The New York Herald Newspaper, July 4, 1854, Page 5

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THE CUBAN FILIBUSTERS. ‘Phe Constitationality of the President's Proc- But why should there be in any b egheed & | wishes of the executive in « einen, canes a invasion of bas Bee the United States, or any NEWS FROM MEXICO, the Ethelbert, and feelings amd opinions of be some reason for it. If to | the of nations, and ‘oved velit i the government, bat it is not vei what we apron tobe thors of the Preat, mass quicken hia zeal in the cos it, ign corrupt mecca revotationn But we would not have the | _ We have-received our dea of papers from Mexico | exfeo and John Bull lamations. the people of Cuba, and of many citizens of the juence. If to relax his zeal, it. is lows of our country construed-with such | city to the 18th, and from Vera Craz to the 22d in- Zhe history of nations teaches one univeranl truth, United States who concur with them in these senti- ‘There is no legitimate way in which excessive rigor as to ‘and repress all sympa-| stant. The intelligence is meagre in the extreme. ‘Fhe Guano Spesuiation of a tamely, that administrative power in govera- | penta and opinions? energies of the President are to have activerseope | thy with the op and to make us practical al-/ On the 13th of June, (the Feast of St. Antoine) | It appdare thes the Govern at Mioaxico hay mae an eternal ee ene led and The Cuban believes ie yranny unter, which be Spite pemmcnticn modieneds t Junns not vender aly pressor every wate —sat xe woe fa | A ball was given oa tha to hie . ae aveates ue. Caveman Sess'o. 4 ander of necessity, suffers insetiate, and cruel exercise powers onable, them needs definition, La | Forns Ar others, representing to be called panes‘ ae, & pleas naa gree, and that deprived ot that shall not reflect with ciabatanyer aabees: deal that needs thon doubtleas the most | Highness, by the Ministers, the Councillors of State, 1» Te ived of all parties in e the Mexican Guano Compan: cluaive privilege self-government. Who doubts the fact? fact shade of suspicion, upon the ermine of jnatice | implicit obedience be paid while | the generals of th th {fs of the pany, an ex pri 1 r admitted, the power then which controls hin is a | How infinitely better, them, meh Sy eae it laste, to all that ia really law. wt) jy mans mem rye for the exportation of guano from all the coasts and e the frog in the fable, its end is explosion. De- sheer witked despotion. May the Cuban rightfully | the manner in which justice shall be sap, snd by ome other: parti * tion of three ‘glnads i the Paci 1 the . what fed XE | Conspire and struggle to overthraw this despotism, | should have been in this proclamation. ‘The | ‘mhe ations for the Capture of Cabs. | Anns. It appears thet the ball was very thinly at | Ton OF Oe ee alate Haag ener the: gilance and integrity pete mach to postpone and may he rightfally invokeassiseance to this end? Penalties of the law carry with them their legitimate ‘rom the Buffalo Express, June 26.} tended, owing, it ia said, to the ravages which the | been issued, notifying the conditions on ‘To deny this 19 to:repediate 4 po epicenter terroea to’ Ge ulsibgene eA a the | The cri r= his Proclamation | cholera was making in the city of Mexico, The | may be obtained, the professed object of the thy is by the plausible dis indepen noe, foe seen sienaelen Red nome ht and | Ax erican citizen. a bopne? fae ee i uelat den to i | Trait d’ Union, however, says that. the sickness is | prietors being toleave the trade as open as le. a bed oot tnd rival, secret si ee ena ople. tig tenden 5s poses Faas of, yes, enjo g, and thet the number of | consistently with their own claims for remuneration. assail the z a t aright of invasion or Cuba. quiet over the est'of Cuba by adventur. | materially diminishin others, and all servo as standards for imitatio motive and action as to assis- @ independence, the uninfluenced indepen- era This leada to the ‘irresistible eonclusion that | deaths is, not greater than usual, the atmosphere | THE quality of the guano existing on the Atlantic Ghethes originating in wily craft, blind zeal, tance so sought pled to be —— eon dence, of the ry.is the chief coemenetonn.ot | the Pronunciamento of Gen. Pierce waa aa soundiog | being cooled by gentle reffeahing, showers Ina — CD Me eee honest ignorance, they are equally potent for mis | “The mock morality taught from high places in | the Temple of Liberty, and the surest guarantee of | brassand tinkling cymbale,wi purpose beyond few days lt th will be + otherwise having already been taken thence tothe United chief, and the pert no opposed when initi- | censure of such conduct, the among the | the equal rights of the citizen. Ita | thatof deceiving the 8 governmentintoa false | the capital will nat be habitable, deserted as.it now | fot mse eT ee tome, Liverpool, and is stated ated too readily follow them as examples. minions or apologists of arbitrary power to call | wisdom is forcibly illustrated in the Federaltst, and achington Intelligencer is not a | je by all who have been able to leave the infected | ¢o"be entirely distinct from the Peruvian descri Ido much regret that President Pierce has made | such aid piracy, robbery, and plunder, will not | seconded and approved by Justice Story, in his to be easily deceived in regard to such mat- ae ‘ tions, te rlebriess consisting im sixty per cent tf his t demonstration in this line of bed prece- | Change ‘the faces. This quarrel, all know, 1s essen. | Commentaries. gives credence to the statement that a ¢ following amnest ws iter by SA phosphate of lime. That which exists on'the islands. den’ baal cal he has avoided the libellous | tisty the cause of the Cuban an Mr. Hamilton says:—‘That t! individaal stupendous movement ia on foot in the South for tak- | Anna on'the day of the feast above alluded to: d ntories of the Pacific. coast and in the dulged in by the late adi om | “tyratinys and bo American ‘was ever justly | pression may now and then p from the {ng foretble possession of the Ialand of Cuba. Having | MINISTER OF WAR AND MARINE—szcTION 4—gun- | Grd, Promontories of the Faciio coast and in the dias ade x fo athe comune me | Cura agen uy sone are eet | eterhtadendeed Vo tk age et Reuss | Sighted Renan hated Ge weet | Serene Highoen Crag the pone | sami ame a of which av rena be never e re I mean 60 ea of an coaduass a tTuly distinct from | invasion of Cuba to’ pursue thels flags boldup and | the uation has reposed in tim, take this oceasiow ot | ¢xPected to.supply high qualities, while in others of The right of revolution is the Cuban’s; the as the judiciary remain oweve: sight’ cl an American citizen is to ai he | bot the legis ive and executive; for I agree that | without molestation. the suniversiey of ita birth, to’ give another proof he eens oe pe ae Pac bawes ot ages, 80 he does not violate the laws of his | there is no liberty if the power of judging be not | _ The pseparations which are going on afe vast be | of hia being always fayorably dis the | the respective sorta, nor any reliable estimates as to country in doing so. ‘The American citizen isnot | separated from the legislative executive | yond belie! and have attained » degree of forward: | members of the army, provided that neither disci- | the ‘Ggantities obtainable, ‘The discovery of these the property of his government. It is his right to | powers.” Rote slniogt incredible, We are. advised of, the | pliue nor the tion of justice re He | geposits, as regards the Atlantic nts peril himsel? in any war or popalar strife abroad he | "Now, all these threate of the execative to ob- | extent of this enterprise in minute and staggering decrees’ that ‘prisoners ‘under pollce of | contidate. ‘The islands iB pie li sees fit'to hazard. And he well knows, if the trade his zeal and his wishes, and even his presence, | detaile, and yet the government neers on in undis- | fences, desertera without any: ago ae amount are called the Tsiangles, near the prise is one unprotected by the ‘of his count by subordinate agents, and his, supernumerary at- | turbed quiet. We gre told that cight steamers and | cumstances attached to their, a, and Yucatan; and no knowledge of the circumstance he peril is his own. we, torneys, into the courts of justice, to effect a con- | four sailing vessels have been paced at the disposal | who have been summarily condemned for potty seemed to have “been possessed by the Mexican people of every nation te a viction, cap have no proper, pure and result. | of the expedition, and can be got ready for the ser | offences, are hereby set at Hberty, and are rel ment until very. lately, when, after two natal ce, question this right ? And, however or truly to seek | vice at twenty-four hours notice. We are also pub- | from the penalty eee them. This amnesty Gre ican vessels had filled there, one of them, with Be it known, therefore, that we—at whom, it fs | am undue. influence with the judge, get such in- | licly advised that nearly a million of dollars are in | does not extend to,political offenders. More than 200 tons on board, was stranded in @ supposed, the denunciations of this proclamation | trusions could not leave his jase, amanity as | the Cuba conquest fand—that eome fifty thousand | General p areeyon. es been naman Come storm on a neighboring point, and the matter waa are aimed—profess to believe ourselves as pious, | erect and self-poised as if his mind was not bur | men, who are well skilled. in. the use of firearme, | mandant General of the Department of Michoacan. brought to light. . W moral and patriotic as any of our fellow ees dened with the exeentive energies and anxieties so | are enrolled and ready for the flald when the time | On the 9th instant thie Leon battalion, cvmposed of 8 My Ec who would lecture or censure us, And the more so, | manifested and paraded before him. comes to strike the blow, and that they are the poa- | 700 men, and eplatoonof the Jalisco ‘lancers, left Ireland. that we have never received any such lectures | Though having but alight participation in what- | sessors of between eighty and meaty thousand | Guadalajara for Morelia, The authorities of Zamo. | opgnarion oF THE ENCUMBERED ESTATES BILL. or censures that have not been conceived in | ever of movement there ia now being made for the | stand of arms, muskets and riges inclusive. .To this | ra, fearing that their town would be attacked by | ‘The Dublin correspondent of the London Chro- misapprehension or misrepresentation, or other- | redemption of Cuba, and the peony of the South, | armament add ninety pleces of cannam and a good | the insurgents, have fortified it andYhave placed a nicle, writing on June 16, says:—Some amall proper- wise marked oy a depravity and corruption | I am willing to shoulder my share of the re- | supply of ammunition and eide'arms, dud the pab- | hundred mento garrison it. ties were sold yesterday, in the Encumbered Fatates of principles of which we conceive ourselves sponsibility, Not wholly to the Ame- | lic can form some idea of the extent and parfection | | Mr. Plareearte, the new Minister of Finance, ar- | Court, by the Chief Commissioner. The sum, real- incapable. If the canse of Cuba be right, ean onle,.f have some pride of reputation, | of the preparations for robbing Spain of her poases- | rived in Mexico city on the 13th, and took, posses: | ized by the sales of the day was £15,285. ‘The fol- and. clains sions. }» policy and }, 80- published are not timely and wall advised, and the power more juestionable. ..1 propose a brief inquiry into the authority for @ proclamation, and. of its objects, the policy and 0} therein ne banc General +4 that it is “in virtue of the poe ee constitution in the President of the United States” that he issues this’ proclama- tion. Now, we have many laws of Congress which give the power or make it the duty of the President issue proclamations in the particular cases which these laws have a] Such is his duty, by law, in cages of domestic insurrections, But our neatral- ity laws have enjoined no such duty, and given no such power. And to all who have read the con- stitution of the United States it is sufficient to say it contains no express authority to the President to iasue proclamations of this or any other descrip- i ; Esa sf we feel how pointless and exaggerated the efforta to entertain as th a respect for : sion of his office on the 16th June. from tion; and I maintain the suthority is not fairly im | rand us with either moral or political wrong, ia | law, for. truth, and for snclt ‘virtues as’ are | ‘Then, again, we. are told publicly that the éntiie | Tbe Municipal’ Council of Tampico had askea | WIRE fiat paitingy Ocrober aT Oks b> deme 1k ene Tait not ms Aaslacatateeaaiten ‘of State giving it our countenance and support. comprised in the character of a good citizen, as | command of this sepedition. will be vested in a gen- | permission from the be ete government to intro: | 1954, inclusiv not previously denoted to the public? And must it “If,” says Mr. Madison, “there be a principle | those may affect to have who can use official station | tleman of known ability and skill,’ and whose name | duce free into that port pine wood for house build- | 3, Number of ions presented, inclus those peed ‘with itsome inherent authority ordeciare | ‘at ought not to be questioned within, the | ass license to pro detraction. And before | has already beceme & household word with the | ing. The prefecture of the district haa. supported for partition and exchange, as well as for sale 8,442 ihaventaiilchsvent.of nome ralasomenthaatiornes United States, it is, that every nation has a right to | the American eI thus defend myself against | citizens of the United, States, in ¢ nence of bis | this demand. (Of the above, in or about’ 470 were supple- viously established?’ If leas than ott Exe, | abolish an old government and establish a new one, | all dispars ing charges and ineinuations contained | brilliant achievements and successful manauyréy | ‘The Holy See has conserited to the formation of a Remist or dhamtene petitions.) mere beate imen, or simple notice, not of | Tis principle is not only recorded in every public | in the President’s proclamations, so far as Iam con- | while in command of the American’ army during | new diqeeyain the Department. of San Luis Potosi; | 2. Number Va beard nee bia meh ERR Y 2,448 Wise the dl fe wall do, ee will have done, | azehive, written in every American heart, and seal- | cerned. Joux Hunperson. | the late war between the United States and Mexice. | the bull to effect this object is to.coat. the, moderate | 8 Number of matters in which owners were bank- Bn matter of official “discretion, but that he cc? | ed with the blood of a host of American martyrs; | New Orleans, La,, June 10, 1854, The curtain in yet.a little higher, and it, ig | sum of $1,200, which the government will wring | 4 number of matters in which owners proseated cts that himself and his subordinates will ao | bubit is the only lawful tenure by which the United whispered in the public ‘ear that the second in com: | from the unfortunate’ inhabitants of the projected "petitions 780 Tandditasttuavicen dais if mee all, it | St@eshold their existence as s nation.” The Inquiry after Filibusters. mand. will, in ah robability, ‘be # Northern man | diocese. 5. Number of ome aa roth tia goon Peo ? ad These were the sentiments of young America. [From the New Orleans Picayune, June 25.) with Southern principles, who commanded a brigade | ‘The Trait d’ Union gives the following news from missioners. 4,665 ed; and if less of more than tig i ie ence ae. | There is yet enough of the spirit of young Americe | The search after “‘dlibustering” expeditions, or a | in the Mexican war, and has since: dlled imporiane | the Bolelin Ofctal ot Proves, of the 19th of Moy, in | 6. Number of lois sold, vis. By public suction thority. Now: whee Tee mites ff ispvithout au | extant, to frown at the fogylsm that would oblite: | flibustering organization in New Orleans, is likely | civil truste, Whether this means General Pleroe or | relation to the insurrectio of the South:— in court, 4,600; by provincial auction, con- takennaclaciiieastatas ta re Freaident (2 | rate the precious record from our memories. to turn out @ complete failure. The Grand Jury | some other officer ef the same kidney, we have no | ‘The rebel chief, Maguel Luia Jimenez, Snel by She comm seioners 10M. Ege by the ine, mansions 16 Sana Barpoee ie In regard to Cuba, then, grant the rule of inter- | have been occupied four or five days under the | means of knowing. It is said that Gen. Gonzales, | was. beaten near the Tver Nexpa. The details of Be cree ll Alig Op the law, or where the ding force WS 08 | national law, “that every government de facto is to stringent charge of a zealous Judge, and with the | who is known as the chief of the filibustors, is to | this action were publialved: with much bombast in be sp 68 peraeh pepen lent upon the beet Ad a chal PTO- | be taken prima facié “as the government of aid of a very capable District Attorney, and evi- | be third in command. the Boletin of the 12th of José: Ramen, in- | 7 en . cclamation, We ere eae are, reanimated bY | the people's choice”; the prima face evi- | dently have found nothing. From all present indi- | __Among the smaller fry we notice the names of Col. | surgent, and acting as an officer in tho ranks of | ¢, Number oi boxer (contaiaing upwards of 21666;- | etn open tno such obieet OF tomeecusucg | dence may be rebutted. And where is there | cAtions,the only result to be expected fa the put- | Wheat, Col. Pickett, Col. Bell, Major Kelly, Major | Jimenez, was taken prisoner during @ie action, and 000 documenin and muniments of tithe) de- & connected with the law of Isle eee? | mendacity bold enough to assert that the power sane one or two suspected persons under bonds. | Moore, Capt. Edwards, Capt. King, Capt. Dewent, | was shot on the 0th wt A ulta, after having been posited in the Record Off100....+.02++ v0.08 a, “These proclamations,” says Justice Blackstone, | Which throttles Cuba like a nightmare, is not a | This has been intimated by the Judge, but we do | and Lieutenant. Cilmette, all of whom wore inti'| summarily tried by a council of war, conformably to | 9. Number of bank orders or cheques issued by hive tee aces ai ig Rania “i an eo sheer despotism? not understand him as having positively decided on mately connected with the previous expedition, and | the law on conspiracies. the commistioners for payment of money or Gabe cheecteny Uapg ase sroieel ee el on All law writers admit there may be a naked | that course. He has it under consideration. We | who, we are credibly informed are exerting them- | Captain Jose Maria Salado has been ordered to tranafer of funds, in or abouts. o+eosithon 221000 the lawa of the wali for though the mating cz | {anny that has no right of protection or rea have no idea what sort of bonds will be exacted— | selves in preparation for the forthooming straggle, | pursue the insurgents in the department of Ome- | 2°- Grots amcunt of purchsse money the lao te entitels the Gork ofa hee ing 0 from the laws of nations’ ‘Nor san the tyrant claim srt ae for appearance merely hereafter to answer, | and will ‘‘be in at the death.” pec. On the 24 he arrived at the Nexpa, where By public auction in ecurt....+... £8,767,001 2.8 legislative branch of the sovereign nocee itt the, | ny legal protection even for his personal security. | {f any evidence should be yet gathered, orto keep | — ‘The time fixed for carrying out the plans of this } he found nine guns and x baggage wagon, He con- By provinelal suctions, ebeesapt sas shou dehdharteomsentaeae e yb ath Mr. ison says: Sepease towards Spamin cular andallforeign | stupendous enterprise for plunder, is said to be the | tinued his route to Cuatan, where he learnt that a ‘by the commissioners. 1,977,188 10 0 a meena rivet te the | . Jt i# not denied that there may be cases in which « | nations in general; or not to go out of the United e of Joly. ‘The advance army is to be about | band of rebels had passed there in the direction of By private contract, an 7B Sar co aon Mate lege left to the | respect to the general principles of liberty—the eswential | States with any revolutionary thoughts, or stay in | 10,000 strong, which is to be followed immediately | the River Jalnpa. Salado went to the place pointed by the commissioners, 2,262,199 0 9 peso teen til dante Ad Me, and there: | right of the people, or the overruling sentiments of hu- | it with any expressed purpose of giving sctive aia | by reinforcements of twenty or thirty thousand | out, and found the wives of the rebels, He then meee Ny on or edicts concerning these | manity—might require a government, whether new'or | to Sor ema of indepeudence which may ever | more. Now, this looks well on paper. It may al} | resolved to. wait three days in the hope that the 212,996,983 13 5 points, which we call proclamations, are old, to be treated as an illegitimate despotism. arise in Cuba. A " 4 DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS, upon the subject,” &c, Now, I challenge any one to cite-to me a single here, is some ‘wpecatstion sifdatea'te hat it eA et, and if it does, then ia the peace of our | men would return. On the 3d a man named Emi, 11. Gross amount of money distributed ‘Now, who will pretend President Pierce’s procla- Pc rekea tip woolen Fa that i be the shape and leeal obligation of these Gahan | oazty, Great jeopardy. The incentives to this | dio Garcia arrived with the son of the chief Ji- imveash an stoeki.....:03. 0026 £8,056,901 9 8 . rushes Cuba, rT Maria mation is an “edict” of thia description? Bat’! titles that power to be respected as the Te timate | bonds,” if they should ever beissued. At allevents, | re Sei ee oe wade nonin Malstc barat the viage tian berg rig poo farther, says the same author:— pany of the Beople of Cuba. The Cubans, | it isgiven up in that court; the District ‘Attorney and It containg an area of 20,000,000 acres, every | previous to leaving it. ‘were ‘purchasers......... eee 1,204,840 9 0 From the samo original, of the king’s being the foun- have good cause to revolt. But this power, | Grand Jury have not been able to discover the | three of which, it is estimated, is capable with pro- | _ Villalva was at Mescala with w detachmeut of —————. tain Sf juation, we sale deduce the tite of issuing | too, in the wantoriness of violence, is now ex- | traces of any mili expedition, or even of any | per cultivation, of producing one of sugar | the insurrectionists, who were said to be in avery £9,350,800 18 8 8, which is vested in the king alone. erted to an end dangerous to the interests of our ¥ the scope of the law, a3 | annually. More than five years ago, the property | miserable condition. As soon as the government The difference between the amount realized by the Mow; the Supreme Court of the United States has | Southern citizens. And these, together, make ang: laid down with such excessive rigor by Judge | of the Yotand was valued at $800,000, 000. Buck troops approached, he fled. He was dateequently sales and the funds distributed is thus aceounted decided that government of the United States | mented grounds of our sympathy, and excite many,it | Campbell. vast ssions and wealth are enough to excite the | seen at the hill of the Canada del Zopilate, and waa | for:—Funds allocated in trust; provisional has no prerogative. How, then, has our President, | is presumed, to such lawful and legitimate action as | It would have been a great rise in New Or- | cupidity of theadventurous and unprincipled, whe- || pursued thence to Huitziltepec and Atlixco, and | not yet made absolute; the incg of cash and 4ndependent of legislative grant, become invested | may reliove the oppressed Cubans, and insure onr | leans if any proof had been elicited of the existence | ther in the government or among the outsiders. {astly, on the morning of the 17th of May, he entered | government stock standing to the credit of the com- with this kingly pre re own domestic security. Now, with these motives | of a military organization, or any preparations for | The island of Cuba is defended by a land force of | the village of Apango. It was:thought probable | missioners in the Bank of Ireland; payments already ‘When the of these royal manifestoes was | and purposes candidly avowed, are the facts intend- | military ‘expedition, to be sent from this city some 26,000 men, and @ navai armament which if | that in this direction fe would meet with the forces | ordered by the commissioners, and not called for by 0 iiwued, independent of law, by President Wash- | ed to be controverted by this proclamation? or if | or its vicinity, to invade the island of Cuba. roperly and vigilantly kept on the alert, will be | of General Escudero. the parties entitled thereto; and the purchase mone; ington, in 193, it was widely and se de- ee ep canines ore eeeeane cengur- | be cure, we have read in distant startling rile to eet off ey destro: By expedition of 10,000 ‘The Trait d’ Union inserts the following extract | of recent sales not yet lodged. “ meunced as a usurpation by the whole demo- | ed by the proclamation, then it may Sgraver | reports of what has been on here, and cir- | men before they can put foot on the island. While | of aletter dated Guayamas, 24th April :—“ It was _——— eratic party. It devolved upon that great man— | in city, how far the President shall be successful | cumstantial descriptions of the presence and | we have no contidence in this, or any other filibuster | on the 19th instant that the English ship Challenge, | The recent Horrible Murder at Dandridge, Pegs Ajax of executive power—Alexander | in his efforts 1 Bae sagmager to traduce these mo- | looks of a le filibuster ig in our | attempt to make conquest of Cuba, we cannot un- | coming from San Francisco after a passage of seven- Tenn. , to eviacerate from the constitation a vin- | tives and sentiments—or traduce thoee citizens who | streets, and comping, in our neighborhood for | derstand how it is that the government cau relieve | teen days, entered our port, having on board 300 | ARREST OF THE MURDERER, AND BURNING HIM dication of this act. The principal points of his | avow them. “raid” upon Cu But these were well known | iteelf from the responsibility of the attempt. Frenchmen destined for the Mexican army, in vir- ALIVE AT THE STAKE. argument were to this effect :—A proclamation was When it was fashionable at Washington, in | here to be the imaginations of alarmists, or It is surpriting to what extent i tue of a treat; de at § ch A correspondent of the Athens Post, under date “a usual and prop:r measure” acne occasions; | 1825, to sympathize with the oppressed Greeks, | the inventions of the malicious, Nothing of | have been eurtied wider "the vecy age athe ot Mexican Coneu Pahiele Beate ad aspeatel trae of June 20, furnishes the following particulars of ‘and to issue a proclamation was an executive act. | there were no Presidential threats of prose- | the sort has been seen by eyes accustomed | ministrators of the government, withont exciting || French Consul, Mr.Dillon, Besides the 300 French- | the recent horrible murder at Dandridge, Jefferson And ss the constitution of the United States vested Cements Q. Adams, Henry Clay, I Danijel ro to woe Orleans. sy Sopa op Boon ane ,on their art, even an attempt to nip the expedition | men, there were 21 Germans, 5 Belgians, 19 Eng. pe eT of the arrest and burning at the ‘executive powe! President t) \- a in. Lata: TS, ment or engagement men for But ur- |'inthe bud. The procl ident lish! 1 Ameri stake of the mu:derer:— ted mates rgen ein, eaten a5 ont ia, 1» ek ie - Phage wots a oe in the proclamation of President has men, merican, 4 Spaniards and Portuguese, e - ed as impotent as the white paper upon which | 8 Chilians, 2 Beuadoriane,»1 Argentine, 1 Swiss, 1 “ A tragedy has just been enacted in this vicinity Sy th t issued this proclamation of neu- | ters to the great unnamed of Europe, commending || kept so diy secret, and the men have been eomeger tre pe far as any subsequent action on | Italian, 1 Pole, 1 from Bogota and 12 Wexicans—in | More awful ‘and horrible than has ever before oc- twality, hia gallantry, and the cause he was ‘to engage in— | 90 ¢ immured “within walls,.or hiddea in | the part of the government ig concerned. This | all 377'men at the disposal of the Commander of | curred in any peaceful land. Elijah Moore and his Mr. Madison, much abler expositor of the | being to ald the Greeks in revolt ‘Tark- | swamps, that the most zealous Cuban liberationist in| tmrows the within the palé of suspicion, | Sonora. Other shipg loaded with emigranta are | Wife had lived rece some eight years upon a constitution, in assailing this flimsy sophism, | ish oppressors. And it was well known to all of | feeling—and there are multitudes of them about— | an, to the irresisti belief that “hin procla. |, also arriving from day to.day. farm on French Broad River, near the mouth of ahowed most conclusively that if the of | these gentlemen that he was openly to take men and | has never been able to guess where they are. ‘Ibis | ma’ only a ruse, to hide the gecret,plans and || We sre” the ‘arrival of General Arellano, | Chucky. They bad no cbildrex. Miss Lotapeech, = President were fo.be ascertained, By "show material i from the port of New ie in Lae bimney high poise fate penenian of a purposes of hee government, in regard to plunder- | who is charged withthe military command of Guay- || the sister yep Macoree bolivia vith them. She wi were executive powers in the ance o! military enterprise. act of such a scheme, ere were one; but in | ing Spain of her possessions. Certainly an i- | amas, as well ag with the du f was @ young lady much esteem er acquain: as. known or defined in patter Boh: elsewhere, was then in force, and our country was at fact, as we are confident, there are neither managers ng Spain: that will plot and perpetrate ond ued port. . RAAB ME nteTatans |e ep ances as amiable, prudent and modest. Moore and there was no difficulty in establishing for the Presi- | with the Turks: And I shall not ad, but | or acheme, arms, officers, nor men, gathered or | its own people, is noue too good to steal from it Lastly, we have received certain intelligence that | his wife were clever, respectable le. He owned dent most of the powers of the English sovereign..| the act so meditated was in violation of that | invited to New Orleans for an. invasion of Cuba. netetbbeee Thin ia the character of the povertmnent, Admiral Des Pointes was expected at San Fran- | 2 negro man named ‘om, about 22 years of age, ‘Fhe democratic intelligence of that day was fully | law. But I allude to the fact to show that even | Such things could not be without some popular | in present hands. What @ mortifying spectacle it | cisco and would visit this port. Tt will be the first | Who, had been raised in the family, and satisfied that President Washington’s proclamation | the conservative Intelli; did not accuse | knowledge, some prevalent romor and belief, some | presenta to the world! French Admiral who has visited Guayamas. admitted to many familiarities and rties, was without constitutional warrant. Net it must | these persons as poy ig robbery or piracy, | external signs not to be mistaken, although, per- ‘i st Bite cae} GES EEL “This letter,” the Trait d’ Union adds, “jg an- | Such as are too often allowed to slaves by these be acknowledged that democrats have not since | or of entertaining sentiments and wishes derog- | haps, not susceptible of exact enalysis or legal cer- irneOrepe. terior in date to that which we published in our last | Who own but few. This slave and two small free heaitated to follow his example. Under these cir- | atory to them as gentlemen, patriots and good ty; but no resident of New Orleans, within our | The Chambers (Als) Tribune of the 23 ult. | B0mber, and has been retarded in ita route, we negro boys, hired by Moore, worked on the farm. eamstances, it be admitted the President's | citizens, And, as giving special eciAt to the pre- | range of acquaintance, has fever met with such in- . * | know not with what motive. It informs us that the he slave Tom had been ingolent to the family, iti : “The late heavy rains have given a fine ap- . ; i ion in this case is comparatively venial. | parations for that expedition, Mr. Adams, then | dications. The discovery of any such expedition | “*Y® y ped authorities of San Francisco decided to let the | 2nd especially to Miss Lotspeech, and ought te have Yet, Sr be say it were not better it hed e clear | Just elected to office, gave to the same Greek fili- | ‘would be hardly less unexpected than the sound of | Dearance to the growing crops in this region. We Challenge go with ier pansaiigers. i We ningt su) | been arrested, but Moore was desirous o aving hie don’t know when we have seen a better prospect for ip- netie the copmaibetion — = poe ag a eae os oonetayrie — gee! the eal cme Ce emp — epee cor, This crop, we think, will be larger in Cham- one _ the French passengers of the Challenge Lea! - ome = q oe (ree pho reo sient Pierce refers “for hic authority to that prise, and such ‘its advocates and Bh corbin without cregrve or fear of self-crimination, that eget = hy has been for t FF Fp aM bp me ica Conbtagt amt Aato.s betaliog mader:the So) if. cumired the negro still to live in the family. On ale @ and abounding, source of executive power, | Spo kes o that the ‘aspersions of the procla mation woul nid have be mn total ignoring nglien beginning, omovies ns astaegeas rai ee 1 Seneral Ampudia, Governor of the State of Nuevo eo Aine Mtr Ag fj Me ee laws be faithfully executed.” All’ yemember | equally meritoriona cause ran be we feserved? | means foran “military Fexpedition Or enterprice’ uqthe Hayneville Watchman of the same date says: | of the cart of cae: the rank of commander | tant, and in the nipht entered the ‘house where how Amos Ki Pressed the omnipotence of ach might be said of the President’s imputations carried on from the United States against | ‘The crops in this county, we are pleased to learn, | ‘The Count de la Cortina y Castro has presented | Moore and his wife were in one bed, and Miss Lot- power. The curt re- look very promising. The corn crop, it is thought, | the President of the lic with a rich cloak of | #peech in another bed in an opposite corner of the and pointed exposition, of this text by the | war. Having there was no intention enter-| A grest many things, however, the Grand Jury | will be the largest ever raised in the county; and | Grand Maser of the Order of Guadalu + thi | Sime room. He entered the room with a lamp and Court of the United States, may be | tained by any, so far as known or believed by me, of | might have elicited, if the rnling of the conrt had | the prospect indicates a fairaverage crop of cotton.” | cloak js of blue satin, ingeniously embroidered by | ®xe. He struck Moore in the head a blow the seem in 12th vol. of Peter's Reports, pp. sie. the neutrality of the government of | not made them, by implication, constructive | The Chergw (S. C.) Gazette of the 28th says: | Mexican hands. The embroideries of the left side | Cdge of the axe, causing sach instant death that ho tion to be this source of executive of lawl cating the question of and | Spain. , Having atid’ these was L com 1] d Time is.not allowed me for the ample | the United States, the question of peace or war by | breaches of the !aw, as tending to some fature ex- | We have now had four weeks of dry weather, which | represent the plate of the order, in the centre of | did not, when first discovered, spear to have of this clatee of the constitution, of which it is sus- | the United States cannot be involved. It is dition, in some le change of affairs, here or in | is parching up our gardens. The surrounding coun- | which is the likeness of the virgin. moved. Several wounds, apparently given with ceptible. ~ But a brief will show it gives no | known there are already a considerable number iba. They might have discovered a very general | try has been more fortunate, but the crops geuerally | The code of commerce, which is to rule the entire | great force with the axe, were found upon and warrant for this PIO of American citizens engaged in the Russian | and very earnest desire for the liberation of Cuba | are needing rain. The wheat and oat crops have | republic, was to go in operation May 27. about bis head. Mrs. Moore awoke, sprang from the Now, in the roclamation is es- | and Turkish service, and ¢ wars waged by them. | from the dominion of Spain, afall and firm belief | generally been harvested in the finest condition, bed and contended with the negro in defence of her this The New Orleans Delta gives the following sum- ly and aims, by its counsel and | But is it supposed es our government in | that itis not only right in iteelf for the people of | with a most abundant yield of supericr grain. The ition, to dissuade the citizen from committing a | any — party to those wars, or Complicate our | Cuba, but necessary for the well being and peace of | cotton and corn is eiosraily foowing Sal though | Mary: A Mrs. M. similar to those — her husband, and : peaceful relations with those powers. the United States; & yery thorough conviction the | the latter has not yet recovered from the effects of | _ The saddest news of all isthe death of Sontag. | ing her from the floor, threw her upon the bed, in ita way, ‘The threats in the proclamation of 8 Jegal og American government and people should no longer | the backward spring. Upon the whole, our plant- | As we have not received our regular files from the | where she died in a few minutes. any legiti- husband. The negro inflicted several wounds “ce whether from the Presi or from cution ig in bad taste, if not impotent tolerate the hostile policy towards us with which | ershave no room for complaint, as with fair sea- | city of Mexico yet, and the Vera paper merely Whilst the brief contest was pending with Mre. Foe may teu eet rs ost tear | "Undone theory on contin, govrament | fre Ang any wh ase uae, | niece? it seo lb mek ah) oct Ta awl ect | Not"hn eek Verba nea a ke may be as one as the other. in e our constitat |. Amon; informed, | antly rewarded. fall party o sorrowful occur- . But the. best hes the’ Prekdet ts prevent a | prosecutions, so special! distinguished, have no | they might fave found @ very strong belief that 4 Seturday last we were presented with area | rence. It 5p pears, however, that the opera of ‘‘Lu- | it; be then threw her upon the bed and violated breach of the laws, cannot, by any logic ii — I mean by such, State prosecations—those | the domestic oppressions will not longer be endured | cotton bloom by John Ellis, Bsq., of this district. | CT¢cia Borgia ’ had been announced for the evening | her with many acts of barbarity and inhumanity elf with his duty to take care that the laws be faith- instituted and carried on by the king, his | by the carte a and a very general Gotarminae The bicom was plucked on Friday evening, and of eh. is andience had ssscmabled, and were pot ere eee et oe fe be Rod folly executed. Laws not ber, a ag ft council and agents in England, and wrongfully snake on, wi ye nner hed ome rade ey must bave been open on Thursday, the 22d. We os awa 5 fond Bod. ceed ro e fina Soop lenpag red lemeng e Sar eed legal ot, the snenies the law follows Ses eal ue yf b be pobre Bape ai Aagdny crisis ea its prompectsand itedeep significance to our oon on as forme as Ray te the disteie? ing to the sudden severe: “nalspeition of Madam then made’ bis eacape. The next day the whold ment. More ltberally construed, it is the enforce- inder our eo: the jodiciary is wholly | interests may require, and the law applicable to | but its fu' 1y ten days behind. the usual average of | Senteg, the performances would have to be post. oar same ued ani r. MD) eee b Media this Fenser ail the duty of ah rlies-on't 428, aloes Manatee ae “atatianely Yeahine*t Saya sepa ten tt seman gin non Re ear. beet Rorkydiucheties entenetinge reas Sho manaake | Seah afl they bad ever seen. ‘The whole neigh peint is include supervisor ministe- performs: Z there been consul We learn from the Pedee Times of the 28th ult. 4 le 64 brated artist, Madam iligent reareb for val Sana, abject to ‘his control, if they fail in tee a net a) a the diseince, ietection that Eesis, reyeratity oaleoaed of nouns or - feast | that the weather has been very fine of late for the Sontag, Countess te Rosel havtug died, the lyrical ioe rim on Banag ‘te was A éaty and violate the law, they incur the penalty of | its operations go on uninfluenced by executive | suggestions of the most effective way of raisi crope—warm, with a plentiful supply of genial | company;of this theatre, in consequence of tle sa however, until he had received # severe removal from office, and such other penalties as the | control. The manner in which all infractions of the | means, to be applied in some way hereafter, which | Showers. The crops of the district, in consequence, | occurrence, has suspended, for the present, the re- | from a rifle ball. He made — fell, Sooage net vo- bite law shall be redressed, how the accused ahall | events may determine, to assist the independence of | STé in fine condition, both rice and upland. | Indeed presentation which was announced for this evening, | luntary confession, which is by other fe wmned to yy permission of his Excellency, the Governor of | evidence. On Monday, after public notice rf arrested, tried and comie t, ia | Cubs. That such means may be employed iflegally, | We have never kuown com to #0 fast, and y the constitation and laws all preted fo, and | is possible. That the he cetaed sat an Lon With such a sturdy stalk, before in all our observa | the district, which it is believed will meet with the | throughout the country round, in the presence of an. ene duties exclusively assigned to the judicial de- | military expedition, Tvilation of the neutrality | tions. We hope this state of things will last to the | concurrence of the entire Mexican public, who now | immense assembly, and by the expressed approbe- ent. the courts will perform their duty | act of 1818, to be carried on against the domiuions | €4. and that abundant harvests will repay the | participate in the profound sorrow that overwhelms | tion of every individual present, the negro was ith fidelity, in all cases, is a confidence which the | of Spain, isnot to be disputed; amd the liability of | 4tduous toil of the sgriculturiste. It is upon the | gi) who knew this distinguished artist and virtuous | chained to @ stake and burned to death, and to : | | | | val | Jaw has prescribed to be adjudged by the courts of | But ‘ judgment it ia then the duty of the Presi- of our constitution entertains without suspi- | those who eo use them to the penalties of the statute, | tiller of the soil, at last, that we must ail fall back lady aches, take care that the laws be faithfully ex- | cion. In this respect, they areas much trusted as ip equally cone, Tt makes case for the oe | to’get the necesearies of life, departments of Vera Cruz and Oajaca have | 5, > Sanihdae ow welide's ented, asthe court has adja: And for this | the is. of the government, aes ita suspicions, very The London be Free Press saya that, after | been invaded by fillibusters of @ more dangerous Th el ‘aniude or not Hn er Feaponsible duty he is all the military | If this be se, wherein has the constitution ap- prover! stimulates {ts officers to watch and arrest.| all the anticipated evils that seemed to threaten the | character than even our “ Fifteen Thousand.” The 9 nel aie jndges, gues oe ere = power of the government. If, therefore, we have boyy may, nevertheless, specially become overt act in violation of i statute, But | farmer on account of the severe frost in the early | Eco informs us that these two departments are in- Terni ol Megan of Neen Of uieaabe fs green rapper) rightly, the authority for President, in fancied matters of State, to work | neither possibility, probability mor intent make a | pert of summer, harvest has come, and with ita | fested with locasts, which are destroying every- Ete 29 salaries hoo ag bg is not in the constitution, | bimeelf Ras an energetic activity to have the | crime against a statute. If the Grand Jury had | good crop of wheat—better where stock was por thing that comes in their way. 5 poche yal officers, Payable “4 gad being without law, {s unwarranted. courts todo something more or something better | found the rumors true that afund is collected for | mitted ta run on it than it was last year. Oats| The cholerais prevailing in the city of Mexico | commencement each 4 account i stated for each officer First Auditor, which ie Next, as to the matter of this proclamation, and | than they otherwise would do, if left to the - | the general purpose of assieting Cuban ind - | look well, though they oi low but thin. We | with considerable violence, and on the 15th, a grand is . ae the First troller, reported to the whet it threatens to form, ee gent perormancy of Bete duy, a entrusted to ence, it would, not follow tha 1s ‘a necessarily to hear. of ho cause: frofe x tab to tora an opinion, Leaner Ae pate = marched to a enero, Bente a ibe ice tat pared, President information ‘“‘has been constitution exper violatio1 W, OF ma: r than at an average crop. | which is de “ Lady o! Remedi Treasury, is wat reeeived that sundry persons, citizens of the United | The theory of the Bagh @xpressly | not be employed in 3 wey which the law been Frait, in many places, is almost an entire failare. | for the purpose of prazin for rain, the scarcity of | a certified, and y Sotho a eee org ing and elag ef omits oy tor | lithe fountats of jaton, "Thsoretioaiy, he ste Ik | ttl the peblo sletions ofthe counery wil nue it | secre eouayicamia, (¥.) the Fredericksburg, Nour | ye etniieay. ee slate | sary pewparnony Jor making parmstt: Tee var a that the wheat crop wi mone 5 mined by the Assistant Secretary of the lew of the of Cube.” Bat. not to it in ways which are now illegal. | the usual yield. Corn be very fair—better than Fires continue to occur with alarming Soqneney he hia initiale at the top; after this apelits is being 4, ing in court in it is said the re an: is expended in violation of the | yenal, here the bud worm has done mig- | in the city of Monterey, whicheare evidently the places fitted out, and whence it’ is fatengea to thelage of hie and justice. In the law of the United ‘the offender wiil be liable chiel. On tome farms, torn this cause, the crop work of incendiaries; Wt, aa yer, no one has been Socios] Onomarelior $0" cota ie meve for the invasion of Cuba, is not indicated.'| British State trials are es; pto- | for all the penalties, with » diffident reliance | will be reduced fifty barrels at least, The oat crop, | detected in the act of firing a buildings 4 44 | tered upon the of Comptroller and 5 ana rithout these two importint facts are fired, video ter. The power of the Privy ¢ fa to | upon any special know! of the decisions of however, will be better than it has been for ten years PR. Maes" Ve Biaitn ae | hat fe to be rained to | it in nent sme Tee for pa; drafts on the expedition is belag orgesized and: tted, er to commit the offenders custody inorder | interpretation of equity and common sense, which ' etuate his memory, was laid with ip | are generally made {iin the United States, and to be carried on there: to take thelr trial In some. of the courte’ of laws” | all tie requirements’ of legal’ eclonce are iitended BR rym seed se Rerra soe Mordor, ul advinnSaata Anan te serers. The whole number of these aalary sesouste sammated, would Violate. ether out treaty with | these dutic are devolved?” Wor will It" de te say | “Bet the Grand Jory, as it ata not get | tended tour through eight or ten counties of this | Goes not, it never will be completed. Per example, | there accounts were stated, copied, ryaied or the neutrality act of 1819, That e eitizen | the President Commonwealth in such | even at the facts of thla degree of preparation, if | St#t0 bas served to eatisfy us that if there should be | the Jackson and Washington monuments. more than a week ago; the yere 7 Sted Barmy ih ted S| nent, cgay | Bc thre nde geen popning | Suara rycen | Trg bane et wt | Be eaten ate ee eae ‘we his means and money to promote an entrusted with this service, and inter- | the witnesses indicate that the t ate | Will exceed the most sanguine expectations of those | Be South, and none whatever from Alvares. it, at the opening of his office thie 4 to be organised out of the United States, and to be | meddling of the executive is without constitutional fects, The rating of the eoart, by extending its Who have hot hed the Like adtpateve of pasting | ght had taken place between a party of the insur- j has not been obeerved ia pay: carried on from without Inited States against | warrant. itt degres iminallt passing f gov- like promptness pay: ota not involve fg eaten in any I can well understand that the {ttarney of the hed the eect at ita a all the poten pers ipa, sowatey,, The: ere! 8 tom mtbod of Ervmen tropa of emi ple te] ‘ oot og elle mes oy govern- fang of ae gudianans violation of “he ‘et of Mi 5 poaeeetion hop pe tould soul Seis hove 5 aoe wml tee the we heard, ina ten days tour, 4 an occasional one 23 driven from pnt gen the top of a are. propositions 00 plain, and too well | mitted, may often voquire, the, etendanee otawit- | purpotee of the goverument, to etablish the fact of Fuih reftence tothe voriog wheat that was 10 | tonntain with the lou one wile aad two pet | Revawcx Vanenie, Coormearmg warm, mi? decision esses from , , a Jo . det, the of our courts, and | n & distance, and sid from **,.easury to | the collection of means in New Orleans for some fu Wisteeaia Will ent Weed araet Ciplas as the re: | Sp2er® ‘Them two prisoners were instantly shot as pe Mage he A oe ee enone and ts a taEan | tach rea ctec bak Sear eeeacne mn, ees | Sore pany 8 eg Tete tamwte to toasty, | SUG Of the harvent of 1854. Judging from the ap- | “"On'S, nirth-day, Santa Anna showed his magna- | rate with the mary, amd shall "eg be der the : Congress when. they passed roo | hee tee te President, heref = criminal i J rance of the winter wheat in many portions of F jontn hed been con- | rection of the Sec of the Ni ex- porary Sct of Lous Marche 1838, to Teettbaetiaeee santa Cot say pre eitcen) ag of a Ba be bad for thet emcee” i Kae" the ate we hen i hy sry mat commence veto we Neelamioses or of tinea, a pee be defra; ty the Na aparbaon, Thee of | f i next week, an we vanced by Senor Don Manuel 0! of Gnadalajara, in diaposing of @ case recendy ‘Treasury 9 rota ons Pitas iene Oanade, | ee Ince ara ordi age and | This, a one io ba et isi boy ale July, if tue present warm weather continues. Deen apy na Minister Hadi jenda, 3 pies ws fs a ” af was lp rete on bad ion font me But the President, perhaps, would be understood | agents, and the thus marked manifestation of already, at least so setth there will be no fas . on arrez,, resigned. inister revenue plasin, that the expedition was so fitting out, } his zeal and wishes, may rend: prosect doubt the minds of the it jurors and Fata Acorext.—An Irishman, named Roy- | corresponds to our Secretary of the Treasury. them onder the orders of the Navy Department, ry Intended to be cominn on, 98 to violate both on | successful or oj ‘ “4 when it mi _ skintan pig maltiesh Golent un cethe yon nolés, wes Milled by the locomotive of the Saturday | ‘The Mexican papers now say that it has bean sat- and hanging the — oo bo ba ‘taeaty and law, as he charges it would. I answer otherwise be so. But all such partial and un- | aetof the United States, and particularly whether | efternovn train from Springfield, near the ‘ athed that the resene of the Petrits | only be done by Congress. er ed then to the fact, that_ #0 far ax T have any informa- | equal interference, which may #0 affect the unequal | the raising of money isa misdemeanor on the pre | street bridge. He was somewbat intoxicated, a in Movehead, of the British ship | men of the raregun oem, if beat Fagen —e Oy tion on the subject referred to, no intention of in- acministration of justice, is & ersion of justice, | somption of its being intended for an. aniawfal | jumped from a car on another train directly im froas | lof the Ethelbert, was a precon- | ¥ ie, ¢o-operating with the actat iy Creer Of | fracting either the law or treaty is mesditated by d grossly adverse tu the genius of our government | purpore, with including the fact of its expenditare | of the locomotive, and it waa pot posible to | ccrte! uate Letwoe ee Commuores of the two | Dvcaldcnt, ave eutitied (by the acto Spill 13, 16147, any ore: ond that no act violative of either, nor act | and fre equal rights of the citizen. | tor any uninwiul ouject, the train until tt was too late. The wheels pacacd | vesscls—the captain ot the Dido having conversed | to be placed on the navy | aap , Under the Involving the neutrality of the ment of the ' Our courts should not be so tampered with. Ifit | We are well encugh known to be no filibusters, | over bis left leg, cutting it almost entirely of, Ho | with one of the prisovera, named William Gillam, a | same regulations and reatri an Officers and oy Vaited States, will be penned of'any armed expeditions for the | ived but a few bours.— New Haven Courier, July 3. British subject, provivas to his being put aboard of ' men of the navy.— Washington Star, July \y is right, the Judge abould be impressed with the and do disapprove

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