The New York Herald Newspaper, August 14, 1854, Page 3

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The the to any. we have ever be- fe Phe Case of the English Deserters at Boston, ‘The Rebellion in China, do, anything to make amende, fee Mi al Let Crops. large, and Targe quantity of | DEATH OF SENOR DON JOSE FRANCISCO BARRENDIA, . MOUS CF TEE EY DOD GP REDE Bhing-peoe insite Sesnaten on alee Joo ie ‘The Bangor Whig has the folowing with regard aul wine aioe cuared aaenis for the PLENIPOTENTIARY OF THE REPUBLIC OF BON: Tn ae eee bay tall wade Berens 19 te ene last We should, aftar th to the crops :—“ The hay crop has been secured in | short corn crop. The forward he which | puRas. ‘ (From the Boston Traveller, Aug. 11.) The Pekih Gazeéte of the 4th of April contains « | gucvessful termination of the war, be specalating | excellent order,and is afair crop ; io some par‘a of | was put in by the 20th of April- talfe the country | | Don José Francisco Bermndis, Minister Piemison |) 51 hie ‘ntcntg we mre fm te Baar to th ling atic | Spon sme etre rman, wpe i tessa mac bce han et gue, Wants een} cua Wi prhape, iodo a are | en on ear gen Te to ely evden: | bury pepuaed tas of tetra Eaglah Soate In consequence of the ‘rebels from Gnan-hwuy | ‘The same Gazette appoints Tsung. to be a s crop, sown later than part . from : | ers, Prichard and Carey, charged with robbing the Governor stead of I much was sown. The corn cr well, but | April, will not yield one-third of a crop. Many Gelds | sged 68 years. His death resulted an ; > peewee amg gc abnor pA. ea 7 tie" hang leang- | gine now to auffer on account of the severe drouth. | will not be haivested at all, and we sxw some felds | of apoplexy. pp eee edly ne beg Beaten; “40 they ste y an the Yeliow mver, ‘and then ‘The Gasette of the 14th of April contains s report | The potatoe crop will suffer seriously for want of | im fall blocm, where there could scarcely be found a Senor Barrundia was one of the few really pure, Twinin, vay se te 1 coe up. Geo. D. entering th ‘tung province, took ameng other | from Shing- detailing a over the rebels. | abuxdant rains. The summer, as well asthe past | stalk of three feet high. The whole yield of the | upright, and consistent republivans which Spanish | |™' alleged snagentney Higa ume places “city of Kinhenng (lat. 35 deg. 11 min. | He says thet the rebellious thieves ving disturbed | winter, has been uppropitions for trees, large nu | country will not be greater than an ave America has produced. A nativeof (i the | 166 Mesican dollezs, 278 in parry 4 or ag mir pcg ved whereupon eur | the region of Lin: , erected some stockades | bers havieg blighted in whole or in part, The | crop. ‘In riding from Lexington to the Lone Jack, | capital of the ancient vivero alty of the same name, devlctlans, sion ys Psd o ang hal fenerals Toe kite ols and Shing'peon despatched | on the east and west ics of os fily, with the | growth of healthy fruit trees has been large.” after er crossin ai the Inte Sul, far hirty rales, there i he t ook an active and cons} aaa) part in the more: rige a,c, Seo pererlage 084 Jal ners. H '. > ln, ’ Breruh a ie ead on, army Lo advance 424 | Tew of ase adn urge Saas Cea | Th Bestam Teri eae leezed by» goti-| Wolof genlemen onthe rade Lerngtm (So) | (sia Taconfn ton with eomall band o Awa, | anton chat He, recognized the two perwas vs report of ‘Teong-gnan, the Judge of Shan-tung | the rebel encampment ae eke at tee eerie thet the crops | Zagress, July 26, he subsequently took the lead in resisting and de- | SRS Tony, f . province, these yas hordes have fought their | the city, at « place called Linkea-yuen. All the | everywhere are looking well, though, the drought WisconsrN. feating the attempts of the oligarchial and priestly | "Te ant Torrey testified to the identity of the Kay tly ng fi Sr is | ele nur ncn rnd cho | Singing aot Unsot reac, | Ce Pht many aprons | Ea, heii wa | leer gry ced Win eget . 55 min. east, wi fudge 4 ous rains, tatoes wi materi la a y= ¥ , C. B.; that Cai at th sropathed te Sage in conte a of tbe oly of | babs, on the mur ofthe moment, rested with death, | eantity.’ Frit willbe abnadaot. Along the val. | YHeoiy more unfounded. The bight besnot affected | ¢any elected Covernor of (ustemala, then consti. | at Ssdney, C-B.; that Corey nas on mused ot the , named Keib-hing, to attack them in flank ; seeing the valor of the i of ‘k the of hay, from the rich 7 Pog ga ley of the Merrimac! crop y, from 'y; but yea to any extent. What is uncu’ is yet stand- | tutings State of the United a Ar Central Ame- he aleo ordered the Lieutenant-Colonel King-shun, | troops to be irresistible, the . intervales, was rarely ever more prolific and valua- | ing in fine orcer, notwithetanding the high winds | Yica. \As such he distinguished himself by intro | 0” the night of the 12th, from 8 to 10 P.M.; he rovision: body have been on guard at 2 A.M. on the f the stockade. A 2,000 or 3,000 “4 and beating rains of the last week or ten days. The | ducing many salutary and liberal reforms—all of | Would Toved at ag ee hes ‘advanced from the eastward tojoin in ee & NEW York. only remarkable loss will be by the shelling of the whick were strenuously resisted bythe reactionary bent He Pacgibnde i but ae sat panentabe meet the , when he killed several handreds of | when the imperial troops formed into ie, and The Montgomery County Whig says the harvest | ripening wheat in the process of cutting, as it has Perey wa pinged tim out as the especial object of de) vexvasnthin dase w2Ne tiinibe the rebels, captured a large quantity of flags, ened fire upon them, by which means upwards of | is now neasly over in this a . ‘The hay and | become very dry, and easily drops from the ebafl— their hatred and aay. sesh or ponory the Ce} ys “A uae military weapons, powder, and scaling ladders, Sirundred wore , and the force of their attack 1B crops were never secured in better order, and | Madison Argus, July 31. AS * member of the jonst tat! anal 1 Convention Windows teing berncadeds three. other soldiers ca and alive thirty and more ‘of hee ies was in some measure restrained. The imperial Fada ake the country together, is an average The Milwaukie Sentinel of the 17th inst., called in , he drew up and carrie conatitu- ; S8Y8:— | tion of the republic of Central America, which, not- | £uard at that door during tne night; the witness After this the rebels took troops still pressed on, and in obedience to the | one. Corn is coming on well, and there can be no | We have glad tidings from the harvest field. The PI fi econ- | #&W both of the prisoners oa the ni the 12th, pase. It aj alsofiom the report of Sheniah, | command of Shing-paou the various regiments at- | reasonable doubt of a fair yleld. It has been too | reports from all parts of the State are favorable. A | Pipe Tae epee eee ae pry airet aeeepater bal that on his arrival a‘ Lin-tsing, he found that the | tacked the enemy in flank; by means of the fire | dry fors large yield of potatoes, but we hear no | vast amount of grain has already been secured, and | Soa enlightened of ‘any ever adopted in any of the |, On the cross-examination, the witness was asked yebéle were encamped at the village of Lekwan, | which was then eimaiiendvena posed; 300 or 300 | complaints of the appearance of rot. there is more left on the ad. The frequent | ¢, Gahte ublivs, pepo other things it abol- | if, when the regiment w ss stationed at various places when the above named General sent Kwei-fuh, at | more of the rebels were sl Whereupon the The Herkimer County Journal hes the fol ; | rains and heavy storms of mid July did serious mis- is sinete forever, and gave to Central America | °2 the Mediterranean, the accused had not the the head of s body of norte, to sibeamne freak Ein Sing main Log pgs enemy retarned,to their entrench- | 7,9 crops look better in the northern part of the | Chief, but the last ten days or a fortnight bave made bo a portunity to earn money, other than their pay. troops * the first civilized na- Shen Nh hismelt bel on the main body of April Pe Fao (ime moming of the 11th of | country than they do in the southera. The corn | smple amends, The weather has been as fine as our | Ae Te ere or statutes the law of | witness replies that they had such opportuaky, bat of seca aeh himeelt Ted on irre then divided itestt enemy wear the Meto temple, on the ncrth- we and potatoes, wheat, oats, and barley, presented a | farmers could wish. Wisconsin, this year, will have | slavery. The honor of this act is directly due to the to his knowledge they had not availed t @ surplus of come ten millio: f fe rta: | | it to tt extent. At Sydney, Pritchard acted esr ne meme ed ty hr | Stated ate eae tap Rig | Eterna ane ae ten” eS | Mat concen as ado ith ret anan-| #8 oar to Mr. Pening for which be remved A ca an + | ‘on | t P @ Killed abgreat Sumber of che enemy. ‘The rebels | Just as’ they spproached’ the rebel encampment, ma ee igen get Rg Ege Another Cuban Outrage. j aay Ree Pecks ee oe Oe ait seen for the Enelins vernment. 4 fe) won like ants on the be ao the rea _ os ly — @ volley, —s the roll of the | feed was lenty and the price of cheese low, so that ies snfigems tes Fortlaad Argus, Aci : 10.) M oe a” areey rs was el le Mr. Treanor, or the vrlsoners, said that he sboaia main our forces came rum army a vanced, hand- 1c Tapa ol ie Cuban govern- ad it t been le ou! and ca; a number; upwards of thirty | and fire balls, with the view of retting the palisades | ° the whole they have ro reason to complain. ment are getting to be eudiaraace: Not satis. | _ Here his foresight and wisdom became ey cir Fra ned Onenianer to certify tothe Executive that great NEW JE ¥ REBY. ith uppressi ] sh. | Manifest. An ardent admirer of the Untted States, Ranke peice mench ace | tot, rete St etree | |e oo emu tot ae mat | Home haatedech adres Taac' | Seto uct cap elt | Hebe eben a number of yellow flags, jingalls, swords and spears. bap ‘about a hundred of the enemy. The rebels | Country look well. any fields of potatoes and | thelcitizens of other nations, and seems especially | n&8ton Code, in place of the complicated Bpanish | 1) ee ilarcepy and not robbery. He quoted va- The numberof those who must have fallen could not referring death to flight, the imperial troops joined | buckwheat, however, are {n much need of an early | gyxicus to visit upon American commerce the ha- | '#W-, He perfected a system of geveral education,in | 10 Prove 0 a: toahowthabenbbery is taxing trons be less than 700 or 800. The enemy having, as | battle with them,and as every one of the royal army | hower. There will be great scarcity of apples tred which it feels towards American institutions, | Which he set an example of devotion and practical | 1.088" seth se noe, bereinlence paige Beey above detailed, sdvanced to Lin-taing. Tsung-gnan | was equal to a hundred of the enemy, the rebel host | 80d peaches, although few farmers will realize | «4 history,” says Mr. Ballou, ‘cf the commercial | Wisdom to his countrymen rarely paralleled. Ata | }i6 beiron. Or im ie trenches, oy Teo Sead? punting at the head of all the tr ian ae his disposal | was speedily thrown into confusion, (The boastfyl handsome sums by the sale of their peaches.—New | intercourse of our citizens with the faland, would certain hour of the day the public business was sus- an rh ” aly. fiirves ee Path cal to peas boldly advanced to check thelr progress; let him, | character of the Gompatoh is here very suparent. The | Brunswick Union. be a history of petty, und also serious, annoyances | PeDded, and the cfficers of state, from the highest to | HOS o on treaty does not provide for a case of therefore, send up a report of the soldiers and offi- | writer admits that the rebels would ‘rather die than DELAWARE, and grievanees to which they have been subjected | 'B¢ lowest, as well as the officers of the army, con- lareeny. In the second place, the case has not been eers who have guished themselves on this occa- | fly, and yet says that every single imperialist was | , In this State, from our own observation, and in- | sora series of years by the Spauish officials, increas- | Yérted thelr offices and barracks into school rooms, | Doo. ted by the British government. Ac- sien, in order to their receiving suitable rewards; | equal to’ hundred of such rebels, This does no | formation gathered from others, the growing corm | ing in magnitude as the latter have witnesced the | #04, 4s teachers, instrncted all who chose to coms, | Properly prtseniee by the Bian geuctamense soe but jet there be no falee accounts given in. Shen: | accord with our experience of them.) Shing-paou | 18 very , and promises well, with the exception | forbearance aud magnanimity of our government, | 2 the rudiments of education. President Barrundia oant ike a moor icine share, who Uae meade Tuh having, advauced at the head of a force to cut | then ordered a certain wonder-working gun, togeth | of the southwestern Case of Kent county, where | Not an American merchant or captain, who has pad himeelf, with bis cabinet, constituted no exception ea iseued “his recrinns and this warrant, with off the enemy, bas obtained some su.cesses; but | er with acannon of 3,000 pounds weight, to be | it is drooping and dried to some extent, on account | dealings with Cuba, but could furnish his list of in- | t@ tbe rule. Without universal education,” said | ory ace of ene authority of the magistrate, should the rebellious thieves having serarated themselves | fired upon the enemy; when the rebel flags were im- of theabsence of rain and unlimed ground. We | suits and outrages, some in the shaps of illegal e he in his proclamation, “the state can have no hope, have been produced here, which had not been done, into two bands, stealthily crossed the grand canal, | mediately seen falling to the earth, and the sur- | have the experience of several intelligent farmers | tortions and delays, otters merely gratu'tous ebul- | 80 all our eflorts for progress, material and moral, | (10° Vooeedings being founded upon an affidavit when the above-named general did not exert him | viving rebels running off with the dead bodies of | t© the effect that lime, ¢rawing the dampness from | jitions of spite and malice.” As a most stri must be vaio.’ i with the certificate of the commanding officer at pelf to stop them, on which arcount he is very much | their companions. (Sach an effect of Chineso can. | the atmosphere, and retaining it in the ground, en- | ilinstration of this Soavish practice of insult and | ,,22 the turbulent period which intervened between | BUG) UNG ectiLe Ba) toe emu e edavit to be blamed. Let Shen luh, therefore, and Kwei-fuh | nonading has never witnessed in the south. If | bles corn to stand a revere drought, and ing 23 robbery, we subjoin the particulars of a case which | 1890 and the dissolution of the re publicin 1838, Sr. | 3 a tal istrate. In support of this be both degraded from rank, but retained at their | it be avything more than an empty boast, other een, fresh and healthy. On several large has recently bappened in connection with a vessel Barrundia played an important part. While Gen. fition ry anoted 10 prespey eee) New York, Ita , also, that Shing-paou has gone | hands thon either Chinese or Tartars must have | Dave we witnessed this effect mostapparent, whilst | from this port, but which indicates #0 much mean- Moravan wielded the sword of the liberal party, Br. who was demanded by the British government as a on other fields untimed, in the same neighborhood i if ec Barrundia rendered scarcely less effective service ppl dng Weoanean Deaiienaincsaened edigreat pe sskion coreg Sami dscaah, hastened i the corn is yellow and much withered. “The fruit ties, that Canty Rone ton it increditien i | with his pen. Ta conjunction with Gen. Cabanas, | murderer, And Witte ne ceed may be considered a failure. Only the original warrant must be produced. officer to place himself at the head of all the doe ursuit, add killed @ great number of the enemy. | °'°) in our State we had not received our knowledge o: it from | the actual President of Honduras, Barrandia and A int raised was, that the British Vice ei re ad eerie iy alti | Pet of she bl Sree ae sad | elope, sp ilar, Bacar me ramiam Tinie vito | macad he ote ey. fle met the Cental wasnt ie grove ran, mabe te 8 m Q 8. pe , i = 4 | .. About the middle of last Febra the bark ©. | i ‘ mand, but ¢ r the warrant was ries and huckleberries are plentiful, and command ebruary, the ba + | gots and monarchists in the field, in debate, and The Gazette of the 9h of April contains a re- | them thither, and before the rebels could find time , B. Hamilton, of this port, (Thomas Means being | through tl - and teluiapbantly vindl the | should have been ?placed in the hands of a legal of- port from Chang-leang-ke, the Lieatenant-Governor Soenen Bre tae: ce ray cetenniete inane fae pbotries mised, not coon tito een % | odlaas master, and part owner,) arrived in Havana frou | policy Pl aie! ri benny my vindicaied we | ficer to proceed to. this county and lay the matter of Shan-tung, stating that he has obtatneda vic: | 8) across the | Re aeee cone! ne want eae Deauae sen Reporter, Aug. 4. New York, with a general cargo, described in forty- | not until excommunicated by the Pope for abolish- | before the executive. He held that these men tory over rebellious thieves. He that ; nine bills vf lading. In due time, the captain pre- | ing tithes, suppressing the conventa, and expelling | ™ght, during their six or seven years service, have they bi to the suburbs of Lin-teing | their powder msgazine exploded, and the enemy VIRGINIA. itest. t | ae age 3 6, d Pee | accumulated the morey found upon thera, and 8; ; pared his manitest, and delivered it to the boarding | the Jesuits, nor until the priests and monarchists qnued she of Mr. Cobbett, host de ring bis y had R [; when Shen-luh and Tsung-gnan headed a body of | were thrown into confusion. The imperial troops The Fincastle Whie says the corn in that section | ¢ficer, Upon going ashor ¥ : Indi yp ape he ar Pe “After oh Shin; ime cee ‘which caved ae Sunared i ‘cates cate papaya eh rest of his conn zee, ard comparing his vl sf ding thatthe power of the bers a froken. : erect pie, ber f P f a mee eh troops ter the! Say {7 a a By lls ae ha wae 2 ‘arliamen\ conclu rata edat the elty in question and immedi | Febels bit the dust. ‘The remainder of them | short at least one half. Bibs a foe, list, he tound that, in some few par- | —_Alleging that the cholera, which appeared in 1637, | fy blmeclt as a member o him: the head concealed themselves moat, and eed; and fearing that the errors | was cansed by the poisoning of the waters by the | ion, he said that these men were not claimed as ately put himself at of the ferces, when he cealed ives in the most, employed SPORGIAS might extend to his manifest, and anxious to leave | a ~ | robbers, but as deserters, the penalty for which may filled about five hundred of them, and’ regained | 8 hundred inventions to repel the al send é The Colambus (Ga.) Inguirer says that much ope no poste chance of difficulty with the Taland | Bherela ite Dries Thee let Pret mabe Cog earn be death. i y oesession of two villages. Now it appears, accord. | but the im liste threw fire in among them, improvement has resulted rrom tne late rains, and | omcial ed at once to the Custo: | Mr. J. H. Bradley followed, enforcing the a) 1g to the report of Chang-leang ke, that the rebels | killed all those who had retreated to the most, until | the general prospect for cotton and corn has not snd aaked toe iy his manifest, in order: cotati get Aue ee icon authoring rtivg fd that the eoceenings were illegal, and the pi 3 « having been entrenched at a place called Hih kea- | the dead bodies were even with the edge of the | been more encouraging for years. if it was wrong. But the Collector refused to give | Indian leader, to exterminate “all foreigners and | titled to their discharge. teang, on the southeast side of the city of Lin-tsing, | moat. About this time about athousand rebelsfrom | A gentleman waiting from Bryan county, Ga., | it to him; and wit} the usual insolence of his class, ” he, the Lieutenant Governor, adi with the-| the weatern pass came up to the rescue, when they | says that the crops in thst county are not ao promis: | refused, also, to give him any reason for detaining Hera i tee actinic 7 and th ed recapitulated the: facte of the case. He said that officers and men under his charge, together with the bid levered by the ca who killed 100 of | ing as the general report, particularly the corn | it. This was within three hours afver the manifest | als and foreigners!” the Indian hordes invaded and | Wa® proved that the erlme charged had been eom- militia of the province, and on the night of the 4:h | them, atd the rest retreated. It is calculated that | crops, fey having suffered much recently from the | had been delivered; and the Custom House regula- | captured Guatemala, perpetrating the most horrible | mitted with false keys, which is burglary in the of April the enemy’s position. The mili- ile ‘ revolt cin 1,300 of the enemy were | hot amd dry weather. The recent showers have | tions of Cuba expressly provide, that “during the | excesses. : | eyes of the law. Prichard is @ servant of the Com- Siac aring cms vp'; thom, fin, and Skew | canoe of foreign amuuctare menocapare, be: | aie ows tne ry season dete at fase salaor | Shi are camemce ena ead ema | 4, de era leadere for tine rexiad the savage | In hea gney an si Carey, wo waste Ferd vi havi me wy same a e, season, of grass, and now | w Oo men from 8 a - Dj , Woh and Tsu. goa haviig sent a force to their as- | sides jingalls, fmatchlocks, sworda and spears, pow- | doing well. . : eerie ing aul sever a ni at, the captat, epee’ go, ee avalanche with success, but finally the combination | It was also shown that Prichard ctiompeod as ae an} inks Mr. John C. Park, for the British Cpt rome der and shot, without number, ‘ of priests, monarchists, and Indians became too pow- Re ote Fram the euddenserel' the: aieuce nertheast were attacked by Shen-as, tnd prevented Since onr last we inven meee trip through the Seiten nace! , and for creer he will | ext to borepelled, mee Uyeeticy nye Sent andd tbat Carey was Door wud in debe The s e unpreparedsess of the rebels, the insur | apa canis 5 te the rescue; when the main body of | northern n portion of this county and the southern | call on the Colle tor, or, in_his Nicnoe, on the mere ee HT beat ou prunaie, banist ad | next morning, at daylight, taey were seen dresscu ge were maie to flee in great consternation. enemy advanced the imperialists 0] fire up- | portion of Todd, and we heard general and almost | commander of the Custom Honse officers in ser- ae i property » 8008 as farmers, applying to captain of a vessel for on them and killed large numbers, w! they beat refuge in San Salvaior. Here, with his former asso- is country, and $12 for & pas T). number of those who were killed and burn- back the that ‘ge coming to thelr y . universal complaints from the farmers in regard to | vice.” Within this provision Captain Means had ‘A & passage to country peying pa ae incalonlable; while the rest, rushio crops. The remarkably hot weather of the pasttwo | cleail bt himeel’. He had called on the | Cates, he endeavored to restore the federal union. | sage, in the same cull as that stc a Shrovgh the fre, trampled’ upon each other in thy | $0 that the northeastern portion of the rebel fores | or Aree weeks and. ihe total falure of Tain have | Collector; be-had stated” his purposes be had asked | Forte Fears these exertions were continued with & | "If wae followed. by Wan. End, Hq, sls for the eonfusion. Several tens of their tents were > | oie them no (This bably refers | parched up every species of vegetation. Corn is | for his manifest. But the Collector would not to whi sebed ete? re hear Path, ° Sangre English government, who argued at lenght duced to ashes, after which the imperial troo®, ; 0 the rebel force already in bik ohih-le, who were | suffering immensely, and unless there isa fall of | give it to him apd ie had fa Taare sha Costam in Which deserv hey, ‘het treaties between two great governments should be paving obtained a great victory, turned their sbP8 | eleg from forming a junction with their érianda | vain in 6 very abort vluic v8 Dall @ wavy mitt we | Hourc wnoul It “twelve hours,” however, per ees sche oper a ray ap construed ina liberal spirit. Both Mr. Park and the eastern corner of the city, where Hey | from the South. They were, however, not above 70 | made. Tobacco is alao needing rain very.much, | did not expire until the next day at 10 o'clock ; Mr. End took the position that the word robbery p Shenae, ‘and imma diately set the stockye io waite Sen aoe Yond em) beer on | and presents a very unpromising appearance. That | and in the morning, with the clerk of his consignee, Pa barefeet ttt te gpa decreed in the treaty meant not the technical interpreta- flames; killing many rebels, and taking alive> in- by neers ae rer on rel pe the crop will be unusually short we presume there | he renewed his application at the Custem tinciple and that inflexible-resolution aiioll wave tion, but the more broad and general idea of what dividaale. ‘The dead bodies spread over the found on on occ ) BD successes obtained, | can be nodoubt. We have talked with farmers and | House. The Collector still refused him, until ten E; P ve | constitutes that offence. ee 20, while nimbey of the | show that both skill and have heen dis- | others from all parts of the country—from Logan, | o'clock. and then, the manifest was retuned to | Dim the designation of “ hombre de hierro,” or “iron | ‘The Comuiseioner in announcing his decision, amounted to mare wie bad been compelle.e® follow Played. Let Shing-paou avail himself of the flush | Christian, and Stewart counties—and from all we | hin. Without leaving the Custom House, and in | M87, by which he was known alike amongstfriends | gaia that he was of opiniom that the case Was-pro- the ranks of the enemy The empers says,on | of hor pad ange on his y,80 astosweep | have the same distressing reports—Clarksvill: | s few minutes, he found the errors he looked for, | #24 for. perly before him, the President and Secretary of vending this report, “ aon, Borluh and | sway this band of robbers from the face of the earth. | Jeffersonian, August 3. and corrected them; but upon tendering the cor. | . In 1851 his efforts were crowned with partial and | State baving no jarisdiction in the matter un Chang: ke immediately advance at tthead of ee charged to guard the city onto. rected manifest to the proper officer, he waa told | &mperary shecess. The States of Nicaragua, San | was reported to them by the Commissioner, that a their divisions, and exert themdves to | of Lin sing with eapecial care. The enemy belng | The Cleveland Plaindealer of the 11th inst. says:— that the twelve hours bid exoired by twenty min- | Salvador, and Honduras agreed upon a federal | care had been made out. It was the duty ‘of thie 80 my and put a stop to thel incur- Ww utes, and that it couldnot be received! Thus, af. | Union. A provisional constitution was organized, | government in ing out this treaty to strictly ia- surround the, enemy m0 aelay.” “It Sppew also | nated. Bat, et them be so pressed aa to prevent | ago Pep bred peri vip ory pel sng rg rte ter baving made it impossible for him toalter his | 8nd Sr. Barrurdia chosen President of the three | vestigate each care, oo that all who stand under the an appended despatch from Chang-lag-ke pena a directions and breed disturbances ted at the appearance of the country and cropa. | manifest, until after the Presocibed time, the official | Confederated States. fleg of the United States shall be proteoted in ther Ve jn consequence of his having lost averal re this. Rete has been no season since 1838 when every- | coolly took advantage of his own wrong,aad left the The failure of this confederation, and the causes | rights and privileges, and also to ascertain that un- iy ne pogo Sma ag ict | rai make Ree aha | ly ar nto a mi | vn, hap Curae Oem | ohn rity rhe renter: |, On fn, drs 0 Pre rally subjec’ * , % e captain protested, but of course test did merely o} offences or & love of If he Lee RA ene pos re es “\ang- | Heu-nae-chaou is confirmed in appointment of have threshed out their wheat find the product, in ds sek wee pg ‘leas hie ‘veane! Py cot weleht), we hove no time, nor is this the place to er be ee back for punishment. It was the q nO i Veg ag een ear able 10. Prov ee ra aas ore sored teenly el si bushels on Same ae eames nenecs were actually obliged to give heavy bond | incicate. Sufficient to say that means were | cuty of the United Stutes to see that all who come post, and not having been able to provide ainst fy y 1 ¢ | to secore the payment of any claims which migh | brought to bear which broke up the new confeder- | bh: 1e guilty of crime of the nature described in the post, and not bering Deed of the enemy, whthey © x Saw kat tery tits ais generally <5 Seo || imgally be atjaagia'egainet bes. Te was believed, | ation before its exigtence fairly commenced. San | treaty should be given up. It has been urged for the advanced into the ince eof Shang tang, very eacaiaely magia Shy) the mischief. “Oats and rye are also very slim. however, that from a case of sun clea: and mani- Sd! Secon ar ema any eons: Secu ie Seow uote tune cayaney « ‘i i ere not in accordance e ment much to be blame on the present occan, The calture of the hop in this State is mainly | Corn and potatoes will be pretty generally de- | [e+ NOs On the part of the authorities, there fier this event, remained secluded | treaty. ‘That point he should not tonsider, for the met the enem and poe ied s Hie, bans WP eocane thas hows: fen age the on ties ily, Madison, egos Hote No rein of any consequence has falien in | nerg: but that the whole matter, probably, would | in the city of Tegucigalps, in Honduras, where he | reason that his opinion upon another point made it how te exert himself; therefore, let this ie be gard to the present the Cooperstown Fice- about two months, and the farms generally present | 1. speedily and summarily dismiassed. To thisend, | Wrote and publiated his final be to the “ Dis- | unnecessary. He then stated that the evidence tlm eg Jasideration when ‘put — te From much the same burnt appearance as the Sacramento Oper statementa were prepared,and tranamitted to | turbers of the Peaceof Central America.” There | was sufficient to convince him thatthe accused were ons xieory aaa punishment inted.'| this article we learn that regres) gers ‘the Valley in August. (Corn bas grown up and soeped ¢ Captain General ; and Captain Means has since | ¢xists in no language &@ more dispassionate and high | probably guilty, and it next remained for him ‘s the lieutenant governor in question seemshave’ in Ot; county is far from being favorable. ons and there has died. One fiehl between Earl- | oie g voyage to Havana, without hearing of it. | tred dovoment. It produced @ profound impres- to comaiter whether tte crime which they have phapchn ip Ly fentious feeling wh.has.| the cocctics of bead ee aid Dela ville oe Franklin was pointed out to us which had | But, by a late arrival, the consignees of the vessel, | Sion, and was not amodgst the least of the causes | committed comes under out treaty stipulations with a i? Le effort, let it be talinto | ne Fomine Broome, be, hope to some | StoWn thrifty to the height of about exght feet, and | (Messis Drake & Co.) have trarsmitted drafts | Which 1as led San Salvador and Nicaragua to re- | Great Britain. It is a rule of law that the explana. regen mooi his faalt. Bat if mis So hrees + ee . peree tr rat doing was dead and dry. Some pieces of corn on bottom | ¢n ‘\essrs, Jenness, Chase & Co., her agents, and | turn to their traditionary and liberal policy. They | tion of a word is what it technically means, and a eciennie aot bs ee int named, cg Narcan. pod Took better, and would be greatly benefited by | Dart owners here, for the sumof ‘six thousand’ and | #e now sgain united with Honduras in The resist- such is the decision of the United States Sq; encape, and no clemency will be shown. \pect fot having suffered much from drought. ‘The intel. | Tun, t may be said the only good crop is hay, | cighty-seven dollars, claims, and thirteen hundred | 00° to the cictatorial and reactionary policy which, | Court. ‘The word robbery, therefore, in the Ashbur- omnes? | Higenee from which county stands next to | fu is el to previous years. It is hard on the | doliars, expenses, which they have been obliged to | Suprorted by Santa Anna, isdominant in Guatem# | ton treaty, is to be taken in its technical sense, \ ne ohtaceenenietert 2 a creecanieten pid farmers, who are as hard working and industrious | Genosite in Havana, to await the further action of | a, Where the Indian léader, Carrera, is now the | According to the common law of England, from The Gacette of the 1. cme -y conti Ae pice De , op relsing t the cad ssapy inthe country. In many sections the mea- Cuban courts and authorities on this case! irresponsible ruler. which we all derive our laws, and which bas been script from the Lari - Le =e, atk m= sy = Aa the Seer meee nent peg seal dows and swamps are burning over, and constant In this way the petty tyrants of Caba seek to The probable opening of a new route of transit | legalized by the United States statutes, robbery is or two seo, scours ng a Bide bo ele the. | wee ok casita wate y bel i apa uired to keep the fire from the fit by their own rascality, and hope to extort | between the oceans through Hondaras, as well as | defined as the taking of property by violence, put- Sereraer ail lod on a body.of. troope and ained | ably'lsrger than that of last fall will be reallzcd. | “ne? nd May stac umpiua From 50, ero Teme fame ney metewes of: Paired “tocttar’ ctr et. ceemeatupiton eee | bees oan tae a bot i Taken In belly ; . a rir g tl P ar, and he was . boun a vistory over ee rope seclnplenetaton Oey Spree foe Nagar eoreertienens more The Greensboro (Ala.) Beacon enys that in that pk | Ae delgechod and setitnaty ers She the United States, the government of Honduras, | the present case the act was not done by violence, we have Bag toh Sg jenna too hing fe Go- , not being very favorable.” prepa section of Alabama there will be the heaviest | Here is a transaction free from all suspicion. The early in the present year, solicited Sr. Barrundia to | menace ar intimidation; is was clandestine, the act Sernorhas tified with military affa'rs, specu | The 's Journal also enters into some | Com crop ever known, The cotton crop, howevsf, | grrore were made in drafting the manifest from | Sccept a mission to Washington. Notwithstanding | of a thief, and not of a robber. ‘The proof does not boasted ne could never result Say saxicns trouble to the ow- Sr. Barrundia, a ever probability be below the average. Inthe | forty-nine bills of lading. They consisted of the | his advanced age,and the sacrifices which the | come up to the requirements of the treaty, and how- lated on cresting delay, while hie boasted 9's Hogiand. © a, Jeune be he Sestenatiny Gop te hood of Troy, Als., and Helena, Ark., the | omiss‘on of scme reams of paver, ands few head, | mission involved, be did not hesitate to undertake | ever pelaful it may be to eet at liberty men coming vel much astonistied at these contradictoyporta, thet “ accounts are very unfavorable and prices on | ‘Tops promise fine yield. ings, (where the shooks to which they belonged, the service. He arrived in Washington in May, | here with such guilt, he must discharge them. Uhasaleang-ke, he says, was formerly moted | the advance.” We however sce no reliable esti- | Since our last, says the Sumter county Whig of | were rightly entered,) and in manifesting more bar: | Where he was received by the President. Regard- | The announcement was received with applanse, from ihe Lientenant Governorshipof Ynen to | mate as to duty, from which alorie a decent guess | the 15th ult., we have conversed with an intelligent | rele of pitch, rosin, &c., than ‘there were on board. | 19g the time as inauspicious to open negotiations, | which was immediately checked, y coul He earin were ld be made as to the extent of ‘croy gentleman whove business has called him for several | The errors were both ways—for and inst the | he went to New York to await the adjournment of The men were at once taken into custody by the A) of gaa; and ben i ee that | | But in regard to that portion of & stl of our | weeks to travel extensively in the counties of New- | veseel—and there was no ances, re of | Congress. State authorities, on a charge of simple larceny, be rata be Gilowed to defend Changaiin the | wn cote! , the present excise duty | ton, Neshoba, Winston, Noxubee and Kemper, in | fraud. The correction was sought to be made at the e telegraph curtly announces all that remains | such a charge having been made ia the police court southern part of that province, w hur: | on hops im England, the amoust of daty levied ai- | Misriosippi, and a portion of this county. He states | earliest Possible moment, and secording to Cuban to be seld:—“'Sr. Barrundia, the minister from Hon- | by Mr. Elliot, British Vice Consul. On this charge ried the a ‘under ‘awaym the | nually, the tariff on foreign hops, &c., we have | that the corn crop is good wherever he has been, | rules, but the Custom House would not permit it, until | Auras, died last evening of apoplexy. ey will, if convicted, be punished by imprison- teat of war, and also detained the, prows des- | something to say, which, however, may not be | and the cotton appears to be in a growing condi- | it was too late; and it now seeks to punish innocent We cannot close this brief sketch without adding | ment here, but cannot be sent back. tined for the troops at Chang-sha, SwXtraor- | news to one so well in matters regarding | tion. men for a delay, which was wholly occasioned by | tbat, in the death of this eminent man, the United ‘conduct as that showed that he yutterly ~hcps as he is. of the amount of daty 03 MISSIRSIPPI. iteelf. We cannot believe that this attempt at extor- | States has lost a warm friend, Central America one | 4x Oy.» Max—A short time since we chronicled whas of first | hops in 1952, wi he states at £447,144, and | The Columbus Democrat of # late date bas the | tion will be allowed to succeed. Yet, who can tell | Of her noblest sons ard worthicst benefactors, and van ignorant ie peverbrentiol wards, | which he says “was a palpable error, and’ may | following:—‘ With the exception of cotton, the | what delay may not occur, where the blow which is | the liberal cause, which throughont the world ac- Hewege or 100 year Thay tothe kom kee when Me tie utroctobal ordered to prd to.the | have had reference to the duty, if one is levied on Cty all doing well, particularly that of corn, | struck in Cuba,can only be redreased in Madrid, | knowledges the same principles, and aims at the | of our readers, that there fe now living near thi provincial capital, and defend that impat post, | foreign hops.” which looks more promising and lnxariant than we | and where Spanish rpacity and Spanish insolence | fame results, one of its most devoted adherents and | city, in the enjoyment of good health and the fragal oe well-es look after the interesta of béloo-ntn | The duty, whenever we have seen it. mentioned | have ever seen it at this season. The cotton is | have so long run riot with impunity? Awaiting | most disinterested and ablest snpporters. In the | Comforts of life, @ negro, who is nea'ly, or quite, @ and Hoopih, he was enabledin some do his | in English apers has reference only to the cx- | backward, and has no doubt been materially in- | the slow adjustment of this case, the owners of the | Prerent state of our relations with Central America, | century old. lis name is Benjamin Morris, and he ORircetls he ees removed {the pro- | cise duty levied upon ‘hops of British growth. | jured by the profuse rains we hada few weeks | C. B. Hamilton are obliged to place beyond their | the death of one who, like Sr. Barrandia, was inti: | {Sresiding on the Charles Mora farm, where he visional viceroyship of Hoo-kwang, tothe office | ‘Theye isa duty on Foreign hops which previons | since. We learn that there is ‘much complaint of | reach and ure alarge am¢unt of money; and this, | mately a-quainted with its history and wants, is ® | 9 tife lease, and where, by the aid of 's few friends, of mor of Shantung. } at that | to the general alteration of British ,in | the grass, &c. It is now certain that that crop in | of itself, might work a serious injary to persons less | calamity both to Central America and to the United | he gis enough ground to carn for himself » plain phe ym Fhed edvanced to Wooing: bat | 1842, we believe, was £8,11 the cwt. Che rate fixed | this section of country must necessarily fall far be- | able than they are in the command of means. To | States. bot eomfortatle nubsisten se. His life has be, without communicating to his sus0r, Woo- | by the act of 1°42, whether the hops came from for- | low an average yield. Coubt that their money will eventually be retarned | civgivg o Care May_Fi P quite eventful. He was born at Snowhil, in Vir- wan-yung, the affairs of ins proving the ar | egn countries or Bricish possessions was £4,10 per The Paulding (Miss.) Clarion, of the 224 ult., | to them would be to anticipate an extent of wro TNEING OF THE Care MAX FURTHER PARTICU. | Cinia. His master's name was Bob Scofield, as he itewhich he had made for itsenca, took | cwt. In 1846 the duty on this d - .ans,—We published on Monday a brief notice of sription of hops, :—* We hi tl and | in Cuba andagegree of Amerivan snbmission which | }4”* pe Y, i robably, the familiar term by which rengement ip ps, | eays: ‘e have recently had plenty of rain saye, using, » mo he. bimeelf off, and got across the Yang-keang as | was reduced to £2,5 per cwt., at wich it now te pein seasons itv Siti and’ the’ ca jolntin connties, | W@ are not pri Eee at present to believe in, be Ba 8 CS es Rin eR wie known Hroughout the neighborhood in whicl: quick ss possible, mindfal only of his dafety. He | mains. We have not fall statistics of the imports, | Our corn and cotton crops look very flourishing, | , We are no friends of flibustering movements or | {0 Mme Veron dion te tn oa od a iclou | he resided. He lived with Soofield till after the Re- even set off on his journey without Ouncing it | into Great Britain of hops, but such as we have ve | and bid fair to {bountifully reward the husbandman | Jawicss expeditions of any kind; but surely every | on Wednesday evening. The Tiooh was shining | Voltionary war. During the war, he was to courts and when he had only #4 at Ho- | give. They are not of much importance, as to quaa- | for his labors. ight minded man would rejoice if the Cuban peo- ” bright and the suag was visible tothe pemengers | t0CTive a baggage wagon; and. so. woll did nan be made a report of the def@ commis: | tity, anyeey — Reexported. Consumed. KENTUCKY. ple themselves would accomplish their independ- ( 115" hundred yarts distant. The condact of the | »avour please General Washington, who happened ssriat of Shan tung; thus anticipsti*e difflcul- | 1848. .I 2,218 32 The corn in this part of the county is almost burnt | ¢M¢e and drive out /rom among them the pemyered flot is severely censured by the Advocate. The | $9 notice him, that his master, at the close of the ties of hia position.’ We belng werare of the | 1849., 500,352 36,736 6 | up, A few more days of such weather as wo havo | tyrants who now habitually Spprem snd rb font, cn e008 caleers ‘directly she struck the snag, | WaT, gave him his freedom at the request of that eraftiness of his disposition, forvay are | 1850 725,872 218,024 .007,248 | had will make fodder out of it, and the farmer wil! | 1¥; in addition, this gem of the ocean could pesce- | Ccteened over so much as to throw the whole cabin prea and good man. His deed of manumission he written with the vermilion Vargee im | 1852. -. 94,670 17,360 1b8.17,316 | not be under the necessity of pulling the ears off. | {7 i eens 8 Patt of our.own Union, with all her | Dortiaity off, and immediate menced ainkia, ak now, of a truth, the “ palladium of his liberties’* he oaght to be ashamed of hs @F conduct, We have no returns for 1861 and nothin, Heavy rains now would not make a good crop. The | frondrons beanty and vast resources, and coald thus | Pery rapidly. ‘The citizens of Mt. Vernon immedy | inthis, negro-bunting age and country. From Vir- and better in fatare to the of the.| than 1852. During these years we have an impor- | oate are better in this county than thsy have been ey to feel the action of our beneficent gov- ately Tocured every boat at the wharf, and in a ia Merris. went Cubs, where he stayed but a region commit'ed to hia care. Buvently, when | tation as follows :— . for years. Wheat is very good.—Richmond (Ky,) | ¢rhment, e rest, Moning would undoudtedly be | + ic7 thme were saving gern and bag rat rt time, returping to this country and at the insurgents broke into the pie Shan- | Foreign and Colonial hops imported, |be. 1,383,112 | Measenget, Aug. 3. bre aa bon for her and for us. She would but for their noble assistance the na baaaage, and Louisville, Ky. Thence he came to Detroit in tung, and ceptared “city after they aid do feaxporad.. 272,720 | ‘The drouth bas materially injared the corn in this | be inspired and ¢ +r by our freedom; and we | have bee: great. As it was, the Adcucate | tO Witness the surrender of Hull, and the closing siege to Lin tsing, requ the w force of the e section. In fact, if it does not rain in a few days, : strengthened by her fertility | soyg, « though we have token some paina, we can. | 2t of the war of 1812 upon the frontier. Since ascertain the number of passes ‘on board, | then be has been engaged in labor of various kinds, ovinee to be brought bear 2 them, he, | Retained for consumption, Ibs.. ... 1,110,392 | there will be scarcely any corn raised at all. fhe | *20 Power. the pand | Al this we have to set off the quantity of y Bretead of hastening to clty aod demtatio bore ‘Crahea’t Set off the quantity of | fields are nearly burnt up, and farmers are di neither is it known how many have found a wate: supporting bimself ani wife in comfortable circum- a ede scat Se te seh se ig te WH ae | a Reet g Samy .ce | ee mee aaa es | Ga cee ae reer naw | dy seas ae , teane they mighty -chow | 1848. .Ibs... .357,029 1850. Ibe, azo sin | was fortunate that the crops of wheat and oats | went out a short time ego in the ‘steamer Illinois | , sh6itl, the wife of «German from New Orleags, | fyi. He in « member Bellets, of ‘the. Plise oleae’ ae vital, from | 1849........” 273/841 hes TiOEIL | were good—Somerset (Ky.) , Aug. 3, to Aspinwall, and took the Golden Gate at Panama, two children, all deck passengers; a cabin pas. | Tami linnun ‘or thie ‘ltr, frown the smart to Loge gen ng A cease SU tel is eR 4 ILLINOTS. for San Francisco. The letter is addressed to his cocaee by ine Demmnet Eieaay from Mobile; | itch he receives such. litle alge fron ties eo uae, i his advance to tl of war; | Total. Ibe... 20... ..4.... 1,005,348 | _ It is impossible to evade the conviction that the | relatives here, and is dated on board the | Senger, Poy; and one other, supposed a cabla Pa*: | sy he needs. He is still quite erect and vigorous delaying, he towards Lin- | Leaving a difference in favos of the import of for- cd A ) Le priate: pede pe hep bind arty Tt says that Kote brags wan left wis the sree On the boat, | ad able to labor # good deal. He walks down to Be . 104,944 Ibs. only. , owiny severe drough r 8 Aspinw: , comprising © | Tt was thoroughly pill ‘The boat is a total | charch nearly every Sabbath and returns, s tat mei n when regard to domestic hops, | Ney, ii the weather holds as it now is, and we can | number of passengers from. the iifinols, encamped roughly pillaged. d distance of nearly six miles. We trast the he ; | see no immediate indications of a change, the crop ight on the road, and that loss, with no —Louisville Journal, Au- ot ame ’ The et es aeeritiah exsine, we | ih 'be far shorter than it has been known for years. | were inurdered. ‘The ext day, 06 seeoting Car | Mtl 2h. . man at live many years yet in comfort and peaogy = Besides the shortaces of the corn crop, the ost ctep, sma,and going on board the Golden Gate, small though they may have ‘been, at a time whee | found that out of the whole number who had left |, Woxdrviry—Andrew Drew, Faq., of Darham, is | 10) weakest. forces, told a Day. Raised, Ihe, | * ® general thing, was rather lighter than £397, and we are also persuaded, in spite of several assn- spinwall to take passage on Gate now living, and enjoying as health as usual, at , abominable manner. } le ‘ 62,254 = | rances to the contrary, that the Wheat crop, altaough - missing. No further estcaars are tla A the advan‘ed sge of one hundred years and five | banging inequipoise.— Detroit Tribune, August 10, Hih-kea-teang, | 1841. 266,898 = | senerally good grain, will be & lighter crop for the | the waiter speaks of the dangers and troubles of months. His head ts aa free of gray hairs as when and opened fire uj e+ 310,025 _ | ground year's.—Chester (1ll.) Herald. crossing the Isthaus as very and warns his | Yat twenty years old. Mr.D. had a wife andtwo | Mackennt.—The Pictou Chronicle of the 3d inst. to a few empt: 443,657 60,704,025 | The wheat crop in this section, so far aa we ean | friends not to think of going to California by that ont. age died at the age of 95 years. One | rays that immense quantities of mackerel have, ory 894,923 45,134'345 | ascertain, bas turned out better than for many pre: | route. We have heard nothing of these x | Of the sisters ja, now living at tho advanced age of | within the past few weeks, swarmed around the he embodie 9,24 388,010 44,843,985 | ceding years. The long continued dry weather is | crimes by the Iathmas papers, but they all speak of sea ith Wis ei lied at the age of 95. Mr. | shores of Cape Breton, In Aricbat harbor, in = Shing-pacu afterwards an 145,693 16,860,915 | bard on corn, and unless we get some rain soon it is | the great increase of crimes perpetrated by the — poe ‘ wife seventy-six yerrs, and has | single weck, “two thousand barrels were hauled, rot tle 424,702 48,537,669 | feated there will not be an average crop of this | natives upon travellers to and from Califoraia— beat eves good health. Wor seventy-six years | and twenty thousand barrels might have been take feoghh tare, otuean 236,823 37'o17'919 |" le this season. ‘The potato ciop is slaost an Philedelphia Bulletin, Aug | e not fail to be. present at the annual ‘town | with ease, had there been salt to curethem. Large the affair, We cannot cou Of, thus I Oar tables 447,144 56,102,494 | entire failure. Oate generally tarned out well.— wits vole’ Getnel Sqaity wo a ow) aaeptities ti aleg being at St. ees ue . , thos im- r tal ct us no further, The; Bear I 2 ‘ a LJ is er places alon; Se coast, ese ~mack ae pe A arn internal: arate we"! tterent and bar be y are of great ‘dstcwn (Til.) Gazette, July 27, Encampment Troveres—The encampment at | mapner of living, from which we learn that he hae small, being about the size of summer herring, but to $86 upon received, we believe, as pertect- MrssoRE uincy was upon Mount Wollaston, the | i juable openly bs m , the property of | always been industrious ti ‘were to order him, to. beppltated in cape te ! p Eye thon patd in 1853 we have seen ‘© have just returned from a trip of three days | Hop. iF Adams, son of the late Hon. Jobn Qainey | Serpe share of init, hee atin ‘the. gy 4 the A png ans earip. on the army, It would be deoorven. | fe Slose whan the remark that it our Coopers-| yeiterent parte of this county ana thesoutheastern | Adgins. The Aderrtiser tates that the gronad | managed bis own farming affairs, nd modded with bagi shoo aso = = - oo former ¥ ‘and earn 1 gover tal at pak i the gut jie fa a early planted corn, should it.) wes occupied by the troops Seige an the wishes | no man’s busisess but his own. What seems most tye 1106 idow of 1d sob by eMetent fn manning a eata vaca (hb eh eee tS, ene, eblished thereat dy come ena x make atolerable’| of the owner. and that he has instituted proceed. | remarkable is, that two familiea, connected hy mar oto byretinth sow bellies of Gigulae emectye we pe leh that he betdiately deposed from being as he now says “palpable error,” it was a — the late for | Uhiese we abel hove mala in o few |- vaniog hin iMabt to enter and cocupy them without | calc A been ‘one preser healtne ee re reat ame ac ae | gffice, apd sept into Tas crc +s ao we wed anew inet, days, will y little or ne grain. The oat ‘rep is | peri — Boston Jowrnal Aug. 12. ig. 12, ph some J value for ite resords ne m : care had been portemeutl (N. HL.) Chronicie, ——————————— Cll

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