and natural privileges which would be ne:es:ary to show that such privi- leges had been waived Besides, the tenor of the ar- bas a distinct object in view, and one upon which it is entirely based, as any one at all versed in the diplomatis history of ths epoch when the treaty was concluded must resoll | The new doctrine of maritime right laid down by gland kept ali the other cabinets in alarm. The ‘ai question for commerce: whether or not the flag covers the person and the goods over which it floats, with the auxiliary question of the right of fearch, were matter of serious controversy bstween the maritime powers, aud was the subject of serious dispute, which finally ended in the war of I be- tween England and the United States. Amid such every occasion which presented itself to set forth their doctrines even though it were entirely uncalled for; and such is the spirit which dictated Article their publicat ou wax te ded to aid the purpose of England and France in placing the whole of the | ‘Wort Incis i-lecd- under the dominion of the | Diack rece uo that our government was either Willing dupes, or intentionally aiding that polic: I tock messures to ascoriain what is the real ray m of things in 8t. Domingo, and | gm more thin ever satistied that uoless the | people or government of the United States Bee prompt end cflicient measures to counteract Britian and French policy, the whites on the @xstern portion of the island wilt be compelled to | acknowledge Soulouque’s government, and that this | ‘Will be followed up by other measures alike disgrace- ud dangerous tous I buve thus stateia few Which | bope wi] arrest the attention of the people of the United Sates; aud I state t mw this movnrer, because I am ap forte will be made oy tbe emissaries of the | hard Frencb govervments, and their allies | and asrociates in the United States, to so use the Tempant of power existing ia the present adminis tration, we to commit the United States in favor of | Buloque’s government, by some act which will pre- jude the Domivicans lt is propor to add that ‘Been, the present Presiient of Douinisa was educ ted in Paris. he i+ exerting his influence in | favor of colon ‘reoce, and that this must end in the subjugation of the whole island to the blacks It is proper that [| should say further, that my pr job for a colop'zation compas, was made in good faith; that I have nos at any time par- ticipated in or eympa'ized with the movements against Cuba. My purpose was to protect the white race, on the easteru part of St. Domingo, from the Sitempt to tubjugate them by the blacks, under Buluque | One word ‘o the people of the South—Will you | fn the Dominican republic to be conquered b; ovlougue? Will you permit the Wes) India islands | ¢ subje:t to the black race? The time has » you must decide this quescion | Héspeetfully, DUFF GREEN. | Cor Hetations with Cuba. | } THR SPANISH GOVERNMENT—THE TREATY WII SPAIN. | m the Dierio ce la Marina, Oct. 25.) myrete exactoess at whieh we aim in all tices, @8 @ pecessary condition of the re- ob *« owe to ourselves, and as a part of the exce #bich we pretend to inspire, induces U8 bo revert to ® sentence in our first article in yes- treey'e paper, and explain what may, perhaps, lead te a misepprebension When we stated that the Dreseent City rewained in our port, on her retarn from New Orleans without boldirg any commnni- ion whetever, we must be unders'ood as speak- in referet to the facility of disembarking or Omitting passengers anc correspondence, or enjoy- foe the slightest commercial franchise. Of course, the communications which could be had, through the condescension of the authorities and the agency of the Cap’ain of the Port, must not be inclu in what wo raid | ‘This being arderstood, we ratify all that we wrote in regard to this matter yesterday, as being a faith- | ful reiation of all that occurred We aze not ignorant of the fact that Par ry an- | founded preteneio: me orators of the United Htates, urged with a view to limit the indisputable Power which we maintained belonged to Spain by virtwe of the law of nations, are founded on the treaty cencluved between the two nations on the 17th day of Oovober, 1795 We concede that there may be cares in whieh @ nation, or ite -overnmont dud representatl 'y implicitly renounce a part of the privileges conferred upow it by international dew; but the ust be no doubt whate oo rly an expressly stated, and not implied merely If, then, there exist in the treaty of 1705 a clause of such a Character, we would have to abide by it, though it | could pot bet be » matter of wender for all persons. Deering in mind the relative position of Spain and | the United States, that our nation should have al- our a6 Jowed berseli to be dictated to by that new-born republic, which to our favors and of France | owed ite very existence Far diferent from this, however, does the case | Mand; end we projose now to prove, taking the | paid Go of ne idefowe as & basis, and con- ere, Le ay and ee te orok it in ne vestion t it of sovereignty, hen » ond Golsinten of Spain, within og 3 | territory; and, secondly, that the said terety never bad acd never could have reference to the wltsomarine ovinees of the monarchy. The Cemonstration of either of these pointe ix in itself Gvcisive, and the weight which both united exer- cue im the matter ro settles the question as to exclude for ever ail captious reasoning or pete caviiorg Te prooged with method, we shall begin by wee sng of the construction to be giren to the forms of ube treaty above referred to, granting for e+ eo ent, for the sake of argament, that it em . ‘elend. end that its provisions are to be Cove tt ie never efu! task to us recourse to the rubterfage of svoiding the = owe bom «. nor of channing <* © the contrary, never uvdertar ng the ® a tally eon | XII | Value: 15. and which breathes throughout the whole of it, especially, however, in the last sentence. Fromit we can readily perceive how far the negotiators were from bestowing any atteotion upon a matter 80 entirely unconnected with the matter which they had in view, | as that which is at present the text of our commen- | taries; sentences, too, which, when isolated from the rest of their text, may lend themselves to a forced interpretation, are clearly of no weight whatever. ‘The tenor and signification of an international agree- ment cannot be fairly judged or reasonably interprat- ed, save with due regard to its general spirit, na- ture, objects and conditions; for isis a maxim of taw, founded on natural reasonand justice, Incivili est, nisi totd lege perspestd. wnd wiqua particula ejus proposita, judicare «t responden. If, then, the treaty of 1795 18 the subject to be examined into and enalyzed by us, and if we must take it as a whole, in order properly to understand it we must of necessity refer to Vattel, and see what is his definition and explanation of treaties, and their ob jects and operation, as understood by the writers of ‘the whole ladiuge. or any part thereof, should appertaim | atlantic o | | Let us now bestow our attention upen the gon- | success to tho colonists ; t will bo at | even in our religion itself, once noticed, that nothing in it, either directly or | ‘‘ the great bond of human li' | nearly all offsets ofour own: no two ovides for cases in which the trial of crimes or of- | the world have so mapy points of union, are 80 0a; | of acting together for their own common gi Our case, however, is of an entirely different cha- | the good of the human race. No action, of any kind or description, can | upon the acts or words of Mr. Smith, whem | bind ’ committed or spoken without the Spanieh territory, civilization of our volatile nei; His expulsion from the territory is a purely govern- | kind to blend ont | and steady energy of clearly and irrefutably demonstrated in a former , nathan, indeed, differs from us in manners. article. Besides, it is to be remarked, that farfrom | Mr. Dizraeit wants, as we hope he will, an there being here any renunciation of the inalienable | evlerged staff of income-tax collectors, America | could supply us with any number, who would ask us or favor, conceding toa foreign country, to acertain | Without a blush how many dollars we were worth ; extent, and in certain specitied oxses, ‘the same pri- | nor will our genuino Yankee fail to instruct youin vilege, and nothing wore, that ia enjoyed by the ci- | the great superiority of every ‘* States’ man” to waficient power to the Btate is null, nd pot il obigetory "no condactar of the sation thang os are capac ofdnstroying the State, for tho slety esare ot the empire tel ae The nation our port regulations, tariffs, and custom house duties, submits to the sovereignty of Spain, exercised within her exclusive jurisdiction—her own house. it were y traveller who complies with our bdicates that ridiculous interpretation of the treaty of 95, whereby his men wouli be ofthe country. And lastly, when we see Mr. Web- ater openly recognise that foreigvers cannot by virtue of the treaty, claim privileges greater than those enjoyed by the natives, the debate appears forever at rest. All this , 6o natural, yet so irrefutable is nevertheless based on the erroneous principle that the treaty in question comprises in its provision the island of Cuba. What, then, will the conclusion be, when it shall have been proved that it cannot havo, and bas not, reference to our island? Alllance between ent and the United States! London Sun, Oot [From the t 20.) Alliriends of civil and religious liberty, of a good overnment, and an active commerce, must desire ¢ hearties union between England and her trans- g-. One in origin, in language, in literature, in our common law, and substantially, aleo, in our common squiy for municipal an constitutional government , even of the past, save the great quarrol in which half of Engiand’s best and greatest men wished one, we may truly say, ace to Lord Bacon *—for their soots are ble Tn capacity for sslf- vernment the French are obviously a century be- ind us both, and whatever tho refinement and shbors, it is not of a more practical the Engliah character. Jo- If with | every Englishman; while the Frenchman will in- z upon foreigners | lish a privilege which the natives of tho couatry do not | Wo can sympathize with hi dulge apy amount of vanity without lowering you. forth | Jonathan is both rude and proud--the Frenchman unda- | only vain, but polite withal. Jonathan affronte and plainly confessed the | us twenty times, and seals our lips haughty silence, or, at best, opens them in curt replies, where Monsieur would only amuse us; and yet we like Jonathan best. There is true Eng- Blood in him, after all f we can trust him Ecos e 18 m more easily. | not prouder at heart than Germans and Irenchmoa cede similar privileges,” which words, we repoat, | are so clear as to preclude all commeatary—words, | foreigner enough to treat us with a little of our think half their English visitera; but he is just own eelf-importance. The chief difference is, that he, not being yet out of his national teens, though overtopping in stature 80 many of the older nations, With reference to Article 15, we would begia feels obliged to tell us that he is the man he is, by remarking, that it also fails to show that ex- | while we as his parent can take our manhood for ranted. We love him heartily, notwithstanding Sia little things; and being got now far too big for the cane, we must wait patiently for his mature ticle, which applies to cases of a general character, | age to cure him of all his nonsense. There is, however, one vice—an inherited one, alas !—which in many ways does more to destroy Ul of sontiment betweon England and America than ali other minor faults or follies on either side. Slavery is the malady, the cherished ma- lady. which can never be otherwise than loathzome to Noglish feeling. From the times of Wilberforce and Clarkson, with their noble band of eo: all but a few interested men have imbibed an ineradicsble hatred of slavery Ever since the ques- tion has been mooted in English courts of justice,the bench and an applaudiog nation have argued that | @ man could not set his foot on the British shores, circumstances the governments took advantage of and remain a slave. We glory in Britieh soil, as pos- sessing a nobler treasure than California, or than any portion of the United States—every foot of it can turn a slave intoa man. Nor is this mere natioaal vanity. The great body of the people fought a long and bard battle with a powertul and wealthy in- terest, mighty in Parliament by Loh barge ing and bribery, and rather than retain a slave in the least island of our dominions, it added | £20,000.0C0 to its already enormous debt. Amaeri- uns must allow that we have shown, by the best | of all teste, self-sacrifice, an inextingu'shable ha- tred of slavery. The United States, however, cling to It, and that, too, under many damna- tory circumstaness. It flies in the face of their cele- brated deed of Independence, which declares that 8)] men are born free and equal It conviste their at- tachment to that deed of the grosvest hypocrisy and selfishne Slavery is attended in the Southern States with its worst and most revolting crueitios and evils. We need not recount the horrors of the whip, the chain, and all kinds of bodily punish- ment; of the unbridled licentiousness of masiers, and their eel. ing their own offspring, porhaps most readily. Of the crus! separations of husbands, wives, and families. Of the impossibility of redress international law The following extract is from | when the evidence of the colored man is rejected. Vattel's “Law of N book second ; cotius divides treaties Into t vo general classes, tions,” parugraph 169, chaptor G The first, thore which turn merety on things to which we were | States already bound by the Jaw of nature, and the second, of those by which’ we engage something more. The first serves 10 seoure @ perfect right to things to which we hud oply an imperfect right. so that from thence forward we migtit require what before we nad only a foundation to desire, as an office of husanity Such treaties became yery necessary among the ancient nations, who, as we heve already obrerved, did not 1 to perform any thing for the nations that were not in the number of their allies. They are even of use among the most polite people, in order the better to secure the auc cors that may be expec'ed to determine the measure and degree of thee succors, and to know on what we have to depend to regulate what cannot in general be deter. mined by the law of nature, and to prevent tae difficul- tirs and various interpretations of that law. as the power of assistance in any nation is not tnex- hauetible. it is prudent to secure ourselves a proper right to succor. that cannot be granted to all the world ‘Of this first clas are all the simple treaties of peace and tiendehip. when the engegements contracted in | them add nothing to what men owe each other as bre | thren, and as members of the humen society; as those that permit commerce. pastage &c This doctrine of the father of the science, being admitted, without distinction and without reserva- tion, we shall enter into a tew explanations, which we shall endeavor to render as brief as possible, consistent with the nature of the subject which we are discussing. Acccrding to the authors, (see Vattel, book i. cbap. viii ) and consistently with the custom of civilized nations, the faculty of carrying on com- merce, which flows from the law of nature, (or rather from sociability and its duties) is nothing more, with respect to international law, than what is called an imperfect right. That is to say, that even though a nation possess in the abztract the right to sell and buy, and the right to traffic and trade, it nevertheless requires for the exercise of that right the consent of a forsign country, whenever it seeks to exercise it beyond ita own limits. This consent may be denied wi:hout apy violation or breach To remody this evil, na- tions have established the praatice of binding them- selves by treaties, in every respect similar to that concluded between the United States and Spuin, in 1795, and which latter treaty differs in no respect from those usual in such cases, and whose effect is to convert the imperfect right or faculty of coin merce and transit into a perfeet right. Before the treaty, Spain could, by a mere exercise of volition, shut out all Anglo-Americans, without distinction, either travelling for commercial or other purpores, from her ports and territery; and though the exer- cise of that right by her, might, perhaps, by some, be termed iniquitous she would be answerable to no one but herself Ja consequence, and by virtue of the treaties con- cluded, the vessels and citizens of the neighboring country porsess, as a general rale, a legitimate fa culty of trading with us as far as the limits of natu ral rights extend, and no sweeping prohibition coud \y refuse this. But this power is, at ite ver; rth, limited by the inalienable rights and_pri- vileges of otk tl regulations which may be made, or disposition tha’ may be taken to establish or suspend it Such, then, and no more than this, is the groand | which the treaty of 1795 covers; and such, neither more nor less, is that treaty, reduced to its real The hermeneutie art, or the art of interpret- ing Socumant of @ similar character, would afford pretend that by virtue of this fact the citizens of the nited States are superier to our laws, would be as senseless as to imagine that eur sovereign the Queen, or her powerful ancestors, had voluntarily renounced rights exclusively their own; and that the Spanish pation bad fully constituted itself a serf of the neigh- boring republic are, we couldinform him that even this improbable contingency is provided against Once more, and for the last time, wo shall quote Vattel, book I]. chapter XII, see 160:— Thengh the simple ininry vr come Mentenmtnge tn a ink themselves bound | In short, | Unite | | | eloquence wae jeft, but not like his. which is paramount toall the | think there faults beauties,—her All these tales of horrors, though but too true, make up but one-half the mischief. What we most deeply deplore, is its working in the free themselves. Idolizing, as they do, the Union, there seems to be no moral price which they will hot pay to preserve it. At one tims a fugitive slave bad some chance if he ones crossed into the free States. Benevolence could then aid him till he reached British soil. But that mos: dis- raceful of modern enactments, the fugitive slave re dispelled the last glimmer of universal free- dom from the free States. Free States, indeed, exist no longer. Sla olding and slave-catchiag States is now the only difference. Over some twerty degrecs of latitude, and more than as many of longitude, a man is a thing, a ttel, a saleable commodity. The whole States is the lund of the slave quiresthe freeman there to aid in returning to his aie re the man (slave we should say) who pants jor freedom ; it fines and imprisons the freeman who aide bis escape; it bribes the Jadge before whom he is taken with a double fee if he gives bim up to his infuriated pursuers, and it places the question of the fact of his freedom in the hands of that bribed Judge, and not in those ofa jury. All Christendom feels this law to be an affront on its moral sentiments and its common civilization. It must be abolished. Nothing so horrible ox- iets even in Austria or Tuscany; and justly did M. Hulsemann, when Mr. Webster lectured Austria on despotism, lecture that low prin- cipled politician on the vile slavery of Amorica. Yet, we are sorry to say, this iniquitous law found innumerable defendera in the froc, or as we must now call them, the slave-catcbing Btates. Reve- rend doctors of divinity, and professors of moral philosophy in dag ed pleaded for obeying a law to do iniquity. he clergy of every denomi- nation were excusing it from the pulpit; or, at least, advocating obedience to it while it was law, though making no effort, at elections or othar- wire, to get it repealed; and after a few violont ef- forts of fugitives to resist at first, the passive North begon to slumber in the political embraces of the South. England witnessed the spectacle with set- tled but balf hopeless diegust. When an English- man went into America be found the negro an object of aversion ; of the aversion which the oppreasor feels for the victim Le wrongs and depresses, but whose will he never can quite subdue. Searcely anything gave tigns of amendment. The noble, in- digeant voice of Channing was silent in the grave; Statesmen and clergymen, more sickening in their apologies for Have laws than the etateemen themselves, seemed banded together. At latt a woman—with a little ot itis ® matter for which | book—s book of tales—* of fiction founded on fact” —#uddenly appeared on the scene. Harriet Beecher Btowe, with ber** Unele Tom's Cabin,” has com- pletely ewakened the State, and completely shamed the senatore and the parect With a kind of spa- cial inepiration by the geviue of liberty, of religion, and of romance at once, the bse pictured the thin, to every man and woman who hada heart to fee! Foulte some may find in her little book—others will gift was to write with a charm for all, with nothing that could much displeare an The tats Bee her appeal lay in the verizimilitude of her descriptions At first a whisper was beard of exaggeration—it died away. Every reader felt, that—given human nature, and the slave Jaws of America—and the worst she has described is nature itself. It ie ae vain to deny the truth of Shakepeare’s portraits as of Harriet Beecher While novels stand on English book- and when slavery, as a fact, shal! have lon; pasted away, this little faithful miniature of the grew abomination will still be read. It is not our purports, however, to write an eulogium of » book over whieh most of our readers have es moet heartily, though they certainly dropped tears also. It is rather our object to shake hands with the Amo ricans over it. With them it is as popular as with us Their cordial welcome of it shows that they and we are in heart one. There was more soundness at the core than was supposed—more disposition to weloome a hook which rebuked the slave-caichers o# well as the 0 -holdera, but epoke kiedly of all, end w of thy hi | Oy) Ae nov Muaaneos (0 Lemane it LavMLA, the once ts aot | pegro, thaa we hed eupposed. “ Uncle Tom” wilt | $1,000 in the souvenirs nations of and in Law re- | men who visit them by our ocean stoat Bike been in dose sane tole value the book for this. We think, moreover, that it 3 Bene (ai ie} Excvina Hannecx, hace poker arlene lta, object fassnine soot to them do San Franchice, |" Mosterideo, ia distros, was, » too pure for imi Abolition societies olng inte Provi we _ by de sro » though just 3 bu trom Natibutie Ovswn, 173 bik eg detitantane Feeate At Fernando Noronha Aug 4, wate croatia Aug 4, By fetter, Seatiowes, Boltes, heart, and the judgment too. It seems ITM: 2S Pe vania bs Us, NB, i honor to vanes it—almost s di to in tote 1'do, onal 1536 ee thatho ook ah iad eresce ome fess ineonsibility. Never have slaveholders be! | rg ar ping dg sy py 1 the w usta Jett the grow never. will t) hear the “ truth so spoken in | 277, +0 do, bo, 27; 100 Reading Railroad, sbwn eae areas tue Aus anh of the goagem love,” as it A © “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” Moat | tween’ Boards.—$2,000 Cit} iroad 6s, “91, 1 li but i¢ broke up and disetsod enter, inary heartily do wo wish, therefore, success to the | rag eee Me Phila Dolemoyn, Dela, of end trom Fade autboress in her noble attempt. Women have been ‘ered, 27; 100 do, 05. 2734; 60 Pennaylvania Rail- rete mkeicee . hief actors i lution ; he be 3s DU ¢ leard Bow, 1334 ard. $8 0 pole: as prot the forervdas th one of ‘the moc: desivablo the “Ambo Railroad bs, 76, 100 i $5088 Pal adel | 0 Nana giles world bas yet to witness. he 45 Bt: 4,000 ‘do. ‘b5wa,'8l; | attivara). Landis, from N York (Oob America has (apart from the plague-spot of sla- 40, B74 6.00) Sehuy till Ba a rig soar ol Bad pg pO very) a noble future. Already! perhaps the A eer Re a ee Bes nye , ? most energetic nation.upon earth; she will soon a Sohupikill Nasieation Prefer qos ae Toors, from NOrleans for Liverpool, Oot 2, the most populous. With a country that commands | 25, 2735; i do, bown, 2754; 20 doin lots, b5, Am #hip, oteering SE. with las sieunl, ewsttaw thd both oceans, rivers, and lakes without parallel; | neylvavia Railroad, ip ta A345 11 Long I | aquare, nud Com) sos io Lie centre, was passod Oov 5, Int ee a climate suited to almost every product of the 1726 M0 Union Canal, 2d, 16 25 Bank o | S7N, lon 48 57 W. carth; a population as yet dicey 8. from paupor+ Haire | prlestou (Fuly 28) Cor Bio Je igm; 10 national debt, and entire self government; and a thorough-going religious freedom, whioh Lord Carlisle him dec! aed he quite envied—what could hinder the advance of such a country, but the crippling, soihakting disease of slavery ? It is this which psralyzes all her political Papen which ut- terly destroys her moral weight ag a nation, and which prostrates haif her States, before any enemy who could put a few thousands of muskets into the Bi ni Oct My, Cape Tibuorn SE a) naire and receives daitace sa gels another gale since los ving Bonaire Foretyn Ports Arr brig Damerscovs, Fitoh, Alamame bad low _=___—_—= Barvapors, Oct MARITIME INTELLIGENCE, | 4. Movements of Ocean Steamers, Cirnruxcos, Oct I anc is reported to Honaur Towa, , Cla, NAMES, LEAVES DATE. ror une. f i m= Ha » Oct 20—A “he Sid Koller, Charteston. which lessens the cordiality of her intercourse ; Sense. poate. | Bary "Elisabotns a caatall eee igh. with really free Eogland, and which places her on pin w: (Br), Adame, New York wa. for New You Base Patten, Purington, Fi od see foc Mansansas, Ke baie for arthe Anna, Baboook, disg: Hy Kolsoy, Curtis, ton, Liscomb de; Mary Broaghtony Cutvest lower ground before the nations of the Old World. Let America emancipate her slaves ; let her make a sacrifice such as we did, if needful, to duty, and the hearty shout of approval from England, would h, ships Norma, P's ohn bs do; © do more to cement good feeling between the two ‘awa, Hier eightoa’ nn New. Von ia oGhas Brewen, Mieke countries, than all the diplomacy of our most igs Cardenal f, froin. Portland, arr loth, di friendly statesmen. Mo. a unson, do; H Kellock Kel- | He ae inde in a The dates from Texas rein ana 23d ult. ewes ahd from ‘Forks idea, Rauch, ree Teratea dam i. ‘om New York: Midas, Rauch, re It was reported at Galveston that some cases ef gyn mime nnn? 7%, rox, Ja, Oct 15—-Bark Robt Mortis, Hornor, for te yellow fever had appeared at Indianola. The In- v1 ‘ter. GUN SETS... ILLES, Oct 15—Bark Roman, Hamilton, for Bostom dianola Bulletin of the 21st, says:—There appears to | ~~~. swe | aol be a tendency to billious diseases along our coast. Port of New York, November 4, 1852, Bénzavns0, Oct 16—Bark St Jago, Deanliony from 8 Aero the ete in Inala and Laan, of daw cura Read ater nic kano ee gaa Ke pe of Rage teaead ry ren a ae witiy Hexdrick Hudson, Warncr, London, Griswold & the next week. sya sayiahit Pisiill veral vessels at ass hav n sick of bilious | Wiley. a y on, Penvell, Portland. disease, but havo eo far recovered as to go to sea | Sh jenturlon, Coombe Liverpool, Zerege Oo. Burnham, Marshall, supposed ir, M* » Sam Francisco, again. Tbe Washington Star says that last week Mr. E. D. Little died at Chappell Hill, of yellow fever, having contracted the disease somewhere on the coast. One other case is said to have developed itself at ¢ te) bark Gulnare, , San tated; bark Gulnare, Lucas, sld from SF d for Hong Kong); 12th, brig Pampero (Br), ® Boston April 24, yu zane, Oct 30—Arr brig Santa Maria (Port), LeNevo, ‘ork. jo, Oporto, P N Searle. Dunham & Dion, nrard. ah, NL MeCrosdy & Co, o, Stur; Ce lagu 0. that place. Hammond, Richmond, CH Pierson, cent (Capo Verde Islands), Sept 3—Brig Wm M The Houston Beacon, of the 234, gives an account an Poitadelpnte, Jae Hand. Skinuer, from Boston via Madeira ate 26th, for Sam ofa mail robbery at that placo. lt seems thats | Schr Atlan Nick W Ropes &'Co. nem, Ovd 28—S1d shipSea (Br), M'Kay, Liverpool, package from Wm. M. Rice & Co ,of Houston, Tex- | Sloop Helen, Eilis. i Home Ports. ag, addrested to R. J. French, Washington, Texas, | Barge Grampur, Fi THN Briggs. ALEXANDRIA, Noy 1—Arr brig Mary Turoan (Br), Gor- ARRIVE! ‘ don, Kio J+ ueiro,’ 81d brig Susanna (Gr), Patterson, Bar- RM Steamehip Africa, Harrison, Li by Hh chr Julia Anna, barding, Boston. containing $%,000, was taken from the mail bag which Jefe on the 16th inst 1 i, Cot 23, at. 440 rd, PM, ere IMORE, Nov 3—Arr bri Glaucus (Br), Dun: The Western Texan states that a man named | 7 45 PM. pasced Ril weamenio Europe, Mr Liverpoets | Rio Janeiro 43 aya brig Chas Kershaw, Bi ancy, Chacter Thomas Fowler dately dee anos for San An- | 4148 Pil, took 8 pilot ! a lay te until das ign pis ton: jebrs Tra br ston; Richard. Borde tonio, in charge of a wagon lo with goods. The | , Sesmehip Roanoke, Farrish, } orfolk, 25 hours, with mdse comet th Columbia, N goods were afterwards found scattered on the ground, | “hekaee Oe big “hitenell, Richmond, 70 k Geo Tlozns, Fish, Key West; rigs Poultney, Cl sh near the Calaveras crossing, and Fowler hanging | hours, with mdse to N L M'Cread Hoaats, Bi in anda market; Frances Jano, Young, & Co. Ship Glance, Taylor, Philadelphis, S days, with iron, to W dead toatree The only facts known in the case | Sraees oches Grevhound, Johnson, Boco del Toro; Enook are, that a boy in the neighborhood saw the cart | 7P-, QOBTON Nov Soke barks Gov Briggs. descending a A near where it was found, the driver Cee bbs: nistdicica dude venom ult v's Del Breakwater; Como, Smid ult via Provincet ow: Brig Pauline (Norw), Folkmann, Porto Cabello, 17 days, 3 brigs Brockline, Ellenwood. with bides, &c, to Peterron & Lassin on horseback in the rear; the oxen having noone dria; Gon Marion, Bitber, Baltimore; schr suai to control or guide them, run the cart off the bank, | "Schr Oregon (of Newburyport), Cook, Arecibo, PR, 13 | Gina, Philadelphia. Telegraphed harks Aun and Mary, from upsetting it; that on seving this tho rider rodo off eoye. vate te Meter, Sane Riera | te 5) Maia a; Raina from Central ‘América; Eagle, sid Be- i ite diresti ir Charle . Francis, Savauneh, , 2 a nal for & ship, a bark and thres hinneei i conte quence of the accidents A coroner's | (Rte Su aecpendy eco. o000™ Same TM OO | ia The ship hava igna or ha Wb Sate O1 bart “ : e) . , ani Me , , Cienfucgor a) inquest was held, and a verdict returned in accord- | naval store ay ain ssi ns’ Midus, Jordan, Mobile; Nashua, Chfford, Philee ir) delphin; Br brigs Brilliant, Ha; Green, Port au Priu Mary Perkins, Nike Balch, Winn, Washi: mington, Del; Ma: vert, Boult, Al! ucen of tl ance with the above facts. The editorial correspondent of the Nueces Valley, writing from Brownsville, on the 30th September, says:—Lieut. Whiting. of the Light Artillery, re- turned on Saturday last from a ecout of fiiteen day: ry of Indians. Lieut. Col. Cuesta, or Acucata— do not know which—attempted to commit suicide in Matamoras, the other day. Cause unknown. He belonged to the Engineer Corps of Mexico, and Schr Cornelis, Curran, Wilmington, 4 days, for Now ve javen. Schr Rebecon, Woglam. Pctersburg, 5 days. Behr D L Sturge, Feirchild, Alexandria, 4 days. Schr Stateemon, Hick: ‘tia Scbr Beauty, Chambs oa, ‘anc, Lainbert, Pough y State, Burr, ti barks May Queen, ies, NY. Schr Harriet Louisa, Jones, Baltimore, 30 hours for Albany. » Sarah M Schr Harriet Lovies, Ji s k a beens ark, Empress: brigs Swoat W' Brinckerhott, for =~? hip Cygnet went. to sea from iy this morning, not Tact evening, I 2k i | Schr Sophia ann, 8i hiladel phis, Oct 8-—Arr brig Crescens (Br), Niokersom, is epoken of as being one of the most eflicient and Schr Despatch, Blizard, P rand, rine, Del, 6 days. Liverpool. Sd Sth, schr Victory. Morgan, San Francisco, | | Schr Frederick Reed, Chase, Koncout, days, for IHal- HARLESTON, Got 20—Arr chip Trenton Patton, Now lowell. Lucy, Bedding, pioaten; Delaware, White, Pht that a sergeant in the ican army, who was } ' pecans officers of the corns. It is stated here to- | exir cay r c " Sebr Splendid, Hill, Rondour for New London. ig Cora (Lan), Plum, Bio Joy iro B9 dave, Cd in prison for some misconduct, ina fit of jealousy | Schr Vermont, Nickerson, Boston, 12 days, for Albany. Yelson, Boston; schrs Time (Br). Gould, Nas- committed suicide, by sheoting himself through the | Schr George & Emily, Stewart, Boston, 6d lor Albany. julia VanGilder, Philade phia. Sid sobre Truth, Brownley, and Triton Brown, Baltimore; uteamers C Van- Schr Brave Levell, Boston. 6 days, for Al 2 j derbi t, Storrett, Wilmington,'NC; Metamora, Pook, Savan- na. head. A correspondent of the same paper, writin, Schr Ellen Rodman, Oerood, New bedford, 2days. from Laredo, September Lith, says:—Lbis mail will Bobr Le ; moe, HUN, Portiané, § days Wea Ais atianviis Bvt Hoshes, av Foal | carry you the news of another foray uponour set- | Schr Volante, Cc using, Hilswort:, 9 dsys. Fee teen cousherner, J 0sser, New. 2 Crk: | Seb: 00, , Machize 8 Laure) (br), Graham, Liverpool’ 41 days; bri¢ Florina, | tleuients, by our red brethren. ‘The fasts are sub- | Stegmer Ushsisy ered es eertford. « | Drinkwater, Caméen, Me; sour Helene NN York. Std | Stentially as follows:— About ton days ago large | Arr yesterday, brig John Dutton (of Boston), Matanzas, | Sith *hip Camcen, Lockman. Savennat Constancia party of Indians were acen near the village, in front of Laredo. Whey remained a couple of days within six leagues of toe town, killing cattle, horse-racing, 11 days, with sugar, to Moses Tsylor & Co. BELOW. Bark Montezuma, from the West Ladios. bare, Phillips, NOrleav: ov I—Lelow, bai, a, ane fe av), Troile, Cid sehra Isabelle. Gree, Havana; Mary & Lowlon Joneiro, 55 | y i i i Also s Br brig, of Halitax, NS—(reported by steamt) da — nl iy gros ae icone ay ae Achiles.) pened tree of - Aetne, Philadelphia. Sla ship Alliance, Tinkham, Lives: | about twenty miles below, and took the ranches in Ships Hendrik Hudson, Warner, Lond CONWAYBORO’, Oct 26—Arr brig Veouns, Orr, N¥ork; Hartford, Movie; and others. Wind at sunrise, NW; meridian, do; sunset, NNW. succession I saw a letter from Mr. Redman, of Bellville, which says ‘*that they already know of the death of one American and several Mexicans, and over one hundred horses driven off.” Division OF THE StarE —Some of our cotempo- | raries in Eastern Texas, eays the Houston Tele- graph, are again agitating the question of a division of the State. The advocates of this measure seem Bunker, Savannah; bark Jenny Lind, Bunoe, ohr Ambassador, do, Savannah; back Jenny Lad, Bunce, Cal t 28—Arr schr Boston, Lewis, Philsdelphis, eh rs Tennersee, Carver, Philadelphia, Mary b Reed, NYerk; 29th, Robert Miller, Richards, do. FAST MACHIAS, Oct 25—Sld uchr Kaluna, Folsom, Sam Francisco. ad All RIVER, Nov 1—Avr cohr Virginia, Heald, Phtla- ely ALVESTON, Oot $1—In port. hark Island City, Hinok- Bo ) arr bj brig Washegs, Smith, for i which ar about 15th, (Per Sreaxsure Arnica] Bonpeaux, Oct 16-Sld trom Royan, Mary Glover, Chase, 2, Brown, NOrlei pne Phi'adelp! Brothers, Windsor i; Charles | to be rapidly gaining ground, and some of them go | Nyc; Anne See eens, Sad Abbot kere, probably the | Kellar, from Rockland; | so far as to assert that an extra session of the | arcs a Amani, fee ah Weaseiaces atetieh ct meee, See Wis Be Barter Malt deere mentee avee ER | Legielature should be called to act upon this sub- MOBILE, Oct 27—arr bark Boll. Teylor, Buston. ject, if upon no other. Wecan aseure our eastern | ah. Cid brig Danie! Maloney, Wilt Lad a\phia. friends that there is no disposition manifested in ¢, NOrleans Dackeatee ome’ wi ¢ 4 “Sit Bey senee Get ta, Pteil, Rothe Fulier, Baltimore (liad ld me day). "Are Tres Hermanso, Clyde, and ald 1 meo, Moon ' Rambler, Mit a Mayflower, Robinaon, N York. Inport Nov], brig Juan Je Certageun, Foster, for NYork. wt: for a crew. DEW ORLEAN thie section to aid them. The people of middle Texas desire to remain as they are, and aro not wil- ling to place the best interests of the country in jeopardy, by giving to the enemies of our servile | Utth, end pur back Coguimno. Av 2th for California. hip Mexico, Pl a Patideen Howes, iia 3 i | | Cuxnayex, Oct 19-814 Geo Canning, “ institutions a preponderating influence in the coun- | Suber ; Philadelphis; Tem- cils of the new State that ht be formed west of | Ash Basiand, Cuber, BOvleans; Weathoor by OY Ww ard, Turks islans i0days: H Von Gagern ( men (5 daye; Provident Smidt Myer, Bremer. 60 days; ia. Smi York; barke A GHill, Young, Turks the Brazos. They see that the vast sugar region of | | the State extends trom the Trinity to the Guada- loupe, and, ew bracing an area sufficient to supply the whole Union with this great staple, is rapidly filling up with wealthy planters, and the succoss that bas attended the culture of sugar in this region is attracting many of the oldest and most intelli- gent sugar planters of Louisiana irom their well tilicd, but less productive plantatious in that State. | Dra, Oct 20—Sla Columbia, Hagedorn, NOrk Gnexxoox, Oct 18—Arr Hyperion, Davis, St NB. Sid lsth (befo:e reported 17th), Mary Morris, Protteau, N York; 2ist, Marchioness of Clyd Log, Peruvian, for Boston; Canmort, for Baltimore; Clu- tha, Charlesto: ans; Janet Kidston, snd Glasgow ; and Thos Lee, for San Francisco; Clansn ao, for Savannah. Gravesenn, Oct 2 —Sid Martha Towne, Boston. Havre, Oct 19—Sld St Denis, Foilansbee, NYork; 20tb, Rhine, Deane, do. dale, Ferguson. do, 58; Palo Alto, Spe Wortoc, Bratos Santi mpeachy; ommedot Dueley Boston; North nn Jobneon, Lathe: p, ng, Liverpool; cbr Mercedes ‘Armstro: hy i that State Leg, Wm Nelson, and Peter Maroy, neon > on i The crops of sugar which have been raised in this | Victoria Admiral. Kbine, and Hambclde( cd ee aly Hors ena soak Muses Ma, ceive Ceaaae on region during the last four or five years, have as- | Liven voor, Oot2l—Arr Fidelis, Dixon, 7 git 4 acide tonished the most prejudiced of the Louisiana plant- | R4tneed. Aner belses, Be Jehu — peer eirs aemmlpt Zaleon, Rodgers, Aspinwall 190% tasty ers, and they are now, for the first time, willing to | Entd for ley 2 Ninna, Rudolph Plantagenet, Price, PR ag tia gg! Bg? ign) admit that Texas excels Louisiana in the culture of Ly iil, NOrleaus; Jos Weiker, Hoxie, Mary Ann, Crosby, Boston; majah, Jone ; : ja divide rk; City of Glasgow (»), Philadelphia; 2ist, Lord Maid % "York: } A this great staple. If the State is divided, and | stone, Fork, Mobile; Constitution, Britton, and intrepid, | Pi! ru Ree a | abolition incendiaries are permitted to act in con- Phelps N York. | cert with the mongrel population on the Rio | oi 20th, Universe, Bird, NYork; Charles Humberston, ip Gal Bay; | Grande, and the anti slavery population of Mexico, | Willisme, and Pharsalia, Dyer, Boston, Jane, Mearns, 8 | shine Emma Wetts. Dearborn, Havre; Milan, Cotter, Liver: the tenure of slave property wil! be rendered so un- col; John Henry, ganar ve astern Queen, Emery, Sid v0th, Midar, Kim certain in this region, that few heavy planters will | Tuscarora, Turley, Phil As eae ix site Venture to remove to it. The new State may be con- | 2st, Jane, Selters, Savannah, Pers farton, Apalacht’ | vallair, fur Niverpo y cols; Fides, Borland, NYork; Pharsalia, Dyor, Boston; 22d, Spanish ship Florida Blan stantly agitated with the curse of abolition in- | Grecneek; Mobile; Montenwe:os Permer: der Piscnesar i 4 trigues, and anarchy. Lynch Jaw, and their attend- | Crleans;| John” Rav Pit: Phiindcipola; | Columbie, Goerken, Dremeey aut ulge sees ant train of evils, will be tastened like # loathsome | kh arh cer lesbon (probably Svoviaee)e jo Matricn | incubus upon the country. The evil will come soon | ‘rell, for Boston; Fami d Haabet, for | Frieseaet caste hy y’ enovgh, without the aid of our castern friends. They Prince, York, Oregon, Crescent City, | Juan de Nieaiagua 10 days. Ul could hardly entail a greater curse upon the State | otus, Euxine, America Eudocia, and Alvert®, | ton, Boston; Lexington, Murph: David Cannon, and Agamemnon, for Mobile; | Beghiehy F mary than to plunge it at thistime into the depths of anar- cuy and misiule, resulting froma division of the State Telen, fo! and NOrlesns; Fitz James, for do and Staten Is'and; South Carolina (s), Andrew Foster, Un hips Brunswick and Olympus; 26th brig Thir of Maye at this juncture. We consider that all who urge | 211s Broke, and Gomes foal, cea ike fe aek eee jatt, and Ane this measure, are directly aiding and abbotting the | ¢j, mito 20 via Valpeeaien:. Aes i macbinat! f abolitionists. Those who are truly x, Oct 19-Cld out, Dev@nshire, Hoyey, NYork, and seams ctrieshancaliptee dts dassincee toner x Conn. faithful to Southern interests, will exert all their in- | 2iet; 20th, Mary, Eustis, C ‘NEW HAVEN, N 3—Brig Thos Trowbridge, | . 5 : i chard Morse, Perry, Newport and do; 0 via X Yc © | pe ad zetain the State in ils present position, | Cerin and NOrlenns; 21st Aizome Anthoay, Per roeee ri ieeial Foumilion te until the Colorado, Guadaloupe, and San Antonio | City Typhoon, Sal Averpool and Russell, Aibany: cloop Tantiv are teeming with & population similar to that now | Wm Barber, Luesses, & ganza, NY ork; ch tana, Xi occupying the valleys cf the Alabama, Tennessee, I ag, do; 1 Tucker, do: Duncan, do: arlotte, Fatuus, and Tr Ann, do; Pavilion, Westbrook: Pi Grace Caroline, Albany. NEW LONDON, Nov 2—Arrsteamor Chas Osgood, Smith, Norwich for NYork; schrs Agawan. Bosse, Wareham for 40; D8 Ives, Chase, Harwich for do; Elvira, ‘Nickerson, NBed= ford for do; Sharon. Thatcher, Richmond for Plymouth; Wavo, Cornish, Philadelphia for do. NEW BEDF' acd other great rivers of the South. Thus will the Bougiass, or Sen ran: culture of the great staples of the South be fostered and protected, until Southern interests will be para- | mount here; and when a new State is formed it will | | resemble Alabama and Mississippi, and will possess, ‘1d Roman, Hamilton, Boston. ton; Jokn Currier, for NOrleans; Centro American, San Francisco, within itself, all the clomente of prospority. We | .Nrwvoun, Oct 21—Arr Elisabeth, Clement, Gloucester for NPEW BEDFORD, Novd—Are dark Caroling, Shepherd, 4 . ork, to for whaling: sehr Statesm: rome fg ps denaabaes| Gas long ere such & mea- | _ prysourn, Oct 20—Of, New York, Thompson, from New | OWL'S HEAD, Oct Wecdtr ehee sD horton Wyo ow feeble State will iron bands, that it eth and breadth, will York for Hav: Queenstown, Oct 18—Sld Fmigrant, Errington, Mobil StRANGYORD, Oct le—Sid Purchase, Wymon, Ardrossan be to f tened together wi population, throughout its Bangor. PHILADELPHIA, Nov Art ship Lucas, Steel, Now Or- and Boston. ‘ jeans. unite as ome man to preserve the integrity of its | gcntEnne, Oct, 20 Three vessels, apparently laden, from eratans, Boveumrvin Kes Won tebenae ont tn with crew territory, and to give it that rank which ite im Fad dea ee Fe poe aased the bas to day for the | sick) Oth ult. Sid brie Dr Rogers. trell (from Paw- mense resources seem destined to secure to it as the | S°Uths ones brig, with yellow sides and painted por $rekes), easiest hin; sohr J WM'Koo, Loaming, do; sleep - . a ort, We -apsipticnags abet ne OE Wine Beictetepetedytavew pes ihe med at Famdethy | poste Soetas CHS Oe ar Lal ae agg ae ot Domestic Miscellany, nol ARRe the sbip, after having Boston Nay 10, all well. It conta the people of the United States fifteen mil- pol net, being SLOMmnte Galen was ie FAY SIRAH, Osh S0-814 chip Dicige, Deane, Now Tort a ee mee Taos Get vekmnstor'a instractions, moored to the | ‘°RULLTVAN, Oot 26—Sld brine Amothyat, Ober, NYork. i pe periodicals are as es- ‘The ground being hard, she lay over, and | SALEM, Nov 3—Sld brig Alven, for Aftica: — Dag a ond happiness as the roofs over ort with serious isan. Fs a ” ad ees WILMINGTO: Al their heads, and more 0 than the army or navy, which | When discharged, she will be further examined, and roj Park, Boston; conte tw upon. , Boston; = omieng ae neo tretibed io taatins 1S oor, Oct A—The Anno Armste ng arvived at Revit ts Bat uri fencorsbslp, and lectures wil’ hensafver’ be piven to all the ihins few days ter shir port. ee SKY, Gnd | vires tomes, Cheslestens Svinte F P Pook, Smith, stodents im medical seience. Dr. George © ener, ck M’Pherson, for Mobile, old yestordey | Dem: 18 a ame roping re Fg big Dae Jr. of Zane, oe a the chair, and bas aiready deliver put back with lose of the enptain over- | vid, ee ee RS Oe The Paris (Tenn Lowpox, Oct 21—Tho James Fagan, of Dublin, from Ca- ‘Oot 28—Avesohrs Larkin, Churback Philee dia for New Yorks Was abao ed in lat 39, lon 43, having Jith sarted budt onds, &e, au at N Orleans, lat inst, yu. 2 Constitution, of the 15th inet , says an affray took place in the routhern part of that cou near the Carrell line. last Saturday. between John uett and Tilman Woods, Woods inflicted some six or ddyen wounds with a Jarge pocket Knife, from the + ffects of which Bennett dled imi shifted cargo on beonme very ) Bens CARD (TH0y, Sid 2 i 24th, bloo Y i jaltimores 27th, 8 fay Seacs All Slat, Agawam, Losso, N have been the aggressor Telegraphic Marine Re) 4 Passengers arom, Nov 4 aaa sabi pK bs | pArrived—-Ship Monterey, NYork; barks Homer, Teealjo; | whty! nas Gorton Me aie a W7nite, Johe felsh, Philaéelphia. nln. Rufus Choate te expected te argue 8 case before | Choared— ark Trinity, Ontveston; brig C Nichols, do. servant, “Mi nd it asain, united if Westar ireul Jour" arhington. Week inva an a is award of $20,000 by the inte Sexiean Board of Ooustale- | Herald Bartne Corsepondence.,..., | ili ren ry De kinins Me Tesnaeh ers i 4 ire} im lane, 4 4 —' te a iis The Toronto Glole i informed that the Rev. BR. | aitavspar, Jolin wil Cayton te and Mis On nb, Me Gogrets McGregor, of New York, intends bringing a #uit for | deck ie Raggo, J FC Vies, Hon Jam Melbourne, Everets, damages against the Rev. Dr Burns, of Toronto, for Bestx 2 hia webrs Gannet, Haekell, Portland; Alfrod, Hill. slander, laying his claim at $6 000, Among those who voted in Newport, Rhode Isiand on Tueeday, was Nathan Munro, who is one hundred years old, He voted for George Werbington at bis Girt | election. The contributions for the Warhington monument, st m, cn Tuesday, amounted to $1TL 01 dertnty J nite, We onl Mr Forbes, M a slater Robert ation, W ixcnsapmers: Fa ter Ai Phillipe A He ay; GL Btoltertelb “Misses oz. co a coke L] White snd ol Mr Darklio, Me Mondera. Mr Borie, ‘be erate hee Wurmee tita se dren ap servant boy, JM Sioge mons Mr arp the polls in New I | ym yton, jr and Mies Mr Kr — fanaa deiomars | Dongias, Suan ‘Tuston Eat Salais; Advent, | Mont ery, J Sponson, Mr MApase SontaG This admirable lady, and high” | Seer. fayeenth J Kucing, Dole, Fail River; steamer mith, Me fthget, J sarm F ly aceomplished artint, has for years past mide the pet harlow, Cardenas; briga Tool ‘ORFOLK &o-—Btenmabi ronal seq tance of Mr. Danlel Webster in i N y, Boston; echrs ‘steward Wer eas ae nn oe ra, aoe Vonathe, WH Sor ray , 1 ede mon , e [ eight conecris in Philadelphia lstely, In rapid euccession, | Miscetiancons. et isms, Mise Lyons, & Pompardoes, Mee the erese veceinte of four Or m for Liverpeck, retwened to NOstozns | W Estrella Fo A Wilms Motors, C Fone Poname = y . ° BC hisis fis, Soper, — oni Ae | Bowe Loor, Redding, fevm Boston for NOrtoasa, before | siocrnas’ Reese, EDT =m Oe .