The New York Herald Newspaper, April 4, 1854, Page 4

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NEW YORK: HERALD. | JAME® GORDON BENNEYT. disposing of a large quantity of business, some of | MiLLanp Firtuors’s Paoonsss iy rie Soure, |. which was of cousiderable Lnportanee. — The | Coun” | —Every Southern mail we receive brings fresh adopted resolutions eppropriating #ix hun | geeounts of the triumphal progress of ex-Presi- CALIFORNIA BASIN, WITH thetr yard at Hoboken, to-day, at ‘half-past ono 0'e o:k, A REFUTATION OF Tus cilmen nena: a POPULAR THEORY OF THE NORTHERN ORIGIN OF “ | the clipper: schooner C. G. Waterbury. She # intenied . Ae Grande, is | sand dollars for th ‘ THE AZTECS OF MEXICO. rs a Gra tandetamrs sna beictel ps aga | os =. — ne eee ie Ped | dent Fillmore through the Southern States. for the Southern trade, and will be commanded by Capt. The April meeting of the Elbnological Gail y was ethers oa gras sesiarndbiems in detail in ‘BPMICR 8. W. CORNER OF FULTON AND NASAU STS. | a scsi pica nt cenkinitheseibapsro. He has been received with enthusiasm at Louis- | Cook. J held on Saturday evening last, the 1st inst, a! tho rooms | my! pesvonal parrative. ‘The Pragya cat the_ Sena estan, er oes | ~ ry as raillon:-caid RAMI Mice A ot asa ville, Kentucky, and Memphis, Tennesee; and Paine ween ap romper virat Oe of Mr. E. G. Squier, in Froaklin street. Modérs. Andreas ag ae aes ey i bud THE WEERLY DERALD secry Setirdeay te dic coeuts | These were atterranta “Gtneneten it by the Alder: | We learn by telegraph that his reception at | oT the new an Scomnintttag Soda ‘S| Poey, of Havana, and Buckingham Smith, Ba., late | same cudition whem Vislied by Father King in 1699; ‘Ber copy, or $3 per annum: the Lvropean Bdiiiom A peran- | wis majorit Acaniecett ‘ts of the | New Orleans was equally gratifying to himself > arrangement y- Secretary of the Leyation of the United States in Mexico, and the story among Indians of the. Was that See ie ons pait of Great Britain, and $toany part oftie | men. The majority and minority reports of the | 4 Vhts aaa Pes iH nee sis ai: ‘Tne Revenue Scuooner W. L. Mancy, Capt. Carnell, | were elected corresponding members. A new work, in LU ood mpeg wl ae by the Senne 1 cle 1a t e Qu ° 3 i. B. r - “ wundred miles > SFOLUNTANY CORRESPONDENCE, containing impor. | Commnittee on Lands and. Places, to whom was re- : pi Aj s. ; ee we a : be suisse fi ss andes eee ae: quario, by Hesers. J.C. Nott, M-D., of Mobile, and Goo. | inthe State of Chikealta, is another and the most deal cin cid from any cuartey ofthe world wet, | ferred the matter of curtailing the dimensions of , dresses to the people at these various places | tion in bor Francisco, wan. ot: St: R. Gliddon, Beq., entitled “Types of Mankind,’ was laid }- southern collection of roins whieh. belong: to the same Le : the Central Park, were both rejected by the Conn~ have been effective and highly popular. There | tines on the frst of January. A letter recelved from her | ycfore the society and elicited considerable remark, as | pecpless those Lhave described. They Casas | cilnen, after an exciting debate—for a report of | is more meaning in this movement of Mr. Fill- | ON" in omett adap os tres ee te | constituting, probably, one of Sa Se ES wos xis esan fown neat alco zara th amo Damo of Casas mn. <A resi it i * . . proceed ~ the t archeological and ethnological joms of eR, ay add it given consider- | forthe anvecation of Beokipn aut, Wiltamatarg | Noreand the manner in which i> has been | shear Cre ov Gascon —TWis wnt no log | the day tat has appesol fr ay years i ns Fany | ADM te wl aera Te Thue guia tga ta New York, was oped Teva than appears upon the auvfice. Be) sit ven, ta ne re ariel nont | reunion pyre yagassan | Rhy nd oa a aa nd } acre te mA apts | fore the last Presidential election, Mr. Fil'more | in the Boston papers, that a large propeller was ashore at | 4, 14 the hitherto unpublished papers of the late la- | tohave ed toa single edifice, connected by corri- “k, Tuesday, April 4 ‘We have received an account by telegraph of the | possessed the support of the bulk of the South- | Vineyard Sound. and which it was Somme might prove ted Dr. Saml. G. Morton, of Philadelphia, who may, | tors nd courts. From its ‘appearance and mode ae amie ec result of the great race at New Orleans on the lst ara | to be the City of Glasgow, turns out a false report. The | ™em' ee ety h vt > | of building Tattribute it to the same civilized people of perhaps, be regarded as the founder of positive philoso- phy in the United States. Dr. Morton was one of the original members of the society, and one of the contri- butors to its published transactions. which I have been speaking. In the course his remarks Mr, Bartlett drawings of the rains and of the Indian pueblaa to, and entered into details of each. We omit these de- tails for want of the illustrations. mistake is supposed to have been caused by the pro- | ern wh‘ gs; and had it not been for the opposi- | peter Martin Hoffman haying anchored at Holmes’s Hole. | tion of the Seward men in this State, he might have been nominated even in opposition to the | of the New York inst. Lexington, of Kentucky, was the winner, in two straight heats. Special attention is directed to the proceedings Herald for the 1854, INTELLIGENCE FROM BoENos AyrEs.—Captain Crowell, of profusely illustrated by maps, plans and drawings, which the origin of the Aztecs of Mexico. it is of course impossible to reproduce in this report:— The extraordinary influx of advertisements this ern Mexicc—that along the San Mi or Cazas Grander 5 — it if ile hel Mn. Fusnorr’s Tovr.—The citizens of Mobile helda is pond meeting on the 27th ult., and unanimously passed a re- dignity with which he has sustained his rejec- tion by the Whig Nominating Convention, and The steamship Baltic, with four days later intel- of the American Ethnological Society, inc'uding the illustrious soldier round whom the whigs subse- | 9 p. Wing, from Buenos Ayres, Feb. 4, reports pro- | After the general business of the soctety was disposed | Such, in brief, is the character of this semi-ctvilization, | instructive aud entertaining paper read by Mr. Bart. quenily rallied. Since that time, Mr. Fillmore | quco as very scarce and high. Tho state of goverament | of, the subjoined paper was read by Hon. J. R. Bartlett, | nd of Us enieal, pyri ones Ole pel lett, late Mexican Boundary Commissioner, relative has lost nothing in the North, and seems 10 | affairs was very quiet; peoce and harmony seem to pre- | late Commissioner for running the boundary between the | oom to have croseed a brow, donee eo Keine i which aes q . : i Pang : 7 ., . " leo. 5 tts paper was the means of estab- a to the inhabitants of the great California basin and ave gained popularity in the South. The vail in that place. United States and Mexico. Mr. Bartlet per negara ot the most vesutifal valley of North. A, river, where the extensive ruins found. Kigence from Europe, not arr three ar F / In the paper which I shall read to the Etinological So- | That you may better understand where this district is morning obl to omit t t of matt ‘ ; iti im! hat ci zee ora sa Ne - " o'clock He ems. bevever, her arrival can me ame pauindca ‘ake smnount or marier | the uniform propriety of his subsequent public | *lution, inviting Mr. Fillmore to visit that city. ciety this evening, I propose devoting myself to two sub- a ve agmatine oe pint hardly be looked for with any degree of ty as oe Ee life, recommend him powerfully to the support Personal Intelligence. jects, the discussion of which being strictly ethnological, valley docs pores “A ‘thin the contemplated line. and properly did not belong tomy journal of explora- ‘Lei us now see whether there is yet, owing to the fact that she could not have tions, connected with the boundary commission, yet the Commander J. Hosken, (captain of the Great Britaia any connection be- when that vessel went into Dundram Pay,) has been ap- northern district of enlightened whigs throughout the country. tween the people or the edifices of this The Cutting and Breckenridge Affaly—The | reached Liverpool until the Saturday night previous * 5 ine fe : True Solution. Should they ever again rally for a combined | pointea to command the Belleisle, twenty-four, troop and the Aztecs of Mexico, or the arts they had acquired. vertised day of saili » following Wi ft ‘ iu ", facts stated, and conclusions arrived at are the result of ola to her advertised doy of suiling—the folloving Wed- | Fo, quietly suggesting, the other day,that Gen, | effort, Mr. Fillmore has, after Gencral Scott, the | silp,commissionel for service ae en hospital spin at | TO TA, NN “a sunleols axe the an- | of etnetee pie. a ete cee a peal 2a hi reeieye ta ee 1 ia , oo | Pierce was the invisible agency which impelled | best chance of any one for the honor of being poe mptemmcr. A. D. Bache left, Chariéaton on thé Sist ult., | cfent and modem. sembsivilisation af Che,eboeigtaal, pba the valley ol. MexiaiAe ye time of the conquest, ALSALES season of @ year, e _ . - 's A " :. . the en ment of air. utelle, on James’ Islan t Cali on as been, that came trom a country called Aztlar Mr. Breckenridge, of Kentucky, to undertake | their canilidate for the Presidency. The Ne- | hee ets ongiget intuetrangulstion of this part of | zee in the great California basin, and the migration of | Has been, ee Rhee thee fates 4 Aztlan, skably unpropitious, and of valley of ably unpropitious, and o! Mexico in the year 11€0, This Aztlan has been placed by present has been he Aztecs or ancient Mexicans. late the swiftest steainers of the different lines have | the delicate and dangerous task of questioning | braskn bill has swept many of his rivals from | 4°: 5 coters, member of Congressfrom Maryland, | In the district of country bounded on the east by tho | many historians north of the gat of California, because, deen from thirteen to sixteen ¢ in making t the honesty of another member of the House of | the field. Mr. Everett, whose store of negative | is said to be | ngeungereasle: a aa Seva Reeky mountains, the west by the Colorado river, the ni Bieis aretatlons, as Ray ye Sole ese: they Voyage between the Old and the New World. Rep ntatives in the parliamentary course | merits and popularity was large a year ago, He iT, Miller, Washington; Dr. RA. Kinlocis’ Charles: south by the river Cila, and extending northward about = nba paterson y Bo aan wet 1 pdt three hundyed miles, ihere exist many Indian tribes, which have attained a higher rank in civilization than any other aborigines of the North American continent north of the valley of Mexico, where Cortez found the ton, 8. €.; Hon, A. Howland, Auburn; Hon. ’J.. Knox Walker, Memphis, Tenn.; Hon: J. K. Porter, Albany; W. L, Cohens, T. Savinon, Manuel Goutier, Capt. Devere, St. 700 miley north of Mexico, while Botusinl says it was & rovince ant ds the mm the long > Rinsula of Califernia, and Ahonos by boats serossthe pall Vaduces & verily of ovitieaes ae eudtain which he had thought fit to pursue upon the Nebraska bill—for daring to intimate that has committed suicide by pursuing the course addition to the numerous detentions to steam 7 he did on that measure; he lost the South toa immense ficlds of floating ice, b wi Is and heavy seas recently recorded, we will mention the | General Pierce may have been responsible in | man by his speech, and alienated the bulk of | Domingo, arrived yesterday at the St. Nicholas. remarkable tribes which wero 60 prominent in Mexican | to Culiacan. He a fact that.the City of Glasgow has been out thirty- Derebbcl ipg ied beg eee paige ‘ Frank 'M. Pisley, Son Francisco; Captain Chadwick, | [inory. Mhe civilization of the former was peculiar and | hia theory, which it is not neccesary for me to repeat. Sta sess ogl fla: DAMA the the premises—the Nuw York Heravp was as | his friends by his shirking the vote. General | 1yme, Ct.;8. R. Roe, West Point; Hon. G. Pliss, Spring | distinet from the latter, and the difference is as marked | ‘Torquemida and others agrce with Boturiai in finding an five days fram Liverpool for adelpMa, ane ©) sailed by the Cabinet organ at Washington, in | Scott and Mr. Fillmore, who have fortunately | “eld; H. Sherman, Poughkesptie; A. Wells, Sr. Utica; | he the ekill which cheracterizes the wigwam ani tho | 8m of the sea, or great ziver, repregented in all the an- most painful apprehensions are beginning to per- g aay ’ Y | Capt. Waterman, California; R. Loomis, Troy} C.S. Cole: | stately edifice. The northern tribes of which | Clent paintings of this migration; while tho Abbe Clavi- vade the minds of those having friends on board in terms so coarse and malignant as to astonish been beyond the reach of the Nebraska hurri- a i Sesioes goniartins at the Astor fo qoaa, | 1, 8m specking cultivate the soll; they raiso Perit get sibeet s bapa OB no prtrege gapped eed * ‘ . na orale So i a ea ¥ on. James B. Bowlin, St. Louis; Hon. C. §. Todd ‘i t i i other ie esentation o! uy regard to her probable fate. every dispassionate reader of the two sides of | cane, stand a better chance than those who | of Kentucky, formerly Minister to Rassia; Captaia May: | Wheat penne ieee ey ed into garments to | painted in the Mexican pictures, before the beginning of The returns thus far received of the election | the question. have confronted it. nard, San Francisco; Judge Hopkins, Alabama; Lardwin cover their bodies, horses and cattle, and they erect their eir migration. Yet the learned Abbe, while: “/ mike ak ry Mae is hi i u Gibbons, U. 8. Navy; Charles Rowe, Valparaiso, wore | own dwellings, of greater or less capacity. In their pot. | the Aztecs came from Aztlan, and that it wag situated which tock place in Connecticut yesterday, show | But the very violence of the Washington or- | From his position in the South it will be among the arrivals yesterday at the Metropolitan Hotel | Peries mad household implements, tov, they aro before ali | north of the Californian gulf, carries ‘to Mexico - that the whigs have greatly gained upon the vote of | gan in this matter—the uncalled for wrath and | guite easy for Mr. Fillmore, on his return home, | ,,2 Heirneman, Boston; I. Sampson, Va.; Col. thomp- | others. No aboriginal tribes found’ in other parts of | by another route. He takes them across the Colorado river 5 ; pelos ree oa “ag , son, Fa.; J. Keatsck, N, ¥.; Thos. Denny, Mass., arrived | SUer*, No, sboriginal “hee sexicans alone excepted, | north of the latitude of thirty-five degrees, thence ‘to- Jast year. From present appearances it seems pro- | indignation which it has vented upon this jour- | to organize a streng party of national conser- | yesierday at the Prescott. have attained ‘the rank of theso tribes. Many ‘other priory south-east, es Gila, nara \ ve ascendancy i 2 S © i i i " $ ARRIVALS. 4 if st for some ;, for at cont “are are, standing 4 e he Presiden: as only served to clinch the a1 Marshall an: ly, Mrs L Blair, Capt SG Rogers, theit - on. tbe, lors at river.’ ¥ of the democrats in the previous body. v he do so we are far from thinking that the | Pith LW Pomuerton. Jos G Clarke, UL © Aide, John B gion Troma eralets f thee eractel tartan spacious edi. | them to the Casas Grandes, in C ua, where thero hihuahy are extensive ruins, which I visited and have de- nail in the confirmation of our opinion. It has phalanx he could win from Seward would not DM Smith,'T Whitlock, Capt T A , D. Bli io ta palin os A ng | . ; | fices. “Hence, this civilization of the California basin is Hon. T. D. Eliot, whig, is believed to have been | yeen made plain by the foolish anger of the Ca- | equal the éntire strength of the free soil whigs | © dwell TH Rogers, HD Johusog-10 in thestecrasy’ | peculiar, andl will add that I believe it to be indigenous, | scribed. This edifice,-he cays, to the uni- elected to Congress in the firet district of Masta- | ys ot orean that we neh he’ aanats vic From Shanghae, in clipper ship Wings of the Morning—R | — The trites to which I refer vary somewhat in tho ex- | versal tradition of these people, was built by the - chusetts, in place of Mr. Sendder, resigned. ee at we did hit ic most vul- | of this State. At all events the party would | West, Esq, Salem. tent of their knowledge of the arts alluded to. This in | cans in their p tions.” othe eae nera! oni . inholling the | pe divided, and the two divisions would regard | phi? Be2o# Ayres, in brig R Wing Gilman, JohuHt | a heasure may be attributed to their peculiar localities, | | ‘The theory of Clavigero and other writers, based chictiy ‘The members of both hovses of Congress appear | 7" sible for, the ‘S¥tratirdisia- ? 8 From Bermuda, in brig Tornado—W R Higginbottom, ac | their necessity for clothing and forcomfortable dwellings, | on the existence of extensive rains on the Colorado, each other pretty much asthe hards and softs among the democrats now do. How they would stand at an clection remains to be seen: but All these ‘villages, or, as is sometimes the case, a community of several ‘hundred souls will occupy a single or connected building. When the latter mode is adopted the building is constructed on the same plan; usually Tyne, A Perreuchiet. ibes live in communities, either in compact Court of Oyex and Terminer. OPENING OF THE TERM. ‘to have been in a particularly good humor yesterday. In the Senate ¢ 1C ifered another petition | ! I and adopted by the learned; and more among whom I tion the dis have designated théce fuine as tho rsh second and th of l the é Gila, and in Chihuahua, has been extensively Bropagated Mr. Breckenridge. Had: there at, n our suggestion—ne plausibility, i ‘in favor of religious freedom to Americans abroad, first, second and stopping places of the Aztecs. There fs Sy and gave notice of his desire to make a speech on sbability of public belief, from the plain | while itis very doubtful whether Mr. Seward Piers vere es alan hee oe ere ety tet three Maes “otk hollow square, or raised on the | ahow that if ever cstablished in Upper Cailforni, they the subject three weeks hence. Remonstrances 1¢ of common sense—it would have | is makingany progress, it is quite clear that of several of Shem, the rem of the Suj ma Court was summit of an eminence where this moral (form is Lo oes Moab resp pene fate parallel, or any 2 Nebrasl ill we re: 5 } SPER Par R 4 crowded to excess yesterday mor rge numbers | not néces: . These but 3 consist of several stories. here else. were there; and, ergo, against the Nebraska bill were presented by the | passed wholly unnoticed by the adwinistration, | Mr. Fillmore is advancing with no mean | of spectators and counsel, aixious towitneas the arraign. | The first story has no entrances or doors in the exterior | Aztecs who came there from the north, built them. Massachusetts Senators, and resolutions calling upon | ov with but a word of good tempered ridicule | strides sneut of prisoners. wall. Its top is reached by small ladders, which aro | , It is singular that so diligent a student. as Clavigero ‘the departinent for information concerning different from the administration organ. On the other s Ll SoS ES EE hs toa see wey a Lyra ed creer tp to drawn up ater he alle? ascended. Se eo Cat bee rere r tap mea eae ie a. 3 ei a Fa | be eae a . mn e and suitors. :—Before usi- | then recedes a few fee! wing a galler; aroun manuseri; preserved Mexico in matters were adopted. Considerable debate trans: | yo5q aiusive aud scurrilous protestations of | MR. Bewton’s Vore on THe Navy But.—We | nessihave to make ncommunication {othe bar and | which are doorways to tho several apartments. the | Dtnted books, in contained accounts of other pired with regard to the resolution regulating the |." ’ Fi be C san np | eee that Mr. Benton’ voted agafnst ‘the appro- suitors. In consequence of the assignment of Judge Ed- | third story is reached in the same manner, by Ind- Pen edifices a shout the California basin and in appointment of cadets to West Point, but after two | immocence ar almost invariably the device of gine ‘} gal wards to the Court of sr this year, and the pro- | dere, when another gallery or terrace occurs, with door- vate Regard ag A Ng eee as those the euilt arty, wh the facts and the evi- | Priation for the construction of six new war | tracted illness of Judge Mogris, three courts haye to be | ways to every apartment as before. Tho first or lower | Which he attributes 5 he. done so, his ineffectual attempts to procure aquorum to vote on | Hie guilty party, when the facts and the evi- | little of held here at the same time, by one and the same Judge. Mory in entered by trap doors from above. theory would have demolished itself, for instead of three an amendment, the body went into executive ses- | dence ave against him. | steamers. Mr. Benton can be but little of @ | yshali commence with the business of the epecial term, | _ A brief account of some of these singular pueblas will localities or ae laces for this people in a direet line A “ ia -Ghiteclonbatw Mr: Guiting i Mr, | statesman, and must be blind indeed to the | ©f which one branch has been continued inte this month, ive you an idea of their extent. we described by | from tho far nort! would have found traces of the sion and then adjourned. | As entirely tween Mr, Cutting and Mr. rege 4 which will take some fifteen minutes, after Which I will jeut. Simpson, in his narrative of Colonel Washington’s | 8ame arts extending from the Colorado to the Pecos. He Mr. Cutting, alter a week’s absence, resumed his | Breckenridge, was ihere any cause for the of- | Condition of the world and the situation of open the special term that was tohave, Yeon held by | expedition to.the Navajo country, are among the most in- wont Boom Jaye found ralna through shoe states, : . * b rf ‘mal 4 ve ve 6 me kis Hopes whol ee seen meget daring | fensive reprimand which the latter thought fit peas commerce, rae seis om a that cer ey any rate, and then the Court of Over Iranth of the fan Tuan, aad aze in rule ‘The ua - ery aii tions, wi a early part of e day on the bill to regulate an Q inister “mer s Nel i sin, ie navy Oo! ie Unite and Terminer wi commenced. © Puel intado, built of tabul jeces of De : There is no lence W an pela sails eee RSME 6 as re d | to administer to the former upon this Nebraska | C&ssity Of increasing os ‘A motion was made at Special Term bythe Attorney | gray limestone, was tee stories high, and coutaiaed on | connection between the semi-civilized tribes of which we ly o aries postmasters. | question? None. Both these members ave ia- | States. General to dissolve an. injanetion in relation to the sale | the ground flocr Aity-four apartments’ some of them not are speaking, and thoso of the valley of Mexice. There G Teast resemblance in their edifices, norin vie of ornament. ‘Their manners and customs, = magi rites and ceremonies, are equally:at ep they possess nothi in.common. there no affinity between aise hapesgar of any ot ae nume- f of bonds and mortgages of the Bank of Oswego. Set down ee ne for 10.A. M. to-day. RAs Meneties— Dante herk YAeea—Resisonts | s Grandduss dow ae Oyer'ead Simcariamenpere dik: | along the route of the New Haven Railroad, this side of | charged for the term, and the Petit Jurors in attendance the dividing line between thia State and Connecticut, | were ordered to be present to-day at 10 A. M. more than five fect square, and the largest twelve by six. The Puebla Wegi-gi had a circuit of seven hundred fe and contained nincty-nine apartments on the first floor. The Puebla Una-vica had a circuit of nine hundred and ninety-four fect; the Hungo Pavie a circuit of eight’ After several unavailing efforts to amend, by in- telligent, high toned and amiable gentlemen. - It is not the habit of either lightly to arraign and impugn the motives of other men, or to F cy ereasing the price of postage, &c., the bill was passed. The body refused to euspend the rules for ° the purpose of receiving a resolution instructing i ‘ eslion the straig ran i have f ti t lain t th ARRAIGNMENT OF PRISONERS. hundred and seventy-two feet, with seventy-two rooms | Tous tribes north of the Gila and those of theancient ~ inquiry to be made respecting the propriety of | Westion the straight forward explanations eee oeaineen en the obese named |", Deunis O°Connor, John O'Conner and Hugh Connor, | upon the ground floor. The Puebla Chettro-kettle, a | Mexicans or Aztecs, Ma granting land or money to asaist in constracting a | Which they may volunteer in behalf of their | imposition prac upon them by | indicted for the muzder of Michael Conroy, on the 17th of | circuit of 1,800 feet, with 124 apartments on the ground ae Id nabalbhe in Mieawians: of affinity in language, company. This road appears to be managed entirely for the advancement of the interests of property holders in floor. These several buildin, in manners and customs, arts and ries, one receding from the ‘were of three or four sto- blanco religion, that renders the last December, pleaded not guilty. ‘'rial was set down { : peel shy er, and all built of stone. ship canal around the Falls of conduct. The motion of Mr. Cutting to refer the 1th inst. gara, Resolutions tion of the Astees from were adopted requesting information relative | the Nebraska bill wasstrictly parliamentary— | Connecticut, for which purpose aro ide | Anna Marin Dorching, charged with killing her child | Near the letter ia ruined edifice, about 1,500 feet in | the farncrth so doubtful. ‘There are physical difficulties : te ; 3 " purpose the sateiof faroAlts aide’) “Tit a hatchet. ‘The Court said. this’ cas be cireuit, which has been four stories high, with 199 rooms | Which render it improbable, if not impossible, to the prosecution of the persons alleged to | the usual motion in such cases. His reasons | of theSiate line ix about double what it is beyond, AU | Posed of very shortly. The aman wae beeed tons | onthe pround floor, Allowing cach story to recels as | ‘That the Axtecs came Inst from Caliscan, a. country pordering: on hae Lie of agen te fore Ped known as lechoncan, loubtless true, an it may left a place known as Astlan 1s also probable, tut go ane have been instrumental in the burning of the steamboat Martha Washington on the Missis- before, and the upper spartmente to correspond with. those below, this building contained not less than 641 iments. Two miles beyond this are the ruins of a | that the New York public ask is to be put on a par with the people of Connecticut. Fvom this city to New Ro- Insane. It appeared that she had no counsel, but one for it were rational and consistent; and whether ] was provided for her. Her case was set down for to-day. sippi, some two years ago, in consequence of which several lives were lost, and asking propos cents to Southport, a place nearly twice the distance. | house. “His trial was set down for Thursday, the 5th Seer: sot 3 a é* 2 ’ ~ | venture to say that Mr. Breckenridge is not | ye object of 1h tac 4 nat | inst. The defence in this caso is insanit; “ip A mis The puedla of Taos is one of the most remarkable now | Yersed the desolate and inhospitable regions which sepa- for the official correspondence respecting the release ¢ object of euch unjust discrimination will be see: i y ? ‘ ‘i " te th: th i os . pec pean oe RYE: ny E ue ss 7 er appears to have been laboring under ai ack of de. | existing. It consists of an edifice 409 feet long by 50. | rate that State from Northern Mexico, can possibly be- the man in such a case, without a power- | aglance. A Dillis now before the Legislature requiring } jirium tremens at the time. wide, and is divided into Jong ranges of apariments, one | lieve Aztlan to have been there, and that the Aztecs mi- ful influence behind the scenes, to under- | the New Haven Railroad Company to graduate therates | The trial of the two Doringers, charged with arson in | above the other, forming a pyramidal pile of 60 or 60 ES Brgy 8 Mithput some, better cause than we ow of. astatement of the ¢ Ingraham, together it.did or did not agree with the plan laid down | by the administration party in the House, we take the presumptuous task of lecturing the cheile the fare is fifty cents, while it is only fifty-five of fare equally throughout. It has been read twice in Archibald Murphy, charged w'th the murder of G. W. Field, by a blow from a knife, in a Water street porter first cegree, wan set down for Tuesday, the 11th inst. Pleaded not guilty. The trial of John M. Finarty, also still larger building, called the Ponasca Blanca, having a circuit of 1,700 feet. feet, and five or six stories high. ‘This great building, it is said, affords habitations for 500 or 600 people. who has visited the beautiful val aot Californis. a breathed its delicious atmosphere—no one who has tra- Let us imagine for a moment some thot or even | | . Pug per Sis pe EE fon ae . dt +. loctipo | Ue Senate, and we hope it will be put through at once, | ceased with arso: t down for Wednesdi 1 The second class, where the tribe or community live | some hund: of Inc wr Aztecs we will call them— hich «¢ pets 4 : ; che ta for a greater imposition than that practised by this com- | 12th. Thoeameplm villages, consists of buildings gencrally of one sory, | Jeaving the feri al climate of Cali- tions upon which said release was effected, | intr clable member as he did. His lecture ; ised by thi P uy, the | Math Of Wella r Pig sic A | leaving the feriile valleys: and eulubrious r nent was created in the House by | reads, from beginning to end, like a proclama- | pany upon the travelling public of this State we know Mao: — of John Wilson, charged with the murdor of ae sometimes oftwo. When of the latter, the cniranee prs ee eat pret Ege latitude of Los‘Angeles Mr. Campbell, a free soil whig from the Third dis- | tion “by authority.” Was it not so? Isit pro- | not of. That part of the road located in New York is betred on Friday, Benne hea oe ote Chjeat af thin oto render them yotectiy iota to ‘ean inetiog. Lf ‘ew inated aps ge trict of Ohio, who, perhaps with the idea of for- | pable that these two sensible and prudent | under the jurisdiction of our Legislature, and we trast William and Clara Hi 8 were then for the | 9 ford them protection gare 3 ores thee Nallons peyshe agg Ser Lis of warding the rumored intentions of Senator Seward | men ¢. a 7 eae} Rennints | the company will not be permitted to swindle this com. | Murder of Dr. er, in January last. Haya is a | wellings more secure, they are upon 5 are at distances apart, and nd John alliphel, destredrto introduce a resolution | ers see have been iy of any lleusive | suns, in fhe nay refered to, much longer. ‘The whl wotiy woman, of mir height, and very tastefully falta syea.plcteon snore, hace: le antinan tra" Coat] seman the quotaotiny riawoneteriak wenuncuamteese sequesting the President to open negotiations with | Pon" ties in a mere difference of opinion be- | concern ix a Comnacticut monopoly, and a nuisance in | to the ultimate nequittal of herself and husband, Soon | NOr rock {o conceal an caemy. ‘These people often | the desolation increases. ‘They havo a district of mot lone England eat sai ahis Sle u ob abenvindatite ak what tween themselves concerning an ordinary mo- | the sircets of this city, and it is time some restrictions at entering ven ops | she let fall her veil, evi- accel ry eles oo coacann h nity = eight hundred ke Generel miles pie Severee, , s f N ‘ ‘ . | dently annoyed at the gaze of so many spectators. a @ adjacent co where rugged mountains and through intricate valleys, Gabiiia tha’ ,lakies ‘ Gaveetimatth: Wi jodilmato tae tion before the House? No. The chivalrous | were placed upon its privileges. We look lo the Legisla. Mersrs, Whiting and Bustoed preachy behalf of | they may establish a lookout and place Ae iieatinet with Jang dinianets without water, and where, ong " . bic. Mr. C.re- | Kentuckian was in the meshes of the adminis- | ture for the proper remedy. the prisoners. to give warning if an enemy should apprpach. | {t would be almost impossible fora of fi ah Dae Maes, eben ane Raat OE do woe Abie ta Werk: ead pie ‘The District Attorney said he should set this case down | The edifices of these are sometimes of | men to find subsistence. Peninsula of Lower Cali- fusod to accept an amendinent to include Cuba, but | ‘ation—he was doing its work; and had he suc- EQuARE—SuAL, If ne Croseo’—-White | "the third Monday of the term. In some of the other | Stone, well lafd up in FRGAS Jarees, without mortar; | fornia was colonized a century before Upper California; had no objection to incorporating Nova Scotia and eeeded in lashing the refractory New Yorker LOOMINGDALE £QUs ESI 5 s *@ | cases the witnesses had been detained for a long | others are of sun baked brick, or of whatis known in bet gg hy taken, vast sums were expended, ¢ 2 FRE YTRS é : | we are endeavoring to increase the number of our pub. | period } and besides, one of the witnesses in this case was | Mexico as adobes. ‘This brick, or adobe, is made in | and valuable lives facrifced in colonising this country: New Brunswick. After debate, the House rejected | into submission and obedience, it would all | i, parks, certain partics are making strenuous efforts to Confined Tart week, which would prevent her present | monlds, baked in the sun, and x foyer’ $e perencs Sty ale ypac-ac aera 2 samaral —— + " sedate we 0 rt - en well e ii Hur 1, ‘4 sd at the proposition by twenty-eight yeas to one hundred have hee n well enough. His failure Was a Ca- | procure ihe passage of a bill through the Legislature, ise Conk said that was a sufficient reason. ‘avel, and in some instances of chopped jacaa “The now, and has never yet, aiaeabie, eat Maniones ies and nineteen nays, A number of resolutions | pinet failure, a Presidential failure, under the | with the view of closing Bloomingdale Square. The bill | Mr. Whiting said he had made arrangements to have icks are usually about eighteen inches by twelve, and | Population is, been able to sustain itself, but derives three or four inches in thickness. The adobe is some- times laid upon the walls in thick layers of from twenty to twenty-four inches, compressed in boxes or cases, which cases are removed after the mud becomes hard; and, from the specimens I saw, this mode is quite as durableas that of moulding the material into regular bricks, with layers of mortar between. Among the principal tribes (which are known as the this case brought on for trial during the t week ; but the District Attorney had undou' ly the right to order in the matter. The District Attorney said he should try the prisoners separately—the woman first. Court will meet this morning at 10 o’clock. much of its wheat and corn from Sonora. ’ If such is ite resent condition, and such the difficulties of subsi Ktepopnlstion, ew mach. more, eae ent becn for a migrating tribe of half civilized Indians find subsistenie thet When @ this region, tradition, or rather trans) ther Across ‘the gulf, ‘about one bunaved and ‘tty miles i width, to the Mexican coast, which is as barren and for- > fechanics’ Institate with | were disposed of rather summarily after the reading of the first of the se however, Gen. Walbridge gained his point of bring- | ing them before the House, and that was perhaps whip and spur of the President’s agent, autho- | bas been referred to the Committee on Cities and Villages, | and it will, therefore, be several days before it can be | rized, or belicving himself to be authorized, to | reported and acted upon. In the meantime, we hope the do the work, whence the importance of the | committee will give this matter that due consideration to question, the folly of Mr. Breckenridge, and the | which its importance entitles it. Bloomingdale square was laid out in 1807, and up to the present time no at- a “tha ‘indent t bitter chagrin of the whole White House party Court of General Sessions. i podem boeing (EOD cy Seen bis ever Been manda to Gonvect It to why ole efore life Honor Recoster Tilon ist tn questina: are the Meveh (ab Zant those ie: |-gaiiealigs—How ie Tule tirutiie people taststtemess peng me “i Gopt, Ingraham to the | We hold Gen. Pierce, then, to the responsi- | Poser than that for which it was originally intended. A THE APRIL TERM. x Pueblos of Acoma, Laguna, Picuris, San Domingo, Jemez, | this great arm of the sea? wer California is destitute lent to promote Capt. Ingraham to the | eet : ent | short. dinie'ikhtioe ftio-work' of opekiing was’ cotkadietioall Arnit, 8.—The Court ict this day, being the first Mon- | Taos, &o. ‘the Navajos possess all the arts of the Puebla | of trees fit for boats, nor is other material fit command of one of the new steam frigates was | bility of this explosion between Cutting and ps alge nery plat agri i commensemnes the dyed term. The | Indians, except that of erecting houses, for they still | to construct a suitable flotilla with. idea of such a On reference to our reports from Albany it will be | ended in the violent and bloody death of | been bought for building purposes. It is hardly necessa- eerie of Mt? day be sy re eee te. dwell in wigwams, yet they are Tnborious cultivators, of | Let us now see what the are presented to a observed that a new project ison foot for the con- | one or both of the parties, but for the | ry tosny anything, ater all that has Ucen already said | {atned the following Nethones waeswarn i te usual pier cir vant hernia mead rong rye VB prey terty Mipow struction of a railroad in Broadway. A bill was in- | active interposition, remonstrances and advice | and'written on us sees ‘t eae squares, to show anh prover ites form; bye Deputy Cask, Ir, an ‘The Moqui is the lai of all the Puebla tribes, en 3g cli olin oF eri geapesy etaers: ‘they troduced in the Senate to authorize ex-Recorder | of mon of all parties of both houses, Such aro | YY the few public grounds that we have should be pre~| Heres - Clearman; Aaron Arnold, John An- | and embrace bout 3,500 souls; next, the Zunl; the | must first cross the great mountain chain known as the | 3 . § are i - pid. m, George O. Baldwin, Stephen Rotsford, William E. . | Sierra Nevada. Thia desert Tallmadge and others to lay down a track, to be | tho desperate straits to which this impotent arnt nasbtailai epoch ena alah big seatie Cthiae Sean a Reading, Eillot por rye mont arid ebaraeter, from one lured an tty to tres : : ich 'asnecas asaya) iran 40:,whloh ¢ ent and | made by Mr. Cooley on this subject, last your, w er, Samuel N. ‘harles §, Francis, Leonard 1. hundred miles, to cross, alm known as the Broadway and Fifth Avene Railroa " Tylerized administration is driven. Elected to | carefully read by the committee, before they submitthetr’s | Johnton, William H. Krapp, James @. Modlatt, ohn Weet tnrbugh 4 avtiera Mexico to ike Pecos of Teva vith but Httie’water, w en, ‘thoy reach the Coloradé. Here is fresh cause for excitement, not only among’) * sve miatform of the eompromiees of | to the Legislature 7 MoChain, Peter Paution, and George Staw. This tribe, (the Navajos,) from its proximity to the Pue- | short distance east of this, it is sald they tarriéd, be- the Broadway merchants, but among the inhabitants | POWe" up P T se His Honor the Recorder then procecded to charge the | pla Indians, has adopted all their arts ex that of | cause some ruined edifices arc found there. Next, they ; 11850, the Cabinet organ authoritatively Ana — ———— jury upon the various points he poe by law. He com- | erecting large tio ye Tcannot say that they culti- | have other barren regions, from two hundred to two of the palaces on the avenue. This appears to have | * s ively Bowery Thentre~A “New Moral Drama.” | mehced by saying that it was not only on the existence of | vate cotton, although! know that they make superior | hundred and fifty miles, to cross, which poner een the only feature of special interest in the Legis | Uablushingly repudiates the compromise policy. § ii | good laws, but it was on their maintenance and enforce- | ylankets of wool. In their habits and manners they also | them to the Gila. Here we will them 7 | Pledged at Balti sak At the Bowery theatre last evening a new moral | Spent, and their righteous administration, that the secu- | differ much from the Pucbla Indians; for, like their | tarry again, open canals for cultivate lature yesterday, although both branches were ex- | Pledged at Baltimore to resist any and every | arama, entitled “Hot Corn, or Life Scones in New York | rity, the peace and order of society depended. ‘Their | hrethren {he Apachos, they are more nomadic, are very | the soil, and rear imposing edifices. Having become ceedingly busy in passing and otherwise disposing | attempt to revive the agitation of the slavery | on the Five Points and in the Fifth avenue,” dramatised Sar Soom coagleten y eer tettet ati persone cheer warlike, and Fell ot ea ey and are considered the — esate tates er a ag Ce Jands endanin ‘ | of ¢ tk 0 haerrne Proot person: s 4 a uses, and a, roceed sou broad Of bills throughout the day. So far as we can leara, | tion, Wut pushed to the last resort by the | by F.C. Durivage, in eighteen scenes aud eight tableaux | with public offences, or erimos or acts tending to such fi offelcot of the Apaches, sti tho semi-civilleat nee Gescris and’ Darren districts; and afte? andering 400 all was perfectly quiet with regerd to temperance. | closures of | free soil y ciples and ante- The play it can be so called, is beneath criticism, and | wrongs. ™ their hands were placed the mainteanace and | referred to are gontle in theiz manners, possess much in- | miles,come to a stand on the banks of a beautiful stream. = we can only give an idea of it to show the style of trash | Preservation of the laws. ‘Tho necessity of not only im- | genuity, ond prefer pence to war. letter from pre pt towards the city of Chiiuahua The same ‘We ‘elsewhere pr lente, we see Gen. Pieree, in his desperation partiality, sourd judgment, cireumspection, intusiry and aguin gone through with here. This fertile valley, which “ " } 2 | ic! is “mi rama’? Ase. No, aboriginal tribes of America presont so intgresti Bishop Hughes, denying that he favors the senti- | (4 yeciaim the confidence of the Sonth, casting | een ere cramne’” Bas given rise, in the ‘performance’ of thees duties, by wa un- | a Sed for iho: philenticorist as {hese Pushhe Madione | eurpases any other in. tule: portion of ie coutty, ls ments of the Cuba junta or the anuexationists, and | . ns bs eC he South, casting The piece purports to represent scenes in high and low endeayor to accertain an intelligent sense of every | Possessed of the first rudiments of civilization, and an | brought under cultivation, and immense csuatares are- ‘4 is ii A a 3 FR " ¢ the into Congress the repeal of the Missouri com- | life, and we have never seen anything of the sort | ¢! it was brought up before them, and that the law | earnest desire to learn, they could be brought toa higher | raised, But this beautiful spot, with all its a declaring his intention to demand the author of the F stheteidln at Wilnaakanll ar ae jn oerf-Aehioh d-ltvus'segpebetiteds-imetobAtie low ie ae was tal to, was clearly manifest. Included | yoinf than has ever yet been attained by their red breth- | dees not suit the roving Aztecs. They again move. report on reaching Washington. The Bishop de- | ? as an administration measure, and thus ae ee fe cha- jn thelr duties, and it was made especially | ren, ana that, too, in a yory short period. For even now, | Where? Ono would nat al Soret oot racters might exist im London, but never could the high life | We have twenty five the object of the Court to chat into auy violation of the el the usury laws, any violation of the lottery laws, and them, to make inquiry in their native State, they are expert in certain arts fon laws, any violation of which the Cherokees, Choctawa, and cur Indians cast of the Rocky Mountains, have never clares that he distinctly recollects what passed at | lighting up such a flame of free soil and aboli- live. sciywhiere: ¢ most advanced of tion excitement as the country has never before and thence proceed on the great table every conversation he ever had on the subject. r seteiclihtal Seiki 2 No doubt of it. experienced. The principle involved in this a ee ae aceite Whole: Spams ememaee va wheee Pubic cMeets exes, Sor: | vequiren poesia dust tare 4 ne . t at all resembles any person that we ever met or heard of | mand, or receive more fees for their services than they B'ihe agriculture of these tribes is very different from toward the place the; be ay Common brands of State flour closed dull at $7 | repeal is a constitutional principle—it pro- | in New York society. There ts Mr. Pease, of the Five | are entitled to by law. He referred them particularly to | shat of our country, whexe it ia only neccsmary to turn | ene. The Anteos gntered the valley of Mesioe, trom Ca Se “pa . " ai a ch ge ‘ rs any violation of the lottery laws, as the evil consequences * 6 1 ; yesterday. Cotton was also dul, and there was litte | pose abrogation of an nnconstitutional | Points, nothing Tike Mr. Pease—a number of reformed | Wowing out of this vefscimus traihe were incalculable, | ie'tect, sere there ts very lle sain, and amitciat | be transported across the great Sierra, Madre, Which in > or nothing doing in produce for export. The busi- | jqw; and yet, with upwards of seventy | atunkards—two or three negroes—a ‘ tambourine girl,”? Fic fou upon examining cm) salendas that apore vets irrigation becomes absolutely neceasary. thoy thereto se aay, inne pearele for man or animal at this point. 8 deb puliedtay, tated aR, : ) at tiie cteteaies-a0i 4 adie" nt twenty-cight eases that required their action: there- | turn ihe water ‘rom the streams, and conduct it thro er ness on Saturday and yesterday, incinding sales on | Gemocratic majority in the House, upon this | ese! ' reeular stage costume—an aristocratic young | PUN TNe aulicn would be iighter then wero those of | tertus cd ditches over the bottom landa which tiey | vigero now places them, he saya :——'‘From “henoe, tra- man, in white cotton gloves—an old merchant with @ moustache, and so on to the end. There is a young | woman who sells hot corn, and dies in conseqneace of @ the spot and to arrive during the present and com- } ing month, amounted to* between ten and fifteen | thousand barrels common brands of State v, if former Grand Juries, He felt it his duty to call ther attention to a complaint of a very high nature bein, made to one of the magistrates, and when only half finished, (evidence of a crime horrible in its character desire to bring into cultivation. ‘This is invariably prac- tised, and I have seen these canals exten ting for miles. In owinstance, near the Salinas north of the Gila, is one from fifteon to twenty fect wide, and about four yersing the hes 3 mountains and. ‘ing their course towarts the south, they reached Culiacan, on the Gulf of California, where they stopped three years, built houses and cultivated the ground,” test issne of Nebraska, we find the adminisira- } ple to Casas Grandes, where Cla- | tion powerless to persuade, resorting to the } = ‘deep. ‘ i Ps rash eX} i arel q iving tw ‘a hh, and the aristocratic young man marries am funtt s mostly at $7. Mach of this was said io have boon | Tath expedient of coercion, and driving two | eater: having been committed,) where the material witness | ‘The civilization of which I have spoken I consider in- | ‘This is one of the greatest difficulties in the Abbe’s : ean, e rifle ot itica rs jend vrotehod | stress; afteravhich his father becomos a bankrupt. The | guddenly disappeared, and was not to be found to con- | digenous and peculiar to the tribes in question, They | theory; and had he ever visited the country he speake. purchased to meet maturing contracts, while other | political and personal friends to the wretched | tei ie ig very pretty, and representa, the ‘young | elude the prosecution. If the circumstances detailed | rere found in the same coodition by the lirst Spaniards, | of, lie would never have suggested such an A mi- parcels went into store on speculation; compara- | resolve of a mutual assassination. woman who rold hot corn golag to heaven, supported by wont wg AY me he ¢ See ee veh A who traversed the country oceu taser in ba grating part fl Meera ba rol bw ‘os ry igen : nrg Cia Kg: I ua a ; tte heaven, supported n ir attention. ¢ crime that he alln 1 is t been de | would be o 0 retrace its steps, and pass - tively small portions were taken for export. For Such are the natural fruits of the free soil | iarge numbers of “practicable” angels. There isa sue~ | war really committed, purely they unoull fivestigate the Eg = Rng ) ioe io Eis serunekatie Jour. tains through the Guadalupe pass, which the extra brands there was a good Eastern demand, vt | deception upon which Gen. Picrce was nomi- | cession of scenes, some of which are spirited, and some | matter; if, however, the parties implicated should prove | ney from Forida to the Gulf of California. THis account | Boundary Commission passed several . ces, ont sat . whi 7 : " to be innocent, then the whole matter would be cleared f'them led to the expeditions of Marco de Niza and Co- Having now shown the difficull steady prices. eee nated and clected—of the free soil coalition of | of which require bre to get them of; but there is no up to the ‘satisfaction of all parties concerned. He also yonsen.te ‘1540, kad saveral Ofthate noon after. Coronado | ‘gration of yeapte trom, 0 yee Letters from Havre to a respectable house in this | h3s Cabinet—of his free soil distribution of the | Commected plot, neither is there any moral lessou inewl- | eharged them to make exci into the condition of our | describes this people as living in houses of several stories, | tule, o ¢ Colorado and. city, state the receipts of flour aud grain had beoa . cated. The hot corn girl dies, bul as to the fate of the | public markets, for nothing was more needful at this | as cultivating the soil, Ne g raising cotion, from whieh $04 ha ing also shown, toate e semi-clv ‘the Gila other characters we have no information. thelr duty, also, to see that no violation of the laws ‘The Indies and gentlemen of the stock company at the | relative to driving cattle ae hg strects should go spoils: and of the imbecile and vascillating season of the year than cleanly market places. efforts of bis administration to recover its lost they made their garments. About the same tod. ‘aaron passed up the great Colorado, the babs of which were densely populated. He, too, speaks of the 80 great that there was not storage room for them and that large quantities of w had to be piled t the theory: mi wfitecu tribes the Colorado and the Rock Moun- tai ; iesdilalit anti. 4 0 or i 2S ry i id ase y id not give us any very brilliant acting in this | unpuniched. With these remarks his Honor committed | cultivation of cotton and wheat, and of the communities ovt of doors, and covered with tarpauling to protect | °* rin the South, by the immediate pas- | Bowery could in i ° E ; te Calif they would have loft inaisd for American produce of any description Nabraska bill. But there it Hes, with a mona- | fUmistion. Mr. Glenn’s performance of a Dutch poa- | py the Recorder, the court then adjourned for the day. | ther than this period, for the country abounds in ruined | case. The California tribes are the { - ote mage . rag ned 4 sant wes capital—an oasis in a desert of ——-—_——.- -—— -- edifices, both of stone and adobe, the general charactor | senle of being, and exhibit no traits of NO A large amount of inteve tug and vortant | tain upon its back, another melancholy example Herring's Wild Maggie was clevog, and her sioging was y Domestic Miscellancy. of which is precisely that of the buildings at present oc- | skill a eae 5 yingereeeebngeb sg ty he businers was thuneacted in the different Courts of | that our present beautiful administration is a | unaffected and pleasing, Mr. Johnston made up well for | 4, Richardgon’s iron foundzy, at Owasco, was destroyed | cupio by there tries. so inte ieittzation | spoken of or wrth the Agtcos of Moxloo, he semal-<ivi- this city yest as will be seen by our report renow, as it has been from the beginning, | Reon, and if he could learn not to declaim colloquial | "ahe Collegiate institute af Brockport was destroye’ | to tend far {o the eal of the Valloys of tie RloGrande, | Station of the ola ie Nae yy gm No less thiee suits in which ladies wore cc ind will be to the end. Strange, indeed, that | M#losue it would be» good performance. Mies Walters, by fire on Banday morning. ‘The loss is about $20,000. | even a Par ua Fe sds cigs’ altace Wi agen peg ony 1 district, an ake k nerned—o ber wit¥ of marriage cont pe A bcd om we the yeh we ‘ ath surance $7,000. found a tran Quivira, and along | Amori “ BUR dilalias circu ity of marriage contract, | such a man as Breckenridge should consent to | org oer ee “Trt da gta ne j_tne tons (N. ¥.) Gass, maya On Sxtariay. ht tine ot “flages net i, where the sane arta were preg. | gontinen!. the Aste civilization alee has character eubar crcumstances—were dea i tate olf 5 cahadlianel ‘ § sash pipes: piece; act a snow storm sot in wl continued, with asin nis basin referred to; y Supreme Court. had’ SE Meh thabiath: dibninnk torture himself to the extre of aduel in | trinity Chureh scone is a dingy affair, the Five Poiuts | short intervals, upto the time of our going % pte, theee tribes have long since disappeared,. they have left pets eta 9) wd, Sai Raa a PA ig ot Yala behalf of such an administration, which has | Mission House is good, and the last scenc is woll ar- | We ate at present blossed with a bed of snow about the evidences that they poaseseed this know! as the Stat onoAN, loth th the Crystal Palace Ac for damage by water tint renege ie cl 4 a oe @ well ar sateen in deep, the hoaviest we have had at any (ne line ee river Gila are trecam of rut ees treet Ne aecty et Gia tom. th Pes fal what y r ‘ itation fc nothu oF compensation to hope for but a few | ged. js 5 ‘bur nes of {i i socle! aaa $a Aistniawed with « fol Pcpalig contingent scr = and giants of the spoils ‘The house was not full, although the pit was crowded. wn Enel ss oboe bas a th ak eae temny om he ethnology of Wertsrn Amerien. The April term of our municipal jegislatare com- | the broken victuals left from the love-feast o° peer hag ayphind cere bred pte Mir swe Gon. Dawe O'Leary, for many years H. B. M. Minister per }) and ih ie coien of the and Coe e.. ‘the conclusion of Mr. car eeetaiied te onnk menced last cyening, and hoth bodies sugeseded in | the free cojlers and segessionists, very sbowphetil ha, ! er not | gh ponote, NG. died at that plage on the might of 261 | Tesors ip begtby the wild aad troncberoms Apache | i referred, ‘Mts Auvags observed that he concurred Cally ‘ “ ?

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