The New York Herald Newspaper, May 8, 1853, Page 2

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considerable discredit subversion of | The Officers of the Late Texas ‘Defence ADDITIONAL BUROPEAN INTELLIGENCE. | bron hesins* mae ns td By pus the tay si seats Ace eoeetar era or mltary dcplne tall be wtiorie, pitta So we reserve or partiality, to a such remedies as his ‘of the compromise between the North and South, Ro ‘ef a controversial character on naval Navioxan Horm, W: Our Londen Correspondence. Bikecel peettlem readin via ‘The great length } cannot have blinded himself to the danger of aca- | and or subjecta. March 28, ee ALBEMARLE STREET, PICCADILLY, of the Chancellor's , (five and a half bours,) | tastrophe which would blow the compromise to the o's expenee the young prince, son of Queen | pon J. A. Prance, U. 8. Senate— Lonvom, April 18, 1863. } pores tel at fe soything Seay seins, and place aepneeeenal eciemmgme beperet bagi svteed Gocraeute Hamas been Sm—It is with regret that I feel myself called on Bruropean Summary from London—Turkey and | revert toit in our next. —_ , ss George,” England’s patron saint. Ld to address you—a sense of duty and self respect prempte | feyt wien by the, Bes Tustioe Russia— Trial of the Duke de Rovigo— The Eng- The change in the Spanish mini: is &] pondon Milliners—The West End white | _ Richard Smith, a jou: cabinetmaker at | ™#; 8nd I would have done so at an earlier day, but I | thereof—simply because the President of the Unite: dish Budget—The Spanish Ministry—The Funds | most cheering event, and induces the belief that Slaves. Leciester, Englan’, has twenty-six children ! did not get, until last Saturday evening, the published | States bas not the power, under the constitution anc end Markete—Theatrical and West End Chit | Spain will no longer be domineered over, as it has [Frem the London Times, April 21.1 ‘An Excise QUESTION 10 THE RAPPERS.—Is'Mra, | debate that took place in the Senate on the 3d inst, om | '*TUi1?.ow show that the President of Texas bed mot the too long been, by designing priests and abandoned si . rr ” Hon. Thos. J. Rusk, Chat, &c., &c. a“ i 1R—I have some reason to believe, that although | Hayden, the lady ‘medium’ who attends parties | the amendment offered by the Hon. Thos. J. Rusk, “‘pro- sioned offi On a oe ag inst., atf the Tuileries, the Emperor fnoold but that the aacient, fidependent muarend the letter of A First Hand/” and your own. able within to communicate with the other world—is | poring to authorize the President of the United States to | der th pul _ i rsundi articles upon it, called attention in influential quar- | she duly licensed to sell spirits? Answer—No; she a f the late Te: President of Texas could not dismiss s member of Destowed the cardinal’s hat on Monsignor Marlot, ener appara ee Leen oe end of | ters to the sufferings of the workingwoman at fashi- | only tells the dupes, who pay for what they don't ees — hae a ee hy pile By ge hig cablaet, as the Prosident of the United States ean. Archbishop of Tours. The Empress, the members cided liberal, as’ Foreign Minister ; ‘gana, a man of onable milliners, active, and partially success{ul | get.—Punch. vy of ae the late won ot the, fifth agmed constitution of i i ini “ | efforts have been made to weaken the case first made i thi mentioned me by name, in a manner that pe you Texas is in these words:— ef the imperial family, and all the ministers and high | high repute fur integrity, as Minister of the Lnterior; | Gut’ and to question the motives of te writer. "I at | of We ten Bogle nt Tete de Vareunes: recently | Youd not have done had you boon amare ofall the facts | and onsen ofthe Bets’ "Spo Setratay of Stace men ar and Gen. Roncali, well known, as Minister 4 . = of the State, wae present during the ek ‘ese are al oc em od shen mee d ne Jens = ay ‘be toargery ofan, iniacenta motive French Minister at Berlin. and enaipaet connected with the subject on which fecal iiabed by tam, whe seecutl ey: and it is to oped that they wi lopt such mea- ? M F Jand has you spoke, of service of the President, ‘The Monitewr podtishes an account of the expe- | sures as will meet the general approval of the Cortes pac in me ons Sore, aa Coe ts ne een of Ee of bl ine oe I wish to be distinetly understood, and will therefore the Presldgnt, with the adrian a nat aton The expan ran n | tescty rma emer mat a | tes ate ata are hes | lagu bt en aid Cech Comat | tl pty treme eto tea Reamer ea tai ; to arrive at it, and for your private information |-_ M. c eee a) fhe severe chastisement of the islanders, and the weites be jag gr nace oS halfs, ish ¥} Aforitp ag give you the authority on which foond the main | St. Domingo, and received “orders to repair immedi- wes, bent Wate tents oe teminass it mich youd any doubt, "The. ‘Pronldolt tantanel shin ‘and eonciusion of a treaty which promises equal advan- | 2264 ; exchequer bills, 5s. premium. ~The corn trade | Poimts of the statement. ately to his post, my derign to attempt to infringe, by any expression | | was tried by the Senate of the republie, which body di tages tothe commerce of France. yesterday was um dull, though there were I will take a house at the West-End, doing a busi- A cee of diamonds of the value of 20,000 florins | may use in this letter. But when statements are made | ot sustain the ipeactonents ie. Fisher then tha Corns Lecislatitraneed two bills, which, | comsiascable. i wy average. prices are | 2e% of a high character, employing a large number | wsa stolen a short time ago from the boudoir of the | reflecting upon my reputation, and arguments urged to | These fuets show that the President of Texas had restric- To-day ‘orps Legislatif passed two bills, which, | Wheat, 434, 8d.; (sen , 348. 6d.; oata, 18s. 9d.; beans, | f bands. Space in that of the town is so val- | Countess Clary, in her residence at Vienna. There | sustain them, not founded in law or facts, I hold it to be | tions thrown around him which are not thrown aro under the title of a national award, bestows pensions | 35, 6d.; peas, 358. 3 ‘Bread has consequently ’ | uable that very large wor! are rare, stillin this | was no trace of violence, and the robbery was com- | ™Y right to correct those statements, and then to expect te Pres tend, cf oe Pnitas. A, Sinton. There are of £12000 the widows of Marsals Oudiaot and | lend nie i-iow, tn he ction marta it. | tans ror ta be tkenanin ie | Hat ibe tet et wel sine ke hte es | 0] gee cna telat tons amen | grag gins ceena te pai rt la e seems to ittle:cl ut the su) } ¢; fs ', 0 fi regret | I willquote. Not be found him the ‘The French fands are on the rise. P continue good, and there is still « large ena one of bo es in iy “the hands” sleep. | suspicion fell on any of the domestics on account of bth eh Soll oe ERE epee. tay ronest whichis, claimed for him now, ata ah be he ond é rom Mancheeter, &c. The prices of continue vee week's fare of dinner before me; it | their high character. But the police, after making | the State constitution of Texas. The frat ture of | reply to your inquiry, ‘was the understanding of From Vienna we learn that an imperial commis. | as high as at our last quotation, and they are severely | /23¥ Ht cel ms Slee vente Spe crates Sah STEER COROT, SES ee eet wg, & |: fhe Seois, Shah motte 1th (be sesead ip teeey aed the wrErulcle, section 9, 1 grante ai mies | - é class q em] ag a nurse ¥ ticle 5, section 9, says: grants and commission: sion will proceed to Italy. It is asserted that Gene- | felt by all persons of moderate or small incomes ; nor | +16 whole I can find no serious fault with it. From Yamonds ene ed in her posseatind. Sr ane me | resolutions on the subject, which von uave’toubtloss sot pwned eds mmo any er tak pith pe bal ate tog zal Benedict is one of the commissioners. The com- | i there any likelihood of a fall for some weeks to | what I haye now stated the conclusion may be fairly | among other articles of antiquity lately sold in | S% 1 Published them in two pamphlets which were replios . .. re A come. mission is to abstain from active interference; its | “The old Philharmonic concert was lastnight most | G7aWn that, as to food and lodging, this house’ | rondon, was a silver watch, presented to the Whal- | thvaPeonmmunters of the navn, api distribaten: sethe | sna eucle 5 gection 4 He shall be, comma Jer. ‘ stands on fair ground; I believe some in these re- - militia thereof, duty will be to examine the state of affairs, and pro- | numerously and Lypraj attended. Winterbottom aa i to it ley family by Oliver Cromwell; £5 10s. An episco- | members of both houses of Congress—as mine were, also in person without the suthority, , i caused an immense sensation in a solo on the trom- | *P¢tsmay be superior to it, many are certainly worse; | 14) ring, of the tenth cen! found at Ai , en- | —I herewith enclose them to you and request that | °f ® resolution of Congress. pose definitive measures for the organization of Lom. | fansed af immense Rensston om Tullian’s American | 1.choose i Kclpans recor ag respectable West: eared at comacasieds Pal oanaees by Me. Tur. in janis to myself you will read. thom”—1 fool confident, | qAztsle,®,stctiond.—The President shall, have power ta a orchestra, Y nal for £17. A piece of money, ornamented, you read them, I would have been saved the necessity | Senate, b pereae’ te the Senate ithe No slight excitement has been caused by arabid | Macbeth, (according to act of Parliament,) was eae eens ee mah er it? Sea of £4. Asilver bookcase or rec very finely worked, of priting bales letter. Clot ‘ on 4 Conateee shail: senroage as calumnious article in the London Times respect- | ee ine Crees, a Se ee 4 +2 sixteen to twenty-five years. Milliners have Ae big gen 21. ei perenne eaceliied «A resolution of the Lngislatareot Tesas had been adept: 4 the 88 ae o ie merci- unanimously bj Be of ing M. Kossuth, the brave defender of the Hunga- put on the “4 » seasons—the summer of about four months, the winter | fy) Gol for everlasting happiness, a and th others, br directing Dy capes ey omnes ae ia public of Texan, Jul nate of the re- rians. It has long been known that the directora of | “ The new p: donna, Madame Doria, has taken i = me three. In the Summer “ aands” rise at five to | in onyx, 128, A stone, *celt” this newspaper have been extremely hostile to this | London completely b , and Alboni had better past per La ein rear a ee Meath, Ireland; 10s. 6d. A pair of ancient spurs, | _ This resolution was conditional, Selle Cilia atkditaue dohessit then coultto look out for her laurels. Not a concert will be given pers ccsthor tee * Ghat je; sbnine at night, an | ¢2 7s, Hight flint arrow heads, found at Clough, | Texas was authorized te employ the whole of the navy in patriot 4 ll they could toinjare | this season without her. She has had an offer of | [Ur further for “clearing up;” in dull months rise | 19,°'An ancient Irish drinking cup of wood, from | S¢tive service, if in bie ogoess he saw fit. In April, his political character, by throwing discredit on the | 3.900 for next season at St. Petersburg—three | ®t Seven, begin at eight, time of uncertain, | Cavan, Ireland, 128. 1840, the Preeident of Mexico issued a proclamation of m the county of | the time of th of the resoluti 7) | Officer of her navy— ho y Fee er eigeaa utions of annexation.” | Houston was President at thet time, and of course nomi Sag uioan cease vacancy, whic! in re; “it Tis understanding” existed; aa’ there ‘would Leve. beast - , A but I believe at no time do they work less than i blockade of the ports of Texas. I sailed from Gal an important vacancy if my dismissal had been legal an® motives by which he has been actuated in that great | months. © 2) | Ewelve. hours, very often as ‘man? as sixteen, some. | . Taking the cube yard of gold at £2,000,000, which | in June, 1840, for the coast of Mexico, having under my | aide. This shows clearly that the act was considered war of independence ; but we were not prepared to | Mr. Kyle, the futst. has arrived from the Staten, | dimes up to eighieen. The meals (this has been | itis in round numbers all the gold in the world at | sommand » ship of twenty guns, & stekinor of eight guns, | * AU 2” section band nt of inci| q i ted 1 despati i estimate mi if me into ingots, be con- | and three schooners of seven guns each; leaving two bri , £ pied see a gross abandonment of every principle of trath | cert next month at the Hanover Square as the eee within one hour taken from tained ina collar twendy four feet aaperni sixteen | of eighteen guns each in Galveston harbor, one of them 1 Titises acca ae their x and honesty—a barefaced proclamation of wicked, Dr. Joy has left town for Dublin, to superintend ( ep : hoe i ready to rail in two hours, to keep in check any Mexte: ixth Cos Te sod th calumnious falsehoods. The Times has broadly | themusical arrangements for the coming opening. of | imei" Stecsterfor Tutaren’ pour gaat Feo Colina end Aearalin; writin ists an os Yewel of war that might slip by me—but “home id, | under iboaboreatevisions. -Xon wlll ena iemeems wast) stated that Kossuth, in defiance of all the laws of | ‘e Crystal Palace. Sims epee Bottessini and | “drawing-room,” or for one or two court or other | safe nine feet square and nine feet high. So smallis | For upwards of three years from, june, 1840 cy ant tows of SBSk Congress = Thay It hat nen memes, De British hoepitalty, has had at work, for a long time | Mist Kathleen Pizwiiam are already cacaged, | « great” balla; at uch times the “hands” havebecn | the cube of yellow metal that hae set popnlations on | any part of fexaa ninety dng with all the Twxas veuels | viceof the public, for any misconduct fk omer’ of hia nei factory of "4 5 . called on to rise at four, leaving off work at ten, or e march, and roust e wor! wonder. of Ww Thad always enough at sea to keep the Mexican issior 7 o pe an extensive mant ry of arms and ammuni- | transact but a sorry business, and the revival of s war off out const Not one of (ham ever made Ranaved February net pry “he tate of thi 1843, f iti -} franea Masts oe even eleven! A death connected with any verylarge The French government has hased for 600,000f. | Ye#* ae the purpose o! op pe es Ww tkam Tell, va Bonooni, Tamberlik and For- | Circle dealing with “ the house,” Pees pes iaaly the aites of the hocana Moa rn 13 othe “Quai | hex appearance off the const of Texas after the early part | law. My pretended dismissal is dated July 10, Saw denounced wine hi Ciattadet viola eee sect mith London fashionable world is regularly on the | % Great mourning order upon the “hands,” espe | Malaquis, and it intends to erect on them @ new write: Leak while T was oppoast off Campenshiya: | SAT AMtel tiers ina nea Dai Aenean LIL ee eee Gt to receive the further protection of England. | gurniee as the Morning’ Post will bear witness, | CWly ifit happens in the season, will cause a pres- | buil ng for the Caisse des Dépots et Consignations. | which is it the Mezican State of Wucstan—te the whole | of the repubite. Hm ‘These base slanders, however, have been amply re- | 4 | sure often entailing for days sixteen hours consecu- | The building, it issaid, will be of a monumental isting of three la: I appealed to the Congress of Texas, that met about futed, both in the House, by Messrs, Dangombe, ae afar eri erga oy, like tive close work ! character, in order to accord with the Palais de 1’In- t Corte which I Tea tad tee four months after the pretended dismissal of which your| Bright and Dudley Stuart, and likewise out of it by | equestrians and opera carriages, ladened with rank Go to a fashionable upholsterer tofurnish andhang | stitut, the Hotel des Monnaies, the Palais d’Orsay, | hard fought battles, and driven them before me with but | *P0ke, for a trial on the serious charges that had bee the real proprietors of the premises in which it was | and beauty, crowd the principal thoroughfares and | Jour femme ae Sia en Tree so in @ way dif- | and other large edifices on the left bank of the river | ‘woof the Texas vesscla the ahip and one brig—in the | Taf bee ayaa Bed leaf te alleged arms and munitions of war had been | parks YX erent from that in w) 'e would have executed the | facing the Louvre and the Tuileries. contents, one third of shose under, my command were | ish Tribunal for the Inapartial Trial of Post Captain E. . ours, Don Casar. 7: @iscovered. These premises belong to a Mr. Hale of | same order last season; but he would hardly expect to from Madri Moore Rotherhithe, and hed been for path time aruirad The English View of Captain Hollins’ Course “rebang” you, &c., twice in one season. .Not so is that Led has Berne eltenba sy AS ee rebel peel pina ey aie eae 3 cpa Tat, President Houston ighed the law rf xi he dy him for the purpose of perfecting his newly-in- | ‘at San Juan Del Norte, it with personal decoration; you may have given | that city that the carriers cannot obtain the quantity | on another engagement, which they alwace declined, of | court martial, which he was required to de, under it. vented war-rocket, (rotating on its axis, like a rifle (From the London Chronicle, April 16.} an expensive license to your wife for self and | required for the daily supply of their custom they could easily do with the aid of thelr steamer. ‘The he End carrying no stick,) on which he had expended | _ It is likely, on the whole, that the arrival of far- | daughters as regards outfit for the London season, | Hsdrid journal statzs thar xt Cordova, on the sth of | Mexican government finding thelr whole naval force routed Ne mpwarde of £20,000, and sold the patent thereof to | ther intelligence Will show that one Captain Holling, | but fashion own no rules, will be subject to no heat lan mscthipe or | concluded an armistice for six months with the President | 78 the expiration meds : peveral foreign powers, in default Pi ‘all attention to | the commander of an Amerizan sloop of war, has | calculations. The expenditure of to-day may in ree ive, 28 degrees of Reaumut | Cf’ Texas, to ree, Fretident disapproves the proceedings of she Court ing ‘his invention from our’ own government; but as for | mistaken or exceeded his authority in violently dis- | & day or two ap) 30 much waste—the whole Bertin Just before this was done, the then President of Toxas— | She'necused im the cascof E,W. Moore. nesamandee at tha eis ion with Kossuth, or any proprietorship | possessing the de facto government of the impor- thing has to be done The “hangings” of a A letter from Berlin of the 16th of April, states Sas Hoare ener 2 wield onetainls Le tured by | navy. er SAM HOUSTON. by him in the concern, that great general had never | tant little city which the Colonial Office has baptized | mouth since are now almost vulgar; at all events that the Empress of Russia was expected there early | the overwhelming force to which I was, op issu Decomber 7, 184... « Sdeered the premises at all, Sad keew nothing what: | Greytown, butwhich Americans delight in styling | they will not any longer be endured. ’ These changos | in May. The Emperor will, itis said, accompany her | $7,"Ri0e1 om ino Hraghs, the teraporary seatel terete: | sident of a Republion yn nes mance af me Pree ever of the H ero carried on therein, till the slan- | St. Juan de Nicaragua. On the assumption, how in dressing-room politics have a heavy bearing on | Majecty as far as Warsaw. pelea hi phen erm we; these jon Hee pepige aes to me of the finding of the court, o der of the Times appeared. The rockets alone were | ever, that the acts of the American captain have | the fingers of those who have to work out the new | The Tribunal of First Instance of Brussels, on the | commander of the navy of our common ‘country—in de. | the action of the President on it. I did not even know found, but no illegal amount of gunpowder, and | been warranted by his instructions, the seizure is | measures. By a particular evening, at all cost to | 16th of April, on an appeal, confirmed the judgment | fence of which I was at that moment risking my life in | what it was until after a change of administration, whem mo arms whatever—although Lord Palmerston | about the most grotesque miscarriage of forei; the “bands,” an enormous amount of work must be | which had been given in an action for calumny | keeping off our coast the naval force of the enemy. more the person 159 Hee appointed Secre amerted that arms were found and five hundred | policy into which the cabinet at Washington could | done. The retarding of the overland mail by some | bro: ght by Count Xavier de Mérode against M. | than ten times my superior, both numerically and in the pened 10 hey gu Posaibl ; t On the meeting of the last Congress of powder. Such a gross and wicked have stumbled. Great Britain, without accident may be a vexing thing to the government | Adolphe Deschamps, editor of the Mephistophélés, | Weight of metal carried by, the respective vessels. Not- Ripnation bas peldiom been attempted by any public Etively sustaining the pretentiona of the Mosquito | andthe India house, but it would be borne with | and ‘filers the defendant was compelled to pay | Sater me 8 enicbed | Lucier cocemaaepGisaesec in| gop thetapeeed testa joint resolutions . emails; but it will at‘any rate open people's eyes | King to the sovereignty of Greytown, has hitherto | patience when compared with the very phrenzy of | 25,000f. damages. one of phlets, to which I have ly alluded. | the fol resolutions were passed -— ‘the unhesitating audacity with which the managers | declined to make the admission that his rights have | vexation which would follow the disappointment of | The Milan Gazette of the 12th of April published Thearmistleo was recewed through the intervention of | Resolved, by the Senate, That itis the opinion E. W. Moore, u: of that “leading journal of Europe” endeavor to cir- | been forfeited, and this hesitation is the single overt | some half-dozen great houses if on the eve of pf a forbiddi .. | the United States, England and France. Texas .and | that the trial of P We ate ee rataaanee Re Cee eAcect | beton mulch the wat party. of the United States | court bell the accidental (2) lliness of dozen hands | 2,°Tder forbldding all persons in the Austrian set. | {5° necstuityenitied of economising in every way possible; | tessiviien of tee Congrec of this repabla, approved culate of their own imprimatur for the purpose of depre- | rest their vehement imputations of an English con- | &¢ Madame a precluded the promised delivery |’ works of art or literature of any kind to foreign goy- | 0D of the means was by laying dee abt up in pedicary; ze eet Sen convened under said reso~ Kossuth in the eyes of the world. After this | spiracy against the independence of Central Ame- | of the necessary dresses, &c. ernments or members but not as you say in reply to Mr. fod, by the House of Representatives of the Republi me can be imiartetied as to the fact that the ne Messrs. Cass and Douglas have never ceased to The “‘hands” have reason to_know but too well, | sion from “toe. parr gaged aon fon ernich see tccting teat bile shipaiateel be Atalay be esee that ita the opinion of hie body that rere! t Times is in the pay of Austria; but, meanwhile, | tax us with maintaining our armaments and estab- | from their own lengthened, saddened hours of toil, they depend. and that her policy seemed to be to abandon her navy ved February 5, by t ere Kossuth himself can well afford to treat such charges | lishments in the West Indies from the single motive | when the season is at its height, and Lend hat r *—that is, she Pened under that with eae “oe ont for they will only raise him | of a passion for continental aggrandizement. Over | is called most exrcyatle, The flutter of a Seat nor athe m the Pope, accompanied by U the mia » i 5 and not iy Febuary, ie, 9 fist ater anes Faily entities Pe still in the opinion of those who honor noble- | and over again, it has been urged in Congress that | tion, the triumph of a successful debut each second remarks made by youduring the debate. Another presen minded triotism. We trust, however, t the | we were meditating a swoop on Nicaragua; and yet | their peculiar intensity of feeling, ere alike in brilliants, of the Military Order of Bt. Gregory. strong reason for Mexia keouing ships laid up in lic “f ‘exas are justly due Commodore B. We gabject be taken up by his friends, and that the | no sooner is a government led at Washington, | followed by their own peculiar reaction. To ‘the ¥ Dr. Aehilli announces by advertisement im the Christian | 0: , &8 a means of economy, was, that during the re, those under his command in the service of the ‘Times shall be compelled either to eat its slanderous | which is to keep vigilant watch on our nefarious de- | hand,” the preparation of the ball or court dress, | Zimét that he is aboub to leave England for the United | pendency of the treaty for annexation, the United States acon i i i ‘ ‘ 1, | States. ernment. teed the protection of the eoast of lan: of the guarded manner in whieh Sena« words by a public recantation, or to Lo Gare penalty | signs, than the unforfunate little seaport is dis- | s widow or a daughter's mourning, have only this Frenchma: fi invasion, and tor airy, thus: “That of their unprincipled audacity by an action ina court | covered struggling in its talons. We cannot con- | much of difference—the one is toil in aid of vanity, | oc4 Tiiction to um English friends ee vowing enri- | CaM iden wemunaud Ut Saas, Soak qorenneate waned: der re, air? —is, that socks of law. : we ceive the tables more cotneray, tarnedon our Ame- | the other, with often much of vanity in it, only van of Robespierre......... 1704 | force it. ” en- vers ture of the State of Texas that: Prince Menschikoff, in addition to other demands | rican accusers. Nothing hasever been done by Eu- | sufficing to tell that there is gne and the same end | (Repeat 174 in single figures, andadd the whoie,) 1 | , Now, canany one infer that the mere laying ships up | him to the Senate of the United States has spoken om on Turkey, now requires a final adjustment of the | ropean governments which can approach this act of | for those who purchase, and those who toil and ¢ ¢ 7 | im ordinary can mesn “ to abandom her navy altogether,” | this subject in the ee manner, and instructed hing boundary question on the frontiers of Russia, anda | violence, as regards the levity of the pretences by | make the thing sold. The needle of ‘the hand” 9 | in the face of the following law of the Congress of Texas, | unanimously to use his influence to procure the passage @emeation of the slave trade with Circassia, and, as | which itis veiled. Don Paciteo quarrelled with the | works from ‘(grave to gay” without intermission; 4 See Care nara torent sath eties fe 1 wome say, the opening of the Dardanelles and Bos- | King of Greece as to the amount of an indemnity to | at last the wasting form of the poor creature tells 1815 republicehal be oom ted of wie sapieian cuaiceaaee ae of the United Staten, ia the phorus. With to the Circassian slave trade, | which he was undoubtedly entitled. But Governor | to those around that a time is near when the making ee Napoleon. .-+.++024++eee+ e+e +1815 | mandant, eight lieutenants, ten midshipmen, with such | held in the late navy of Texa: very one knows that it bears no similarity whatever | Marcy seems to have positively taken issue with the | of the mourning of eome will be the token she is ut iGisneng. on abexe), B nd petty oMiers aa may be necessary forthe | ‘The last instructions were precede’ by the followin ,or even America; | rulers of Nicaragua onthe construction of an instru- | rest. ir reamble, shcwing the construc.ion Texas but it is merely a graceless pretence for the purpose | ment of lease. ny American company, formedforthe |] could easily give to you proof, sir, that even in 5 a two purserss nee spon that part of ‘the joint resolutions of snoezat ony of a character for humanity, to which itsown | purpose of conveying goods and passengers across | such houses as that of which I have written above, — laws of Texas, Fifth | the previous ones were nearly in the same words :— serfdom allows it no substantial claim. | the isthmus, has occupying a considerable plot | no provision of mere food or shelter can com) nsate | Fall of Charles X......sse0s0000+. senvesecereee see e890 ) , however, has begun to exhibit uneasiness | of ground under a demise from the State of Nicara- | (or ‘the cruel prolongation of the hours of work. 1 ane, aad ee Oar tian Ghy Chet ss} gumaintien te tha eoateateaey and at these dictations of the Czar, and is | gua. The State government has served ejectment | Every medical man connected with any of the public 8 | ot ie shloe about bo MOA. on te eee {Se Ro" Termu thereot, as well as ethers cleat! Pimpiind as ng its naval and military defences. We | on the Transit Company, and the company, insisting | institutions in London will bear a oak in Pi in, 8 J a short ine pelo to bamestation?? toatend of Pedtcats a. | fairly deducible from th f which ‘Texas has 0 to find, however, that England is still pursuing | on its right to remain, appeals to Capt. Hollins, who | that this system kills hundreds rearly; iu very mane 9’) as you ray, * that her policy seemed to be to abandon her | Ret Part fully, and com a neutral, shilly-sbally, undecided policy, in the hope, | forthwith hauls down the Nicaraguan fiag in Grey. | ee et ee nee ye Te aay | pal of Duke of Urleans....... Jeux | navy altogether,” shows the reverse to have been | navy’ hy liberal and mo doubt, of avoiding war with Russia. As sucha | town, and hoists the Stars and eee life seat In busy times, na’ penis pee no ame aesctit aaa aE 1 | her policy. That act authorizes the Secretary ‘to re. | nexation war, however, issure to happen soon, and as there | _ We have stated our beuef that the usurpation of | times, not an hour's od a ae Ps alowed, Iwi 8 | celve propomis for keeping in ordinary the vessels of | Steleein Fae -] sy if " ré ; 8 as follows, seems to be a pretty general feeling in well-informed | Captain Hollins will either be disavowed or apulo- | 7a. 3 4 | the navy of the republic,” and dirests as follows, in hen SuTCUEeL ita petted tana a i - rell-informe A , e wed pass over little petty tyrannies and vexations to Seo. 2. That any contract entered into for the keeping of | $8 from their high characters, personal and professio diplomatic circles that Austria and Rassia will unite | gised for; but the consequences of this act cin by | Which these young women are exposed; these in all 3 | said vessels in ordinary shall conduc for ome reas fee tke | the real, fide Patriotism and valor with whieh # ere long to attack us, we see no wisdom in conceding | no means be annulled so easily as the act itself. If] jarpe eatnuCabinente, late is aencerintendenta sated ; Toor | fate thereot, unless said vessels aball be scone? Teduived for bes of their country during her struggle for in General Pierce were more violently overbearing than | juve their own tempers and powers of endurance ed eyeerbewesistnreteee the public service: in which event, the party oF parties so Row, sir, I appeal with confidence te you if I have not to the eres Ey of Ler wegies allowing | : = ey to lemands it must utterly | we have reasou to think him, and were dispused to 4 Eesti her fndependence as an European power. The | justify the proceedings of the subordinate whom he mere ey Lippe Sayre leant br Nerd he Fore! Czar has done that which will wholly disturb the | ‘has commissioned, he would have less difficulty in | Kivced to work. I ain speaking only of what are | , Mf. Richard Tubal Lewis, many years a contri- | Texas, Fighth Peneatas relations and balance of power between the | finding a warrant for this outrage in the letter of the | yeally respectable houses. I am j ey say [| butor to the London press, and well known among | Plainer? Tebdta ceta navy, ls equally aa clearly proven, Ge certainly ts mos Ieading States of Europe: and we, must—aa we can | law of nations than in rectifying the false position {9 | cannot heur in these houses of ‘any the least encour- | the at propery.* from hia connection with the | s.tning trom slong cruise, 1s laid up ta ordinary; tho | This measure wan brought before the Senate by the exclusively to home interests; though, infact, of the publicists on the sabject of reprisals are hyn bp Senet wi an a ested Loe thavoauae cian Saloon, ed of ‘consa tion at his residence in Sopenen Tan versal teieg aloe ia ey mare et Bons of the Logins hp thea oot beter A maa terrence” is absolutely necesmry for the | toa degree which is not readily credited by taose | tnemmelves, and seem to make a use of it, under the | Hefetles Buildings, Lambeth, England, on the 4th | Slaton tat theaters “attached to her areconsidered | Feb. 16, 1862. “The amendment offered By Senator a e of Tec or — r mence. who are accustomed solely e actual practice of | circumstances, very much to their credit. I do not of April. He was in his 35th year. 8s abandoned by their government. The first Congress | a6 stated by him, ‘is in the terms of 1! ieee | rminat e de Rovigo’s trial has | nations; and we have not the least doubt that many | pelieve that there is any comparison between the Miss Edith Heraud, who has accepted an engage- | of Texas, by resolution, ‘‘adopted the laws for the govern- | from the Committes on Naval Affairs, which was accom< resulted in the acquittal of some of the prisoners, and | a text might be cited which would bear out the | numbers in these houses who are driven from pure | ment at the theatre of Southampton, England, has | ment ef the navy of the United States, as the laws for the | panied by a report.” It is ins bill from the Naval Com< ‘the condemnation of others to imprisonment, fines, United States in assuming a private grievance of | disgust to ways of shame and those driven to the | Produced a remarkable sensation. She Sppeared in| :poreetimant of pinsti gp retl If the officers of the | mittee, # oa ae: Riek mr orien, aheretiat 12 wee es cre oe “pee amd eens a = patra, abe! een But | the grave. ‘The materials are often of so expensive a | |,1he Lady of Lyons,” “Romeo and Juliet,” and | | oi oramary, then there is yomek temic te piiation caries part that this measure Was bee ee The Duke de Rovigo is prorat of ha ‘ied . sled ¥ ai rw ie st rpst beet t bi haan = ally fu nkg nature, so much cleanliness and neatness is required | ‘Love's Sacrifice. i United States ‘navy who, under the same construction Renate.” Jeon. aan e rest) vi e le “s iates him, the thee’ as been equ: false. | in “the hands,” that respectable young women only, The Good Woman in the Wood,” it sppears. has | now holds his commission legally. 7 The amendment is in these words Louis } ry ont hinquet, wae ap ota ent e Americans can at present gain nothing by vio- | gs q rule, would be received. f know it as a fact | ® host of admirers at the Theatre ye |, Dublin, ‘You say that “you doubt very much, from the evi- od "the latter cognomen composing the (a | lence. Nicaragua is too feeble to resent or | that many of these “hands” are daughters of men who pay their devoirs nightly to her Hawkins | dence you have, that they were so far regarded as offi- of the cities in which the Emperor won his Pag Oh bea and the affair can only end, oeuios ofthe highest professions. street. At the Queen’s, the dramas of “The Sol- | cers in the service tached geting cnn pay.”” ai , contracting shall be paid according to coutract for the time established, beyond controversy, that I was ie Theatricals. This act was spacorea Aer eare: 9 1844, (See Laws of | rightfully the commandin, ofhecr of the meaged re gress, page he or they may have kept them. a 5.) Can language be | tho date of annexation. t Texas considered she had im , viz.: Boulogne, Strasbourg, and Paris; besides | by the reinstatement of the Transit dier’s Progress” and “The f Hy In this statement you are entirely in error. hick, he was charged with pet He arms or warlike | Company, ah the restoration of sovereign power | _ There is already a talk of a remedy in the form of | had been produced. At Francon se Chene feapert are directly the reverse. ‘The officers coationed Seeing said ‘weapons in his pomamion, which, after all, only con- | to the Nicaraguans. But then what becomes of | # combination of some ladies of rank, whose inten- | ge France, the grace and agility of the Mdiles. Fran- | their pay, or s part of it, as there was money in the | pul tion to the United States sisted of the sabre which he had worn in the Great | British conspiracies on the Mosquito shore? Where | tion = er sence Cet a aa ee cont draw crowded houses’ On Wednesday, April | {ius ry P07 us rast vooaroee had sppropriated for | provided shat th to be incorporated shald Mapoleon’s service as a cavalry officer. M. de Plan- | is the amicable protection which was to shield Nica 6) Ae ine Amer’ | 13th, a grand equestrian soiree, with the comic | pey due all the officers of the Texas navy ‘at the time an. | There is certainly no attempt, in this amendment, “ ta was accused of having lightly spoken of the | ragua from the enslavement which England is pre- | Cas have English ladies heavily in their “books,” cle of “Don Quixote and San 7 "comma! ‘officers Emperor in a letter to a Belgian paper, which, after | paring for it, under the pretext of teuder concern but this I do know, that the money owed to milliners | were given by root of their Brovllonsien the Beate paula Dart ts censor ner tte ined Cartas yt ee iBtates i —— = all, has been pronounced a eh tle The’ other | for her savage protége? Itis as clear as the day | from certain rather exclusive circles is enormous. | Lord-Lieutenant and Countess of St. Germans. The | paid me » part of what was due me; the last tg . eharges are ai equally unfounded; and so | that the true policy of the party which wishes to | The heads of these establishments may well smile at | house was filled from pit to gallery long previous to | paid more than forty eight thousand dollars of back fs and ashamed was the government of its conduct that | convert Nicaragua into @ virtual dependency of the | ®Dy such agitation; they know their own er, | the rising of the curtain. pay due the officers of her late navy. the contrary, it Leo & Proposed to authorize oa it closed its doors, not only against reporters and the | United States—a party largely Tepresents in the | 20d can afford to treat any euch threat with con- Mr. George Hodson, from the Theatre Royal, Dub- ¢ very Congress that “passed an act that her ships | dent to nominate to the Senate those officers of the lata Fane hg against the leading magnates of the bar, | President's cabinet—was to keep the Creole anthori- | tempt. I firmly believe that love of dreas in one sex | Jin, a clever Irish comedian and vocalist, has Played should be laid up in ordinary,”’ also passed another act, | Texas Divya ey a lc amreeatn Tuerefnre hank ig M. Berryer. The decision of the court was | ties ina permanent exs of alarm at the medita- | has all the excitement, and works all the destraction | with much watural humor in the character of O'Slash, | ‘¢ Srst rection of bd KITE f fife: he Mere maine bie t aoriate tae res roy one that Messrs. Coetiogon, Planhol, Virmaitre, Flandin, | ted perfidy of Great Britain. But no assurances of | of principle, which gambling does in the other sex. | the Irish corporal, in “The Invincibles,” atthe Strand, ywerely appeonctated fortbepectooy | Btatee,’ if er ret bad Sees betes from and Aubertin, having introduced interdicted foreiga | the American government will now avail to prevent To such a pitch has this now been carried that what | Tendon. He wang “The Boys of Kilkenney, in a he ugross, A Journals, should be condemned to six months im- | the Nicaraguans from perceiving that their real dun- | Doblemen have ere now become to their trainers— | very spirited manner. The theatre was fully at-| *¢¢i06) I at and 200 francs fine, and the Duke de | ger fapente from their Peers neighbors on the | Mere servants—ladies of rank have become to fashion- | tended, y rs oer gay Mectuent tatioe eran oe te gard to that fact, and have made good my assertion, that , for the possession of arms, to one month | north, and not from the English colonial office, to | able milliners. The coaxing used to get early served, On Fri Bde 1 oa fob was | the statements made by you, reflesting upon my reputs- i D day evening, April 15th, the comedy of t ships be laid up in ordinary,” and which was t and 100 francs fine, with confiscation | which they are but a perplexity and a name. This ne aie ak of longer credit, have given “Marguerite” by Madzine Ticking, Gea revived the | appropriated to carry that act into eect. These appro- be cy Ue ed ‘urged to sustain them, are nof Pa bop and costa of prosecution. Louis | is oy understood on the theatre of affairs, where | these dealers in dress an ascendancy which will first | gt. James theatre, London, Maile. dan Magen priations are certainly very far from being indications | f°" Tsu, very, respectfully, your obedient ferrant, Ni already done a great deal of damage | the American denizens, who are multiplying im- | be really known when they are really put upon the haract that Texas had abandoned her navy. it to his political character; but we doubt whether any | mensely in Greytown, have been the first 7 protest defensive. No, sir, ** the hands” have nothing to look Megane Doche origisally gained great 4] tien it Shesthenn on duly en Doent the veel, from ae time = ae act, since the trials following the cowp d'état has | against the harshness of their naval compatrivt. | for from the class for whose vanity they have made | was a most ceful mation in the hands of the a ‘wore laid up in ordinary, under the setof Feb. 8, I Sr. Li ‘been, or is likely to prove, so detrimental to the Doubtless these gentlemen cherish the hope that | life a ay Miner The noble-hearted noble | young comedienne. M. Lafont has been playing in | 14 rom poate Be CUE ea Sin er eereiwa pis Wiese ead tare ot his government s this pseudo trial, of | Nicaragua will one day be as Anglo-Saxon as New | women who would take the lead in such a work are | some of his r Hom The peak of the ship Aastio and ihat | thieves and pickpockets particularly, of an Illinois Bot- of ular characters; he was announced to which we have just given a sketch. York; ‘but ‘they evidently comprehend the immedi- | Just those who have not the peculiar influence whish bn i fae, {on ihe tan fr eae ied tn this cit Few Chancellors of the Exchequer in modern days | ate difference hich will Ne de in their influence | would prevail. Those whom the worldthinks command Petavadisconedyce kane of Mi m Ae ot yoapses bates, ae rome ty aest prey rey ib cad orone most aN af or ene have shown such ability to cope with difficult ques- | and position by s premature instalment of aunexa- | the market in which these young lives are daily sold of March, 1846. For about three months from that.date, | Was dry guard from the outstart, and cultivated no tions, and exhibited sach real financial ability, as | tion. Hereafter they will probably be less indulgent- | #T¢ just those least likely to move in the matter; they he Minor Plan until they were relieved by Commander Hollins and other | scquaintances, nor stayed out after nightfall; but with Mr. Gladstone. His speech on the national debt | ly regarded than the once dreaded admiral of the | love the baable—personal adorament—too much % | o 45,1 ouR 0: nonce _ on officers, who were de' by the Navy Department, those | his hand on the breeches pocket containing hia wallet ‘proved him to beno ordinary man, and the develope- | English West India fleet, which has, it seems, been | care to ae to its cost. ef are too deeply in- | “own, LaKANGED te Suh CRD OF ane Dis- pr h A d a soliens Fs here yd if tthe pb roe tbe jiuonay iat eutaiday: Wise b.3—-4 ate ‘a - 7 = fhent last night of his scheme for the proposed al- | sent for. Meanwhile we have every confidence tat volved with the manufacturers of it to dare to quet | COveny “nogeriine WTTT fire ORE NO eee noe ere tr rounder waich ihe | pored the town to teeta, He retired at a reasonbly early in taxation, fully bear favorable | no reaction at Greytown, in favor of great Britain, | tion the method of manufacture. spenlea ‘our, but got up the next morning with the first crow of opinion. It apy s that the revenue for the year | will tempt the English commander into any act of The legislature should interfere ; a ten, or even pope Bg ee ee et OME bontolase of AEs mene -te toe other of- the cook, ‘The clerk riood quietly yawning himself awake ending April 6, 1853, amounted to £53,089,000, | indiscretion. England has not, and never has had, | twelve hours bill, applicable to trades in which more which the ficers on duty on beard the Texas vessels of war, having | behind the office counter, when onr friend, hatless and showing an apparent increase of £1,464,000, and | any sinister designs upon Central America ; and | than a certain number of women, between the ages | Ainor Planets Date of Name of drawn their pay from this government for about three | ecetless, arrived in the highest Cappo mage waite, showing a surplus amounting in round numbers to | Englishmen—the innocent scapegoats of so much | of 15 and 25, are employed, would touch the evil ; it | are Known, Discovery. Discoverer, months after those vessels were transferred, and com- parades apes baghody i be ee, in m abl ‘ miltions and a half sterling; and he considers | covetous ambition—have only to smile at the un- | would, I fear, onl ‘oe that much ; still, one step | Sx. menced wearing the fiag of the Union. I advised him not es, Aad, Teck," id tae Ole gale ond Mencury. to bring the suit, end predicted confidently that the court | coolnens. his contemplated changes, there will be a | toward accident which has rent through a web of | towards right is a blow at wrong, and Y jousand wa 1800 of mearia is tallnons, ‘The unpopa: | policy most industriously labored at, aud uot unin- | wrong, cigabiibis. ei ould not grant the mandamus agalant the Secretary of | trembling, | have Dene rea cal te bed, and now ite As fax, which he makes no sc ¢de- | geniously planned. vie Tia ty Cacwels De eat woe coer nanan hall hold y ible for it, sir—I look to ie 9 g no scruple ve & pate fs : . ficer of the pavy--Commander Brashear held no commission | gore. I shall hold you respons! r it, sir. | Rouncing a4 & ial evil, he proposes by degrees Tiss Wneldent, curious enough in itself, is a sample Foreign Miscetlany, asen officer of the U, 8. navy—and above all, Congress Ynchilegt 7 N err a at So phesdlesiny Kom — . é ' ‘ A in Dy Y actually smi ndiness 5 to , but meanwhile to extend it to all incomes | of difficulties {n which nothing but the utmost firm- It is rumored in Paris that Mrs. Howard, the late ids BD pe nirte ged Bae Corel kA wo os cite can't do;you_ did not deposit your money exceeding £100 annum, and to those in Ireland | ness and rectitude of judgment will save Presid<,t | mistress of the Emperor, is about to be married to ote: wuieg iton the money is to be paid, for | with me; in fact, you said nothing about having meney ps well a8 Great , 80 as to gain therefrom a| Pierce from getting himself seriously entangled. | the son of an English officer. She is worth 300,- —how could I, then, secure you against its loss? Oome, * “considerable increase of revenue. As regards its re- | Whatever were the Tirectiona actually communicated | 000f. a year. See ec malin tin soarionnerytine: ‘oeia bend stranger, ain't you piling iton a Leetle steep; sin’ you newal, he that it shall be renewed for two | to Captain Hollins, it is clear that he—and probably A reepectable merchant of the Rue Montmartre, cision was purely incidental. pleying somes rie gamef Come, now, it wontdo;” and at 7d. in the pound, for two years at 6d., for | every other agent of the United States—has been en- | Paris, expired lately, in the midst of frightful con- IT come, now, to that part of your remarks in which | sothe elerk sm ‘and jestod, and pleasantly denied all re~ | years more at 5d., and finally to expire in | couraged oy ee accession of a democratic chief ma- | yulsions, induced by having burnt the interior of his ‘ you went out of the record, and made, what I regret to | sponsibility, and lauj ingly hoped aoe bol earn | 1860, as not then required. The spirit duties affect. | gistrate to believe that arrogance in tone, and vio- | ear. Feeling an aching in his ear, he placed a 12, De Gasparis, of Naples. say, was an unjustifiable attack on my reputation, not | would wig anges fear og wat pie | ing Scotland he proposes raising 18. per gallon, and | lence in act, are the qualities of public conduct most | chemical match into it, forgetting, in the warmth De Gasparis, founded in lew or tact, aT will proceed to demonstznte, | be fears AGN eanvanted taki see normsetibe | those of Ireland 4d. per gallon, as well as to extend | palatable to his superiors. An impression of this | of conversation, to look which end he had put in. ind. a A de Oe oe mal Glebe? FONE Words, | Tiemma, to wit : an adsault and bettery on the clerk, or the legacy to others than direct legatees., This in. Kind, disseminated among the many servants of the | Unfortunately he introduced that which was inflam Oe err ed in tow, Tunderstand that, on the 19th of July, | the arrestor the whole household by the police. _ After crease, however, he would counterbalance by a Ae age federation + gel ee just approaching their new | mable,and, on rubbing his ear, combustion ensued. 145, the then President of Texas, now & Senater from that | the interview had pi ised for some tinae, the dad . . Houston,) dismian repeal of the soap duties, now producing upwards of | duties in all the rawness of inexperience, would | De, Alexander Mayer, a French physician, has Sian oetsteeg’ Git at ote the beast oftpats | came Sled with Moarters, any with th clerk, whey hav a @ million per annum, and all stamp daties on news- | be fraught with the worst forma of embarrassment, ‘ papers beyond 1d.; while, at the pe time, he sug- | at the moment when the condition of Mexico is pes ge rata ak ea otas e be 4 large reductions on those stamp duties affect- | likely to introduce disorder into all the continental be ith ~e in of obtainin head for all the advertixements, apprentices’ indentures and | relations of the republic. Santa Anna is by this | *)Vee ar oot ‘ch. fg gee Y on aa ts the aieeneye certificates; proposing great reductions, | time in Mexico, and it is abundantly evident, trom Prot fee M4 oy i that Pagel ‘ll cance aut 7 also, in the assessment taxes on carriages, horses | the térms of his reply to the deputation which soli- | means of Motion, and Tha he Wit soba Oe. Sule te and servants. ‘The hitherto very oppressive uniform | cited his return, that he, as usual, is disposed to make | eXbihit to t heat ~ ag gece ca fri any duty of 2s; 20. on te, 00, i to be reduced to s., by | veogeanoe on his enemies, and the reversal of the. Seat saat ot aa Wiad, Pee the purpets oF aS. 8. 10d. in 1854, 1s. 6d. in | policy, the sole objects of the government which he " d . : 1855, 1s. 3d. in 1856, and finally 1s. in and after at Cioatly pot nn ‘As the golden rule of his mestic use, or for the generation of steain for steam 1867. Repeals or reductions are also to be made in | decessors was peace at all price with the Uni engines. mearuro, from the naval rervice of Texas. I should bo fe Ing created enough suspense in the stranger's mind, pro- fitd/to learn from the Soastor from Texas whether that is | 198 created coh vag et io ead Gores oct a fi —That was the understanding of the Execu- | $1,000 in bank bills. As the other stared silently at him 1 ghter.) in'stupid astonishment and gratification, the clerk re- -- Goldschmidt, Germany. EARCE—Then Iam not mistaken with rogard to that | marked : ‘Stranger, let ve yous ‘of advice. - find. nd I take it that itisfrom his asriduous and perse- | The next time you stop at ahotel, don’t hide your money - Hind, vering application, more than from any other thing, that 0 ‘ty, and then, in moment of ab- this mesture is now brought before us. That officer, who | i your boots for security, end thon, ite Tikes, O° we = vad I now understand from. the honorable Senator | straction, set them out in the ball to be blacked. Sir William Herschel. » Texas, dismissed from the navy of Texaa, in 1843, is, | thing had really occurred as thus explained. The ) F Galler of Beclin, by | DY that amendivent, to be put into the navy of the United | strarger, fearing always to be robbed, bethought himself Jireetion of Le Verriog, | States, over te heads of forty lioutenants, ninety com | of his boota, as the piace, of all the world, ¢ rafost Ita tL t Oo stall iH outrank! his the duties on foreign butter, eggs, &c., and no less, | States, it may be presnmed that the conduct of 5 A circular has been issued from the war office, of Paris, MMe Tiie he let the tefvice ot’ the Univad states. EnisT | cOneeal his money. After dismissing, Mult grantor, sare altogether, than two hundred and fifty articles of | Anna will be regulated by considerations of a England. stating that the Secretary-at-War does | Geant owe ee consider as a gross outrage upon the naval service ere rome vata biseked, and accordingly, taking the consumption; so that there is no doubt if not of t posite complexion. not der it expedient to admit newspapers into | . ANoTHER Victim OF THE MICHIGAN Rarinoap It was unfortunate for the officers of the late Texas | to have his boots blacked, ] 8) an po Aes the sts ‘of the middle and lower ore! apes of rep Deatng that mh i the catalogue furbished to military libraries, but | AccioENt.—Coroner Hines held an inquest on the body of | navy that Senator Rusk, of Texas, was atvent from the ae seme pei, phage toned fest flys all, pogat “4 classes be materially improved srengin wttich has already cost Mexi: he will not object to their introduction into the Joie tea rmeint thes. ake epmah io, "et ny ‘the propeiaton Vink; #1 the stove rewerks were = rb hip slomabe e next morning, forgetting him- actment of the measures of relief proposed by Mr. | and of launching her on a struggle whi reading-room if obtained by means of a small yol- | Peavinn of the Michigan Central and Michigan Southern | ard that he knew pothing of them un‘ atter the voto | self, he folt persuaded that he, had placed his wallet un- | Gladstone. OF course, he cannot expect to end in her extinction or dismembe t g the soldiers, upor the jaitrond trains, whieh bapyened near C ‘on the Joth teen. He came in just in time to Wave hia vote re | der his pillow, but honest “boots” had apprised the all, nor will all be pleased by any commandtag ’ h roads clerk of his very end deoosited with “him his fink + chat op the 16th cf July, 1848, the fetter to | ings—S¢ Lew Hqmtiteun, April 26, we are dispoed t tion whatever; Lut

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