The New York Herald Newspaper, February 1, 1856, Page 2

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2 SEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1856. ted -ecp Ux vende anc abandonment of ths proe tore By article second, his Britannie Ms jeaty ag -eed that — Buch is the trsnwerab e argument for the American | memivec o! the demeera‘t: ouus, with the platform any pee of. the Pre: ident avd his femily, and | tery rhea iberr #1) FO@RMD any Perrone FO dariug 48 to pre | Foxton imzegarc to the Fa ive, . eae ss It was; alwoys cecupied. The house, small as it ag Lore Carend cote to derive 8 «on emparaueras | supe by revring into thy io'e ior coumery to eadeavar to 00. lh remalts now to speak of emetic tbe Bay Is- . Cox's resdtutinn wae rejected hy a vote of 30 | prared, proved to be larger than the oongrogstion, whic} ceath e fever @ fron wh | rrnet te en'i¢ eva ration <lcrad agreed is Briaanic | isnds. Ia Genta) Amoriea, oot in Bri ism Hondaras, io at 176, might ‘number one hundvei und fifty persons, meatl] capce Dovein end the Unites Statsa previnns to ths | “Malests, +o for from atiording hem cor, or even | rhe Cartobean ea, aout thirty-five miles from she part HickaM, (0¢10.) of Pa, clfered a resolation to | femates, The pastor stated that he had with th oe -s Spal. d'd not infeed remonsteate agaioa: th os ped oe pepe Cee fegpeo manner j3 | of fruxillo, in tha State of Gondurss, ant four hamtred | elec: by plorality. three years, thet he had labored with great zeal in ee see univ tbe lust gears. of Dior powen im Aan | RAZNLEA My te eee Oe be Saka donee gee | tiles ais’aut from the Balies, Hes the island of Ruatan, | A morion to isy the resolution on the table was lost by | appropriat , and expended six thousand dollar ‘The British Minister replied:— vie pus she badabundant cenupe't ra in def Be Sues p93 spacious fertile, beausitui, and easily auscep\ible of de- | cme msjurity. ih and the discouraging result was that he had « small from an early period the Mosqn'to Tndtans had bora | A yy.t her inanryen’ yrovin Tae Uorted fence. Near w it are the relatively sms ler, bat Mr. TrsrvB (K.N.), ofGeorgis, then submitted as a | chan; om, anda feebie church of over : I ky ericle Yeurieenth it wos stipulated as follows:— uent 46 4s paree apd todepen enee the laanlicy of the Protestovat eh 4s ear Heven | or cha Wnge the legali'y of the Protetora’e netur Hem Cathoiia Majests, penmpied solely by motive» of human\ rat Mewagiuy ber ng uorer be. | altheogh invited to do so by Ugniral Axerica sud tho | yy! Srcmien tn the King Uf Bugsand (ha. he wil not again ex- That treated by the British gave Gent Bate, nad whe was asmuch o King as oa or Th %, ging congrega: comiversbie, islands of Benacea, Walla, Barbaret, He. | substiiute a resolution declaring William Smith, of Vir hoodred wemsbers, two-thirds of whom were fom lene and Mcerat. Ibe islands of Rua'an and Bonacss | ginia, Speaker. Mr. Trivpe sald bia proposition presented | Toe ivterence was obvious, that going to church was no Rect pa ot those visiting W: aid by © British gaog-apher to be, by reason of | to democrats the question whether they would adopt the fersina of Man Juau o&dwken pusessiva uf | Stuic t Honduras, Guatemala sod Nicaragus. Bat "hn | yyeme any acto! severity agaiugt the morquitoe: iuiog io j fore bens i pete oe crtich bad driven her aay’ tom, it, | ches bad acquired po title ant wo interest’ whieh would | serine coshiies weich are to be evacuslea by vieton of the fice bartors, g 03 soils, finn air aad abamiaat | ploraity rele, and thereby elect Ms. Banks, or vote for nt and his lary both look pale and earewo tho beNicaraguacstad, as Lord Palmerston abaged, in bad | patie UNGe imverwemeion, When that title and that | prrreut couveniion, 00 sosount of the connecions woich may | aninais, as well se thelr commanding ground, prover. | hia rev lution, and elest & man whois a demoorat, aud | She secms «xtremely delicate, and it is sald hes not feith, gramied to ateorivan citizens art bt fo @0en thaprapased | Fk thew pty and expiisitily aa- Rare sunsisted tetween the sald Ivdiava and ‘a? Singlish; and-| vially known im that part of the worl! as the garden of | who has voted for jshardeon and Mr. Orr. Mr. | covered frem the dreadful shock ocovasioued: by Passage tovovgh a terriory of wuich she was not tn posses a a) promi ‘iach caition | bis Syitannic Majeay, on bis part, will strictiy prot ist bis | the West Indies, the Key to Spanish America, and a new | Trippe elered with the remark that he would never vote | death of ber son. The President seems ten years el eva that ihe aritish geveroment bad therefore given no | nounced \- ot Brite:n their trreconctlaole oppos! ects from (ur nisblng asms or warhibe stores o the fodinus | Gitralra-. On ihe ith Pits 3 1850, thirteen d .ys after for the nominee of the democratic caucus. than he did Jast winter. He has been unfortunste io tee to thore grac.tres of |'s Intention to regard the ¢0 actas® | to her maict-sance of the Protectorate $ jevers’ siuatea upon tke froouer of the Spaaieh posses | 4). ong clusion of the treaty °f 1860, ‘® proclamation was A motion to lay the whole sudject on the table was | administration, and compelled to see his poli'ical friend SSeS, thst a ausa wood tobe 00: | ‘°y'Yaye alzcauy given the prctest made by Mr. Rives, I | flone--(senate Doe 18 ¥nlx'p 18) issued by. the Brigsh government, ‘emstitating ‘he | disegreed to by 84 against 132. Mr. Trippe’s substitute owey to a small minority. Almost any alt feriained by somie p:reons in the Uulied Ae ae ema gana, | give now the language of Me. Ciayton ae expressed by | ypis treaty was wade the ground of m mo'ion for s | 11200, store namm@a cstony, under the name af the | wastben rejooted by a vote of 100 ageinst 110. 0 more oomiortable; then his and could jeroment wished to pint © fondstion for that shspiaion as | MY. Lawrence :— é vote of censure in the British House of Lords, in 1787, | Colony of the May Islanday ‘Mr. Bickman’s resolution wea not acied upon, when the itter of his opponents look into his pale and of Great Britain bad already more coleaies toxn she could maa- Ie Great britain eager or wi'licg that the question of ber | «no was den unced ae being a Pawmlisting eurreader 0 ‘The United States insist that Great Britain shall dis | House adjourned. worn face, tke feel ‘of contempt for tha tbat as to anv des of her boiding exclusive possession of | alleged protectorate shunld be tried a: the bar of the puole | i1@ Moequite ecumiry aud aoandommen* of tbe Mosquit? | costinue thie new e2lo Gheat Beitaio ‘refuses, and —— and fierce indignation a! ‘would yield ‘mouth of the Sau Juan. as the kev of the contamplated | opinon of the worl’? Doce she beiieve that she ean onain | yin” the Cf Greay Britain, The Ministry de- | CURPINUG Tote me ee eit od Our Washington Correspondence, ity for thi ‘He hus been mentioned aa a candidat Soier-coeanie pamace, nothing could be fariber trom her mind; | credit tor having unceriwkeo i from a ewvie'ion that ih? Mow | AG be aren y, on the ground that the British set'ly. | Sueges thar the colony ia withia the Balise settlement, or Tor're-cleeti he onal and that if any plas cna be suggested by which Greal deitain | quivoes were comp: ent wo diarharg~ the dulien ofsover SEV: |’ Sent om the: Mesquite Bai inh Honduras, and vo iz excepted fcom the treaty. Wasurvarox, Jan. 27, 1856. re-election, but such an event is not considered h tak eo no - a we ere was Dot & regular B04 | On the contrary. the Islands which ted a: Tactics Contest —Mr. Cov | either possible or desirable. initoence tnd muival co-gperavn. ibe opeaiag! of great | ‘iror ‘of rosally which she would fein piac> poo the peewio | Iswiul ret lement, and tha the Morquit) nation were But daserihed ashe eaention aan ake Party in the for the Speakership— Mr. ible ehannel by way o Lake Nicaragua, and \acom, | menarch, of that resion i# too agape ent lo conceal ine . and torsefure Great Britain waa not bound to pro- | borhood of the Balze. Not only axe thererucn amall | "dhe Democrats—The Administration Opposed to the oad abbue Gensensal tee bison She See, ond Sanaa SE oeeaa se oad | tures of he roel sovercitn! Cen Ciovia mayan her ty and ‘the vor of,censure was refused. bY * | iy ans in that place, but tary are expresily describes | Organisation of the Home— Object of ls Policy—The Pre- ame Commenente ae wa receive the most favor consideradon "8 Bo- comm “ “ ity of rie jus the matte: remained ts VANA, Jan. 5 ” 7 p. i " ual and exclasive son- 4 ) | acdareigned to the Balize, in the treatyer 1' while o A. Nothing Move to Throw A eeepc eee eine ‘ra be ot way tot Fat weatios or Jaws were coneermed, o:1it1812, | teetey‘nlands are xelther small isleods mar age they grssbae natty of he Prsent ‘State of Thingt on the | The Weather and Sugar Canes—Generah Yermobif, of Ras etan| tie, by the port of san Ihe treaty was tully ratified om the 4th of July, 1850, | 0! over the rv bt of way to the race, Oy hee Bee Stay »ptetsnew and wiitten consritation, ia . ir : Ss Sook See ite date, 9, Tt recites | 348004, the river cs ino Tightinl. oruprictort Te pach prs ce uf the despotic cowe-a ot Europe. Taat conati | StDsiee in tee angie na Serene etgeatiiae ant Democrats, the. sia, en route for New Orleans—The Donation to Ure Seba the purpose b afer nal thy Hecgretog Sani; | tenrions we ‘rust that he United rate, Mose 321 Cong)” | tution comtained thie artic e:— of historis importance, The t eaty of 1786 assigns theca | Cowid Mr. Cobb have been ignorant of the almost cer- | ‘0% Sufercrs—American Vessel in Distreas—Sports —_ Baers ting forth ae ee er | Sen. Comer Vee ene: a tot crit: | _Gbalemsla, with the internal proviness of the Bast and | to th h Continent,” and. expressly excludes r to tollow hie ta for the eal the Island—The Slave Trade, ws and intentions concerning any inter-oceanic canal | Lo.d Clareodon next reverts vo « refiuement of erit- | wes anv the sdjscemt island: in b th seas, form parto! the | Great Briain from them, Urea? Britain shows no. pre. | tit Tésult' that was to follow his movements for the eal ‘The weather bas changed to miserable alterna’ that msy be constracted by the way of the river San Juan | cism, quite extravrdioary insucsa piace He refers | ppaoish dominions. tence ara or sven.ef continsed:ctsa! of them | ofa.caucus, in the withdrawal of Mr, Kichardeon, and the bw pe avd aioe ene or both of the lakes of Nicars; Ta bs the stipulation by which t eon ly cae = Bhi = Great Britam resegoized Sprin under this constiu | gain Lelé them uotil the revolution ia Central Amerioa. | introduction by him of s resolution reiterating .be objes- ing with gusts that have no touch of comfort in then mus. stipulations which come most directly um Powers friendly 10, either of them to ener 10-0 s4pule, | tien, ame guavaaieed her soversiguly, Gustewan th-ew | ihe Stave of Honduzas assumed possession, and placed « | donante sentirsente contained ia the resolution of tho 20th | 824 Which despoii the hopes cf the planter in’the ricl review on the present accasion arc— tions similar to thor vines, pa uff the Syauieh yose in 18.3 sud b-camo a sonfederared | flog on Rua'en, in 1819. Great Britain caused that fsg pila raeneckone eager spread of matured canes upon his fields, which are neve! 7 Art. 1. Neither party will ever obtain or maintain for itaeif | argues that this sgroemeut would include the Ceacral | reponiie. its eoustitution thas desccibea the domaia | tobe supplanted by her own in 1820p but this was im- | December? There were those of his party who warmly fe pled thet aio aide veasr-the “pa any caclustve control over the lated canal. ‘American 8 a'es, whi, if they abuld ascspt the invita | \ORUOiS oe ee either ‘ever fortification " = ould there: a pine me tately after lowered, and the flag cf Hondaras was | advocated the abandonment of all further caucuses for * maa ibesume or tbe visiniy erect com | tion and rigs the treaty, ney wild aero ey oO OE | The terrtory ot the repnbio is the same which formeriy | restered to its places. It te unimporcant to fallow this Speaker, believing that such a course would have a ten- | TB¢ enemy of our product is upon us to prevent our ‘Neither will occupy, or foruiry, or c oF assame oF 6. hich they exist. Ihe most cursery reading of cowpriherded ibe ancient Ringdom of Guatemala, with te | pet'y contention fazther. Whatever pretensions Great : ing the harvest we have cultivated; and it three or fou ercise apy dominion over Nicaragua, (ota Rica, the Mowquilo | im which they ex: most cursory reading of “be | gyeeption for the present of Cbinpas. a'am may have ever defore made to the Bay Ialands, | dency to draw over to che democracy the support of the . Coast, or rt of Central America. stipulation, wi h its context, shows tha: two classes of : “ 1 withdrawn from | Weeks of like visitation befalls us the crop of Cabs will Neliber will'use avy protection which eltber affords or may | Siates ure contemplat:d—one class, not those existing ia ane mone perp Me ence Bs ah an gre pr ha er -aagy rane ee and | Know Nethings, whore candidate hai wit salah ™ | short—far less than that of the past year, although t : , i a je abancon ir 4 \. aficré, or apy a liance which el:her bas or may hav 2, to or wi Centra! America; the other, thoxe which are estaclished | ee IF nay and the Silver, (called the Baliza ae aes vesstad tie amniacion tha? iia: keeticer the contest at avout the same time with Mr. Richardson. huenasverdnllenskin grey toohocmaaataeaat andthe smerican demands are rigut, | Tbe mevement of thie last mamed party, by Mr. Fuller's any Biase ov people, for the purpose raepinipae f 0 ag) there. Only the first class are invited to sueb fe ocoup» 01 ‘i delwrgiog within the Spanish pzovicce cf Yuca‘aa, ant eridons are jus ? ‘Fue, Corte hen, te Mowu'o voastcor any part of Central | waiations siniay to the prevent tres'y. eo by the sevelution paved under the sway cf Mexic). The final quertion is @ practical one—What ought the | request to have his name dropped, was supp ed to havo = ee Bhan ae ara America, or of assuming or exercising any dumivion Seyilakaaaaior sain on " Great Britain acknowledged the independence of Mexico, | United States row to d>? 4 had in view a poss{ble union with the democratic party, p 7 H siipulating at the rame time tost Britivh endj-ots dwell- 1 can now only glance at some of the circumstances been well received even by the Spamsh enemies of bh ‘Neither will take advantage of any intimacy or ee any | case, ramely, the Central Anezican States. aiilsnce, eoppection or influence that either may possess wit T tnivn its comievares of word erritories should enjoy the rights which bed | which aflect the question. I regret that in any cae it | im the selection of some candidate unobjecttonab’e in sen- countzy. In thiseonmestion { am remtnded of an ex: any 5'sie or people through whose territory tho canal may | gi,tinguiahed negotiators, 1 rise to the height of the a nied to them by Spain in the treaty of 1784 involves a possibili'y of war. Although I believe war | timent and of stiong national principles. Not only was pass, fer he purpore of acquiripg or noldmg, dire» ly or indl- | 9 Tee SR Trey you the it conflict thas Seaifirmed aod reestabli hod ber own exslai-n | srmovilmen sostidable, I regard tt always, nevertheless, | there plausinlity in this reasoning, but whisperiags were | tract made u fow days rince by the Déariod: la Se eee ee or ated ee Ere the Brilish expostiion with ites 2 fom Cenire} Ameria, with the exceptions and limita- | ase calamity andon evil. 1 do not ag-eo wlth either | everywhere heard that the Know Nothing: were anxious, | from the Washington Union, stating that « letter had pees touristic apa i nyo | ni ata of te Atntentomer, 186, ord | MSM Th sen haere an be Ini on Mngt | antnae he Esta art mbsy Sedglan!Ot ut | Ware in eectig siete orgniatinn, | Dem tied tthe anan pon trom get Ben cverbe territory hrough wbich tbe canal shal wtheghh geahna| Noah Diino ., | kingdom or Kicg, 1 need not prove toat there an law- | I ehouta therefore d@ply deplore apy war with amy na- | and bat they were looking towards the demoerats for | donating four thousand dollars orphans and widow! induce them to favor ifs cons‘ruction. and to use good If the treaty bud been intended to act upon and termina'e | +))y be n» Bri ish Protectorate ef such an imposable d more than any other, a war with Great Britain | the fist step towards accomplishing his impoctant ob- | of those who nobly fll in defence of Sebastopol, again: efices whenever or however it may be most oxoedien', to the Protectorate. it would bave contained in specif terms | ingeoe or King. Power no longer arms alone, Ite wealth and infu- | ject. Mr. Cobb will not surely plead igovranse of | the invaders of their country. The langaage Ido not gi r- eure the eniabiishment of two free porta, one at each end of the | renunciation, om Re re ae oe pares ane | althé usb it is superftuous. T will now show, secondly. | ence easily secure allies, Nor in such a contest should | knowledge of thero facta, nor of the wishes of many of his | 3044.0 aocument is not at ay(soteatentl in ae tasted following the | :D8 != tt at et, the: . ; he adoption of & new policy, whish could Mitt, 6. The parties engege to invite every Staten friendly | had ¢.aimed to maintain. whet, im fact, thece 15 no eueh ningd za, King’or Protec- | wove unsided. The adjacent American States, at least, | colleagues for 1 % ro piers pate pene eh mera on pale. ' s 4 tora’e. In Central America, populstion, civilization acd | wou dco-operate witn va, It woula therefore bea gene | attach to it neither the sacrifice ' of position ¢ 1 mad Seer Zunller To those conteined fn rousy, os that all saber Agats) aa8 cn the. pane bypoibeels, De rile 5 bind of Spanwh discovery | yel'war, aud, consequentiy, more extensively injurious | or pricciple, ard probably result in the election of Bis eienie.'*. Ther mantets,” of eliral eee Eidte, ba tions similar 'o those contained in this treaty, so that all other Btates may share in the bouor and advantages of having con. | Tbe treaty would then have impoeed upon Great Sritaic the tributed w the construction of the contemplated canal. and | Obligation te renounce poss+sious and rights, without auy sovormneng ever sine tbe "ve dastered on the higt grounds inland and on the | and wicely d¢moralizing than any other in which we | Speadcr. Yet this gentleman intis‘s upon his caucas, and wine kinety ehenists onan Bee Ree vediog, Ye ving the coust of the Caridoean Sea, | could be engaged. It would, moreover, renew and prac | in person reacs a resolutim rencering imposib.e al) affi- Ngent yentleman. ‘The ncte, acdreased to the Ru each of the contracting parties sball enter into treaty stipuia | equivalent renunciation on the part of ine United States, He, rg : “ rant ap fi i ih let i ead na , theagh exseeciogly fertile, war pevioatial, | tiesl'y perpetuate an alienation between two fraveraal | nity with the Know Nothings. This movement of Mr | Nest, Ucn ye V5} and ahora de but one deem advisable, for the purpore of carrying out the ouject of c irfly uncecupied Fach was the contrast between the | Sates on whose common guidance (ony secured through bb’s canno’ adduced as evincing that urgent desi sian gentleman rgaiding in. the United fates wie {9 Se treaty, namely, the coustraction and tsinimnence of the T’the convention was intended to impose upon Grest Britain | segione, that the erly visiters desciine the coloay as | thetr concord) the advancing uations jargely depend. on the part of the democrats for organization, which the ben zal oe lake dhcoct et ition, which is alike lon Dcable, eanal as a ship canal between the (wo oceans, for the bene’t | #2 ovligation to witedraw fom portions of ‘errio-y occupied | si:yared de'ween beaven andhell. Tout coast. inctudiog I deprecate a war. moreover, because it cin be avoided, | have so earnestly been laboring te establish, and whi hnselt andy Gbuntrernes of mankind. by ih then the government of the Central American, atsie* | the Mosauita above, sti 1 remains “‘n bauat of aavages, | un ean there sbait be fault on both siles, or om one whey would bave the ceun:ry believe they have been de- | bimecl’ ard bis ocuntrymen, rad art. 7. The parties detarattae to: pive: hele oueipors sadieh elerrilaries in’ ciuated whim three hundred yeara of contact wita Buro;eet | and tharefore, inone sense it would be am unnecessary | feated in cnly through the stubbornness of the Know ie 4 ers eomalderal bs Seursgeinent to the persons or company who shal frst oir | We erritories in which they were # Civilization bas nt cmiy failed to improve, Dut actualiy | conflict. Notwithstandi g the occasional ogcurrence of | Nothings. Thetlime, thea, in a measure, of the present | Tae retrated, and with great boldness, in the hou bb sediment Am nfo A np ol aati Gegraced and “denaned.” “among. hem are ‘the | mlbayprehensins aud trations, whe wosld i yet wile | state of things, i justly cbargeatio upon Mr. Cobb, who, | of 8 Mr. Fernandez, 1» Oflcios street, by whlch the rob ing, as may have a coulract which is justly unobjeoonable to | »,,7 be British government nelther hare the wish to exiznd he | Meequitces, the moxt degraded ani deoased o | en,vgh for boih nations, and for all nations. re te | as the leacer of his party, directs and controls their ac- tebes aud Jewelry, ceposited “th hile the tamil; epariee ns varies decure tna, Deadonthe paricamr | (eat tware ad weaiday hritch bares Be premed oy | ale. They" are “a ‘mixed bred of Tadisns and no | sentie ot one ayetom—an American ono; Great Britain is | tens with s severity seldima {fever witnessed in the House | Tanto, Isto: Hep Sa acnunted by one vill —' ri ye jes the particular og so. But th CON, siz thousand. They eno- | the centre of anotaer—an Buropesn one. mostin spite | of Representatives. . purpose ofthe ireaty before sated, Wey have the tartber acd | dciig.co. But the Brides, eoveroment ace nov prepared W | GCs 0 Me ching and hantiog, and live-on the | ofcurreives, we are steadily extending and inereasing our | _ Upen tie withdrawal from the canvass of hoth the ean- | he scns of the planter and tervants, | Thelr rooms beld Broader object to establish a general princip'e; and so they oe to extend their protection, by treaty stipulations, to any You see at once that in tnese che practicap'e communications, whether by caval or ra{- | sion, the Protectora’e is no uasubstaatial, shadowy thing, | ing Do other part cf ‘he ¢xiensive dis rict covered 8 of tha discus. | bars of the lagoons ou the vaige of the east, oc vupy- |e piroi over there continents. Notwichsianding her te- | didates, very many thought-they saw before them clear | 12 the back part of the house, and the valvables in a . c pts ‘ front apaitmenta, they were not distarbed by, the in acity, she is ccastan‘ly losing her domiai-n bre, This | ¢oylight and an cary viotory, and a portion of the prose in fron, spertmenty ty ewenneca nen tom t city were offering thet. way, across the Isthmus and especially to those contamplated o it i ‘tacal insecuciw, | tbrir name dy the protectorate. Tasir blood i: tainzed, | is withia the crderof nature, It was for three hundred * te pe made by the ways of Tchuantepec and Panama. Pag Spt eatlarnayr ables Mocupaney, aad do. | and thry » c) imine hing in nambers, like the natives 0. | years the business of European mations to colonize, dis- | the long siege of anarchy which had threatened to the Sysee as Catia tomilige ree ony Sua OF oe It was a great treaty, sublime in its conception, | inion. 5 the “as dwich J cipline, and eduoate American nations. It is now the | country such serious consequences. Again I ask, what | Pusncts Ot lie Young Bibalioeh tO cence, ar] | owen in its spirit ard Deneficent in its purposes. Listen now to his lordship, while, witheqnal skill, he | The Brivi+b he town, named Blewfield, at the | busivers of those nations to govern themselves. The de- | was te object of Mr. Cobp in blasting a prospect thus | _, We have advices by the Amenca® bark Diligense, an two rival members of the Britieh family, after lovg | plays upen a lower key. la his cateuentcl Mag 42,1864, | mouth of ‘he Blewfield river, which contains six hundred | clinerf European power here practically gan with the Aly by paving announced the call for a caucus, non Deg 2 Bane, No tignals were disployed for sexiat and angry alienation, met, not within the ‘territory of | Bey siten:— inhsbitanés, of whem Sve Bundred are Inia: and ne- | fall of Canada ou: of tho control of France, in 1763. It | self slpecting im person s serie of measures the offest | DP8 STO. wae not glonatly mee out upp either, but on that foreign’ and narrow isthmus, which, : 5 ne | Steer, BEd One huncred are Euglish. Nearly a! the | has stesdily continued up:i! now only some relics, pos- | of wii while ‘it unites North and South America, divides tho | ,,J{J2,Pz0per that her Majests7s, government should at once | $1 e%‘are mere ha s; but there fe one house which {s | serxiy hitte vitality, remoia. Without any war onour | gence to affirm he did not at the time fally convem- | tobe Elizabeth 0. Hale, or Healiog, Vigorous Atlantic States of Earope and America from | “h'ihe Morquiin ouuntre, But, sithoush Great Briiata beld ny | built of bards, ano an tris the Britteh sgent Dives, to- | part, Great Britain will wisely withdraw and disappear | plate? A true and henest policy would havo | 1 00 si6 Walrus witu onals er of Re, EBay tend impmature American States and the decayed Asiatic | possessions in the Mosquitocountry, she undoutedly exercised | gether with a native, who has b-en selecied by the Bri- cma this bemixphere within a quarter of acentury—at | crawn from Mr. Co%b the announcement of his have lwried these celfidanae Aunt the hatehet, rs mations which, on opposite coasts, overlook the broad | * great ard extensive influence over it, as the proteciing ally of ) ti:h gc vert ment to pernexate ng. Tne Britisn fixg | Jess’, within half a century, War wight hasten, but sey intention to hold vo further caucus on the ques: | iy government may go on, and be epared the con wi * Pacific—the last remaining one of the barriers waich na- | the Mosquito King. Wuven over 1be edifice, although it is recoz7ded that ans | might also delay it. ‘of Speaker, and a’ the same time to have expressed | mn ‘ture had erected to hinder the restoration of the unity 9¢ | Again he writes:— ticnal bazner for the Mosquitoes was once prepared at |] regret, also. that a war, if it must come, muy! also | bis preference for Mr. Orr, or anyother sound man, which tienes nora, <2 fame ae aoa a 4 Winn, ba Landon. svd sent 19 Bie vfield. They claim for this King | p:cbably ‘concu: with the’ grest conflict tax now eon. | woula have been regarded by bin party ae having all the 0, m, y y that their cboice was satitied by a number of the etic | vulsts Europe. The Buatish administration has lang been | «ffect of a saucus nom'nation, whilst ft would bave beon | Petnfent to wear cut, Tusts ares yas kde oS e | or bead men of the Mo-quitors, and show @ certificat. | unfaithful tothe cause of free institutions in Europe, | deprived of the objectionable featuzes thet have thus over, as an agreement not to protect | With resvect | to ‘ha’ cic’, baling tbrir take. ‘They claim, am) | and the Hench empice is, in my eyes, e hateful usurps: | long prevented the Know Nothings from giving to their | §,/tw, cunyor'. niles fo nok pertain to hele prment coal aay one of years so fow had ever before | 10 rovereisnty, Great Britain never siaimnd, nornow | (hat the present King, cr some, one of hin bate pre | ‘ion, Novertusless, bork of these administrations are | eaudicate a portion, if mor the whcle, of their mupport. | Coch, Sitch jutineied the" shey would be, allowed attained. They ‘were ro longer unequal, but each Bere the British Protectorate afsasives into a faiat ana | COces#ors. Virived Jamaiza, and there was iuvested | tempo:ary, and prac ically ephemeral, while the Russian | From there preceeding, it ts almcst clear that the ad- | ove their t2me ‘a’ the pubtic arsenal, and without iron was dominant, sioough in a separate sphere. | ,, Here the British Protectorn\e alssoives into a telatand | with the robes of royalty by British eurfocts. | ¢m,ire is an obstinate and portentous reality. Tacoept | ministration arecppored to the organizing of Congress; | SATE NUON. ing back to Cuba, this winter some The one, by the prosence of its mercantile mariae and i:4 | iueistiuct suv) w, avd s Mosqnito Kinglom rises up be- | hy Yorquitces aze heathens, They bave mvitaez | rhe orscular exposition of the first Napoleon; and, be- | or if not, why bas it not availed itself of the recont ad- | 4, dite Nutini Pil O8 menecaad senor daca ‘armed ravy kept the nations of the Feet in their places; | 10'8 ee eet eraceful yot majentte atrucraces whieh de. | cburches zor rchools nor Minfatry, Pa-liamen:, er Coun- | l'eving that Europe must he soon erther republican or | vanteges which bave olfered themselves, only to be | ine rset caliente SS dotite dteitioerhat it ora the other, by the mere influence of its opinions ard i's hs in tho keahe teht Bates ‘ uesnces whien de- | ci, They bave boasrmy or navy, Do treasacy, mo cus- | Corrack, I reco; , beneath the monarchical mask of | thrown away, as interfering with an adopted poli babi will not be the last. — ree Jaws, was supreme among the newer natiuns of the West, | W8h* Us fa the Arsblan \igbis Fatertalamen tome, D. taxes, Do revenuer, LO police, no iuduetry, no | the alies the fern natims contending ogainat an | Joubdtless Mz. Pierce hopes to turn to his advantag? this 'y vid A ‘They met on that important strait, not to contend to- | _ i takelesve to vey, that ve tres ed rot wit thacd, no intersoare, dpleine to ox ofverw.se, wita any | acvencing desp tism. A thongh no duty and m0 proprie'y | s'at0 of conusion, by the issuing ef popular documents tales May tinsel eae mane ee aa ie wb) the buman race. How were they changed sinze they hid | Mr, Buchanan confounds the two conditions of @ so Jast me: inconfitct! The elder had grown risher, strooger | ant a provecworate avd, wader this error, trea's the agr and more imperial than ever before, The younger had | voto colonize or occupy, or forilfy, nor assume nor exa reached a higher and more palmy ‘state than | domivion over, as an agreement not to protect. With reso ‘a Mosquito oa, bot with her own Most Gra- gether for dominten over it, nor yet to combine together | Kirg ano Morquit Sav S other people. Thrze arc indeva at Blewield, civil, jaai. | requires ua to intervene on their side, Isbould be very | in the form cf messiges, and thus quietly making for him- So seize and divide an exclusive dominion there, bat to | clous Majesty and the peovls of Great Biiraitn, Taey | oy, ie, mali oritie 5D " try ina comb ‘ " oe will havea frosty ride, aud return for the breath ef th make it ire tocach other, and equally free to all man. | c#2UOt bow renouues the cherasters they tne azsuraad, ons Tan ie, aah ary, Aad aeval au boritie ; oii | unwillicg to engage my country inw combication agaiast | self capital with the naticnsl convention, and procaritg | Don next week. z ‘ be 4 Syitish; they exeeu'e only Bcitish o:ders, and | them. the tympatbies of the Americaa people. This game, Biad. Toey me: io the presence of the feeble and coaten- | #N¢ tubstitute in their places unreal or even real perties, | doiiye ali their p2W arsenal sista Feomeites fetish, I regret, aleo, the ead condition of the Central Ameri- | however, wiilshortly be brough: to a test, and the coun: fin tearoraens tien comncorer atten spot tious repudiics which the influence of their own fas-icu. | Whom ‘bey dia mot then intrcouce. cverpment. he ¢ conbriege are the reasons woy Lord | can States, which seems to render them as incspzblo oi | try will be be.ter able to judge of the sincerity of Mr. 2 tious had perhaps too soon organized out of the ruins of | | but, in fact, there was rot thea, nor is there now, | Paid tivuo, ineyeaking of de Mirquito King, sais, | profiv'rg by our interventimas the F-ench people wore, | Cobb and party, by avelection, which I understand will | from AfiSoe,.. numbering. 1,000, Sop, Fae tees tenant. ¢ Bpanish cespotism in America, not v overthrow and sub- | ther # Mosquito Kirgdom or Mosquito King. “che is as much » bing as yon or 4, end why.'ee Me, | when, 11199, they demarded a Like interposition, ic | he made from the democratic ranks, by the the Know No- | Cur azticulture, aud tor @dacation under the lights 0 Agate those republics, and seize the domains which taey | |, Fist There was no ouch Kingdom or Kiog becanse by | pyyerut reporter, the Briisd House of Commons larg ied | fulfilo.ent of ouz precsdent treaties of commerce and al- | things. The refusal or the democratic members to voto | Heh ‘could not hold, but to fortify them and guaranty their | the laws of rasiore, vhere could oe none G any, tor the | when (ke bei'g prts@ut in 1849) they yor d the ep;ro- | hance. for apy such nomination, from the fact that it had The United States war steamer Fulton arrived last evel ppsternions to them forever.” It i not tno preseat, but | sake of the argument, thut there is w trioe of Ssqzito | pristiny 10 support the Charge c’Affaizes at the ovuct of | Nevertheless, a war with Great Bsitaia is mow among | not emanated from their own friends, will at one ing. from Key West. future, that stamps upon human tranractions their | Imciars, ano that they have a chief, who is called that imepinasy monarch. he positie sslntions of the present emsarrassment, | fasten upon them a responsibility whicn the democracy ‘be wet weather prevents the drying of pe a cane, which 1s calculated upon for two-thirds 1d last faa others ana regarded by themveives as ‘ey taue an ‘ig character. Highr thao the fams of y in boiling and epgine furnace; and from this eanse, al Seen ee eee eas, sn he ems ce | Lang!t—grant, thet wilt, whavevec form. awl or Ti any substance recained in the fisticns of s Mosqaite | We certainly can look for no moderatiun on her part | ofthecouatsy pill refuse to have any share in. The , 20 ‘ e ta, 4 . “ persistent refusal ts tal! | Know Notbings have out to put thefr contexplated move- , i Ps ne lop ond protectorate, i% was flually clusolved by tue | bereaiter, it we overksk heads ‘ = ar wey Lew of — conjunction of Great fraedrepe- begotten yer tag pronernc eatin 81508 | frank enc manly natecaen's of Lord Joho Russell, writen | bee, the inmost solemn and impcitan’ of aM our inte-ma. | ment into operation, and thus leave to che democracy for reece pere ren eee foun, aan See eee ce a) ae ee ne | antl fa. Teale, on toma cans on the 16th sf Jaxtary, 1863, witha view to its belog su | ‘inal engsgements. it will be an idie dream to supose | decision the question of Banke. ox some honorable name, J Se ‘et eshte ei ae = ponsulecadfan = petipon ee agli pt ng s4e mitted tothe Cong +ss of the Uaited States, He writes: — curseives hee ard sale if we le ave her to waylsy Ws on for Speaker of ihe House of Representativos, sequirea under xe discipiine of free government, | disputed, that this ng heir Kicg wera that since Grent Britain @vst aswnined the oro. | et! 8id-s OL Gus. I Gaus Parseges from our Ate Wamnvotox, Jan. 80, 1855, Disipinhie! om nad Scab Dirheote sepresiod's constitptlonsl ampiciom tbat: | TET iiecal “Umlisecl, Gusvemsla, a. previace (00 nerd. Fust epaa inslenaof exgrciing abs | " Nor do tear a vac, having juslice and high Siate ne. | yp, atlas and the Bnolish Misin—Presiten'iad Move | Gorge are cue nae tomtom, o Desember 20. From th a rere per nator Ree nd ian a Gian, om the \earbess . colenisn tin’ dh aaveste Ae tie mere my eid Centra) America, and probibitiog ai) | cessity cp our side* We outnumber the population of «He we copy the following items. uncer her away, has entirely lost her | he Britiaa Islands. Their dependences detract from | ™menls—Mr. Buchanan’s Return—A Southern Tour Ex- | Tye Tezritoziul Legis!ature met on the 3a of December ‘a aged. thet they remaiced there until the revoluiioa with- | det an over the contivest, from (ape Hornto Florida. Se rT - i i ‘dson’ i Hees ee eeeten and these ‘riendly Powers engege in | 12 tbat province, by which it becawe incepeaacat, ana | cody, ihe orquo Indians. instead of governing wei: own | 'D81e84 of Uenoing streng:h Although we hare less | pected from Him—Colonel Richardson's Chanors as Vice | ana the mnestoge o! acting Governor W. W. H. Davis Geadly strife and discord, and violense be thus let ‘cos, | that they have rewained ever sice in tae same territory, | ihe. Secording ty thels ov customs, furuien s nae aod titie | peat’ ' : if Seen ible ot | President—Secretary Marcy's Policy—The Diploma! | sent in on that cay. The {cllowing extract will serve t| : : te Europeuns end awericena. who ; te | these of Great Britain; end our revenues, susceptible of foarrest the progress of the nations, Better for the | Within the geographical limits of tue indepondent States | [es uopesns end ax Sr lowatto, according fo te wove: o lange inerease, are practealy free, Our recruiting | Rather Wily for the Speculators. show the feelirgs of the acting Governor on Know Na who have the management of Mr. | thingiem and the question of slavery:— fo of each that the white clifs thay garrisoa the evese | Of Honduras and Nicaragus, and pominly Coma Atca, | Sn4,c,0P8, ihe coast of Mesquite, according to the usskes of , : : that Niagara lore forever its deep toned voice, wad ooze | 5 ates, savege tribes, altvough they are permitier to ox. | reveuing partof ne rerritory of Central americatrom Spankh | ciency of nativs valuaterrs, Great Britain hereclt, 2s ogee eller est ial oo Meare Set | Althovgh cur remote situation bappily exempts us fror hough a vulgar channel to tue sea, than that the grou: | @rcire Home municipal powers, have no actual ox high | $0vtrol, ard cblaluing sn oullet fur her, has no sther interc2: in , Mr. Geo. M. Dallas out of the way by sending him to | the political ogitations ihat prevail in other sections q ‘ Moe quito ths 2 - derived well as other European nations, his supplied us with and sonorous conoord thus established between them be | SOvCeignis. Even when they have never been displaced | POP Ue auestinn wih ine indian'oa lon a Meoqui. this element of war, We haves corps of military off. | Bogland in the place of Mr. Buchanan, Forney’s finger, | tbe Union, we cannot Le uninterested peststora of p Fee ar od ee ee aeeas And statesmen of | late OF ation which ‘exeecloct, cicestly, os derives 1» | ,, Under no elrcumsiances couli the fiction of a Moaqu’'> | +78 wmeguslied. amd wo bave the founcations ‘of au | qs chief pointer, can be seen in this movement; and | MEérents, Fanslicim and treason to the constitutlo ‘Bi tates, by all the motives thatare born ia the sc cpebadaey Tt was | Kitog kicgd i, or protrcto ate be tolurated to dey navy, that cam speedily be ouilt up and put :. iu “) and laws of the Unites Srates seem to have had breathe Jove of such a land as ours, in euchan age as this—I cona- | itself. the tive acquirea by — sel the Senators and statesmen of Great Britain, by all tue | Dy thir universal law that Great them > " ih’ motives thet greatness and ambition 1ike her own will | lrg tcaintained that sovoreign'y within tue territ ry of | th¢m ry trenves with sho ¢ st doubtless Mr. Dallas is, to a considerable extent, ia- | into them @ new life, and are now running riot in th In view of the circumstances. it seems to me wise to | cebted to this gentleman for the honor intended to be | lend. moe sec secret cath bound societies waging a poli not permit to be inactive. to preserve and matutain, at | the original United Sizes, which she recigzed to tuew | it Would be con-enting to x adkere to ovr demenis, and yet to east on Gzeat Britai | conferred upon him. His withd-awal from Pennsylvania | Ho07eligious crusade opainst our adopted citizens, ¢ Sta a : 1s to ee é ine ing to ceprive them of their constitutional rignts and ~ eont by the weaty of Versailles, in 1783. By 1 them end ourseives 10 tolersie Cistir ctly the sibihty of dec diag upon peace « = | ing ee ee cate tak thie polition ntatns | France acquired and held tbat Gominiva fo Onneds ana | ‘eaties of 1°83. 1:80 and 1850, war, Goce ws Bat | Jesves to Mr. Buchansa the undivided support of the de- | reduce them almest to & stute of vasealage, asking tha} P aévise us to propose arbitration. é hey. shall i Se ease ten ewe} the vaiuabiaiw anh Tea laladaa ailglioa hs eee etry ‘Cla enaon sleins that the late Mr. Webste: when | I think we bave paseed thet point already. It would im. | mocracy of that State, which was, at one time, promised | they shall tear all the burdens, but not be allowed to the horizon, a pledge that avy of the nations shail not | ot forred to Great Britain on th» fall of Queves,ia | Secretary of Stale, san Scizish constr 'y doubt of the rightfulness cf the posisions on which we | to General Tierce, and which that sagacious statesman | ¢?J°Y; apy of the rewards of government, It is con! egain be overwhelmea by after coming deluge of haman Flcridss avd vast regions in Louisiane and Mexier | erély interred trom Mc. Wemtes's having Such indeci-ion wevli be equivalent to abandonment. 4 By the same law Spain acquirad thit tila to tie | the treaty of 1860. This sanccion is undezst: to reason ard experience to make the birthplace a test I shell examine first the question concerning the Mos- | t0 which the United States have susce-ded by par- Maccolew, the Nicaraguan Minister, to accept a treaty Besides, I do nct know where we could find aa impart.’ | #rycertainty that Mr. Dallas has siguified his acceptance ties exist among men without distinction of race or ciim a Sages the Uniied states of continental rights gustan‘eed ain acquired saa 60 een hendeae te astice 0 ave elected to stanc, as claimants out of possession. | saiters himrelf he will yet receive, I canno! learn with fidelity or merit, when it js known that these qu to which the United States ave wuccmded by par | Sere ia the wate of Nieweguncod cette Rint) | umpire ta the present dirtarbed condition of Barope of the proffered appointment. pe tlt en: Ohm ne a TEAS der quito Coast. The United Sta’es in-ist that Great Britain | " fl zens are as much devoted to our institutions as the nati i cu e te the Biiiish government. ason the basis of that construc- 2 do not thik that Great Britain will choose @ res 6 M4 ti is board by the treaty to witadraw from that district, | in, Mexico, Central America, and South Ameries, | tine it, rarameal ston tes eee Ca na | tower. Her geverament hardly les than gur own, is . | _ Mf Buchanan sto leave England early in the coming | torn, and our history shows that they sve never b reat Britain deries the obligation. | wae seve pees se sees han, Somalatons (800) So aartatte yrerhsdterr ner per fee ats Sepuler cue: “Tics contre Weray. @rawe ott of a caprice of | month, but we have ne intelligence, of Inte, whe‘her be | tarcy in shedciog their blood or laying dowm thelr liv 5 bs vat a ~ ERT ‘ in deience of the Union. ‘Tho most objectionable featu t of the 1 ia the trea y. | t was by the same law that Denwark a: if a his approval of the er own céministration. A war would embarrass be is to make gcod his original intent of first visiting the | 3? Teo mipvlations are, chat Great Britain thall ‘nt obtata | femrioos tn the ‘West Indies, aod that Porvagal seyairea | Bish comstrustin, {has never bean adopted ty ite | HosFerows mausirial syvtem, ond could bring to ber ». | southern States on hic way to Pennsylvania. Should | Prokesing’ Chiistane of cathe on peter ‘or maintaio any colony or occupation, or exercise any | Brazil; and the emyire of Brazil staods now on the same | Uni spices Barossa Pia ay a on tae’ 1 51, My ccuneel, therefore, 1s’ notice to Great Brita... | ¢, however, make a tour cf the South, which his physi- | bended therselves with the political fanatics of the day; don caragua, Coute Rise, : : p : ° | own, as now waintainsd, ixion over Nicaragua, Costa Rica, the Mosquito | ttle. The sutho-ity for this universal law, wos: apo- | OWT “Welt Os suppcred admission agaies’ the United | thst we sball interfere to prevent her exercise of doin. | cian, Dr. Forney, would recommend, in consequence of | 884, in torgetfulnc ed her pos- | UUtDowever solemn may have , 3 of the precepts of Him whom the; Coast or any part of Central America. Great Britain | site to the prorent occasion, 19 that of Great Brisata hi 5; jon in eas to tolls 7 a 1 copieseed in tht i aign tae trea. | Staves is more than ba’aucei by tho counter admission of | im in Cen} America, if it shal! not be discontinued ot . pro‘eas to follow, have turned vials of thei: wrat sosorts that the stipulatiocs are only prospec'ive, and do | te Mey eran alain walsh eae tae'trea- | Tord Jobn Russell ta the tetas honcho tens qucted | ¥ibiu ene year, and aléo that anthority be now given to the reverity of tke weather in the North, it 18 | upoe » single sect, which worship in common with th ’ bnew , i ene Pee ees mers ahishr ie exiting cathe sins | versation between himself and Lord Palaeracen, thas | 60 largely alresay?— the President to execute that delayed purpose. probable that he will be called upon for his views on all | the same God und the same Kedcemer. This may b when the treaty is ¢ cluded. She argues that such an | —Teoncluted with saying that it resulted f-om this Jong conrse | q,1be pecullarity of this case is, that certain neigtbortag States | se,aneat Britsin Oe EAL re ce Laren eet enor oe Tamer) ew abs tecme tee Rect, fore iy, tos evar et nae ints he history a 4 . = o w ito; ad iy a ) ami be ty g 5 o tect ia merely inferential; whereas, if it bad been in- | o° univernal uiage ad convon'ional practic, tat actual pox. | teu alugeinr, the independence of xowullg: sad the Mov. | Gey’ tt ee and to gh to the wary arrayecranpuncas of the Union. | Tn doing this, he will bare anticipated | the world has been mace a blocdy record by arousing th Srp renunciation, 2 “memset to the form of an | serereatr on Tudian errtory? and tat ahtragh indian | gr7#0r¥- (Wecan Dete bo Gimp ie orovaia sgunn oa | ‘ion. But this ctaposition, 1 Uhiak, ought not t> per- | ate sumicusly ‘waiting a call” to pat forward « fooler | Aczce Passions ot men upon the subject of religion, and por af . 'y honor and bumanity re | spade wu inactivity. wi an for our country when ix shail b fe seems to me that the renunciation does not rest in | ‘bes were possesced cf some of the alirivu sal s sevaraie | On: in behalf ul the soaqatvo vation, bul we intend | for the Sourhern vo gon inference only, but is explicitly expressed. The tron y | Qos"ical osetence, uch aa that of governing weir oom nant Meestty tothe treary of Warbiagioe ce ihe 100s oF apeit Ineo, | alt, ‘he Wisdom of Cingreen shall approve this course, It {s porsible that Mr. Buchanan may not find there | ©/m¢ on element in our popular elections, beca H rd . | then the mtervening time can be well and wisely i gious fanaticism knows no boands. it will be th ts brief. It ¢ intere lations of whe, a and notioasume any rovereign'y, ether direct or indircct, 1a well and wi ra- | evi ing in accordance with his wishes, for General be , of Nicaragca, Honduras, Costa Ric: clamed for the Meraaltors, witout eubveriing ihe whole | | Go much light bas now teen thrown upon the whole stone ai Bout teleping ail ta power tain oe ESC me much the admiration ot Southern caucuses and con: | their patriotiem ‘we see evidence to call in question ™ , pric Gt public law belonging to our pecu'lar posiiion. #i jeid of dedat at lan dispoes very briefly of the two 4 144i . A | ventions, but wit! exception, having in view the it o ‘ G Ba Row “Grtnaca, aod "ata itentin™ onions, | egrguey Racin te Feral mcurrence an aoan: at | “Fos ining auonions ipsa Co apaue of the Bag | RAL hat strike lor Goatnenial sapremacy, moat | Genes fc Me’ Wise, favoraio Iepremfon apon the | yqmneat ofthe Union he med ape of asa 5 of cs si temsons!: cation of - ‘ D, 4 oy cb 4 - | Sout dy means \ te out tain stipulates that she wil not ever (-hat is to say, | ‘Bat cepied trom its operation “the British settlement ta Hon. | (raz "ith the Gret maval Power in the world, we must at | Richardson has received a strong Southern influence | Junt'ecrsion, vagsey oat ee or oe amsnchiusetts, at thet after this time, heneeforward) maintain any colony or | , He fully admlited the general doctrine for which wecon- | amas, (commosly celled Brien Aononsas, as distinct t begin what has been too long delayed already, the | which will shortly develope i'self in placivg that gentle- | hua parsed an ‘act annulling a law of. Congres Seoupaney: or exercise any dominion over the Mosquito | tered; that was the principio on which they contusted ail | trem the State t Hencnrae Miieris Ippe Staton te che poets eeaiee pet orders of ‘ha | man forward as a candidate for the Vice Presidency. It | fy carrying it ints aect 1h thor See ae Coast. This stipalation cannot be fally executes, ualess | Pare of the Morquitons was sui gen-ris, and stool upoatta ows | RUedvochocd Aihingl the eontroventy wince tae ah ne | if aliedged that the South owes this much, in re | yicg upon the constituidon is Bhi og tech ae Great Britain shall, from this time, lingaish, diseyn- peculiar circumstances senate Doo 27, p. 22, vol. 8 24 seus, | 28 dependencies Corsibbesa fea, yot tbe ted of contest wil now aries a TN sce A me A ge ae 7 lf Union, and in a moral potat of view isan mien teen Sud tofore, sie north of thet. Lawzence. Canada cannot be | formal presentation of hia zame for this elevated post by | £08 # though the people had resited with arms in the tinue, give up, retirefrom, and abandon whacever c slony, Cong. thst # tUemeut and those islauds wad left by the treaty, k * ; ‘ itbout denying, cr affirm Sey telawi tuo cr comctos en, to Acesciio Osnel, | suf rents it tome tre oe penne wien Tih the pene. Sing ce meloieg is soy 47 J conauered ngvink: her will. She cannot roruse if you | g Southern Convention, tt wil fad many strong sap. | andl When a Sate sete Lerselt up in opposition to th minion, indirectly maintained and exercised ia the forss | were euch, yet they could not suetain an exception w | i fer sourhof the St un ) as the do of the Britian Thave thus axsreesed taro; come ‘wih frauks But is fair reasoning thet the Cincinaati Convention will | aid. if necessary, by foree or arms. The dtectorate over the Mowqaito nation, is inclu fed iu | the usivers ‘ 7 rettlement of the Ballze while, ty the traaty of 1783, the Md y frankness. But | not suffer for the wantot names from which to make e 2 os eonstitution of tis eaundieton. To remove this doubt, Great Britsia | "At leans, isin ‘ence of such a case in babalf of the ae expreosly defined xa ity Pr pe ound ry; and isnt 15s sane einen a ie Mota amet Led ees page may ene tats to he Gn Beate ie rome suas ting yt wrrere Tepeate and peel ce OF any provoction witch aby | Motitaic nation cannot, ve pleaded exator: sie aal | Gvstee, walle by ths: ieaty her p vicesiva {esecy | animal parts of the coust/y- If these shall be fully | the sutvages of the incinaatl dolegaters who at present | feri@,mitpout wich no Unleneould heve been formed, an to te or le, for the purpose of a Mae chaste pleaadad’ ber saire vate s subordinate one, wi hout wny sttrirute of dominion | Sxero Red, hie cay will inaugurate anew aud important | gre unknown to fame. iy 0 States was a sacred pledge on thei eer tatitlg tay Paaeagee clrataiey o euainicteg ay’ | tapett ban cecnientte, Se ae une due at kis Gag | sbstever. - By this exiended oa aberbate pati ang pet jescefal triumph over the sneieat cviontal poll-y | “On the 4th of March the oonvontion will mest in Ponu- | Rig nycag, Paty mous, remain faithful to the obliga ion Gominton wastever, of the Mosqaito Coast.’ I tern the | ber successors, et Sp Great Britain covers a propoved vexasge across ('s. Tou. | he os }, honoratle to ourselves aud auspicious to e!. | sylvania for the nelestion of delegaies to the National | jor Tigbted faith, ee theréey haw di proper to viclai¢ argument of Great Britain against herself. If she 1s not Here you will pleoae take notiee that the protastorate | TU throngh the state of Honduras, and atto hoy great a ‘onvention, aud it is supposed that Buchanan will bave | the eyes of the other Stntes “Wren oe ee erent ia Yorelinquish and disconttaue her Mosquito colony, occa- | peitberis, por is claimsei by Great Briain’ be a an. | 20%er 10 Omtruct eves the Nicaragua rouve, Th» Uaited | The Senate toen went into executive session, the en'ire detegstion in his favor. Gov. Marcy has re. | Cin fails in her federal uli [Loerie ee a gs tion an! dominion, now maintained aod exercivea ia | ¢ern inaiitu'ion. (in theccntra-y, iv stands upon pre- | -18!*% iu view cf the exeep'ion of the Ralize dissrie: | ‘The Senate sdjourned ti!l Mcnday, fused to make any oxpreasion which could lead to an | of every other Stnio and Tervitory th tees aeeens aay Be torn ofa protectorate, why does she not expressly | scription, 1 give you the evi ence:— from ‘the trem'y cf 1860, do not insist now on ber silat opicion as to his choice tor the next Presidency. Thove | Gereliction and call. the erring ea notice of auch Besorve aid save them ? Forstos Orrice, Jan. 6, 1650. | Sond ut they ingst that #he shalt Mouse of Representatives, who have sounded the Secre‘ay upon this delicate potat, | gauge of ceep mortideation tat thin rithee prot ¥ Leubmit, in the next place, thet if the Amerisan ¢on- Viscount Palmerstom prosenrs tie ome lineany ice... | sitbdrew trom the: isizict she hee usurped, lyiag bs- Wilbsistaecn - can know but little of the man if they suppose him oapa- | State, around whore history clea: ae net Proud old struction Is not the true one, then the t-ca'y is desti- | renee wud beusto oummunica’s to bin, for ha peruscts | teen the Sioun avd the Serstoom, and eontine hecsaif astuxatox, Jan. 31, 1860. dle of ¢-mumittalina upon matter of such interest to | riew cf the past, where: the Kevin, holy memo tu‘e of that ma'ualiry watch ‘is fuorent in aul conven. | traprlation in epanieh a w lewor irom ML. Chaticid ber Me | within the stipulated boucdaries of he Balize. wile THR SPRAK . himeelf persozally, Had they atked the wily *iplomat | Was rocked while yet in Revolution had its pirth aod tions, and avowed with peculiar earnestness and aolanci- | Jesty’s Charge d+ ffairs io Cuatenmla, addrewsed ty tie gov. | they ae con ent to leave for farther diuseussion the exs Mr. Cox, (K. N.) of Ky., oftores ambh what he thought of his own chaaces, they doub?.sxs would hl sent be swacdiing clothing, wh ay i hla ove. The Uni'ed states have not. ciuinr on | r0iDen ol Nkaragua. on the Gh of sestemrer lst enniaitiaz | mivacion of ez prets. sions to arsoiuteasvercigh'y with | pesisg, im’@ tue spirit P4 soi tte, e wrige gene | ave found @ more favorable return for their labors. Gusorimuntek seemn arn Seats teaerenberes. ; ne o aierpent of wiDR ibe Balare en ivecth i frit of patcio a 7 Mosqnito Const or in sny other part of Usatral Ams | Stich hus existed, slgce ho mddie of ihe seventsonin centucy. | ‘yma Chere : re come | Replying in his behalf, your correspondent would in- | the Union should forget her eclemn Obligations and lft Lord Clarendon sus:aing the British clsim ty drawing | Pélitical principles, in order to rovrre the election of | form the over-anxious applicants that Mr, Marcy | hostile hand ‘against the constit Tica, apy colony, occupation, ot ¢ominion of any firm | Heiween Great Britain and the sosquiio nation, —weasle 1 whatever. They stipulate that they will never ob fo 1he fact thet the Uvited Sta'es io 1841, one @ Ge @ rg’ iatet is the same Mr. Marcy now as he has ever beon— ‘ution, the great ark of Serums any such. Crest Britain tes ail thov extstiog | 2.” , aati denies tr Weaide a1 tbe Bains, wha teverre’ hin otenontachin, | 0 pester, members reserving the :iz': to tasiston then | fein" of himmselt and wo ome else, Even up to tain Gon, | OU Political safety. May the returning patriotlem and inthe lorm of tbe Protectorate, aad Uist consticutos the | ggiDitftetemtive, protectorate came unter the cognl: | ‘nein tah givercmegt.” But Bate 1a sitayes a rim a: | Pieetsally Rereatte:, xo coneiudisr vit resolution | ment, there naa’ net been the hlightess indication on the | MEf0,0F duty of her people speedily wash away the ¢ Obrtacle vo the opening of the proposed ship canal, na | “NCP Of not ovly Spain, bur cleo Great Bei-tia berwll | in¢ ston, aud chide prope: tints OF Poche Ros, | that all who thas agree wlll first vote ir afr. Orc, and if | put of Marey, tm writing or speseh, which could commit pl Tob alba sprbe Peeing object desired by both parties. She agrees on her part | Heres in Les ny POMem . ¥ ures, The aot of rendicg 4 Consul to reside there ts ms | de he mot eleeted then vote for Mr. Fuller, of Pennaylya- | Dit 88 approving the administration of President Plerce. 7 ary crermment we sino learn thet the Derritory has that she not only will not obtain or assume any new oo By srtcle sekno sledgemens cf he inwfiiness of the extension o! His reply, when too closely pressed open thia potat, is, | Population of upwards 07 sixty-one thousand. Jony, oscupation or ¢ominion there, but she will avt cixth of that treaty, it was etipaiated that | ihe seruement beyond those diusdaties Secoory, nia, inviiing a. conservative men to unite in thisar- | «that the duties of bis office absorb all his ti be Masonic Lodge cf our city eolebrated St. John th harcafter maintain or exercise any such that in ao ex” | Dritieh rubjec: ; aypomtaent ct « Consul is only a comunerc ial, moda po | Fangement, wite the reservation thereia conteiaed. tention.” This peculiarity of character hen weantong | EVaMKellet’s dey, the twenty-seventh of December, with ating. Ax he has heretofore ‘made are’? of ner pro | iogmund in the diasres lor eat oe a GPT Og goray | tv a1 transection Fa Mr. Cunaman, (dem.) of N.C., in oxplainiog his req | Boted by bis eclleagnes of the Cabinet, and by outsiders, | pePach'es snectnt United Sea ce Goons baa eee tectorate for the parpove of maintaining and exorciing | au iio Homie distns unirets of rales dinamo te | Ws 10 Clarendon farther ana 24 there neu-pat 1ep-olltthak ha plaraitty ressiotien hey, wes who would ave refered ita ofa labors could another | Palvedtoine tailed Sstes Dati Court Hons ey Fe { ° rr gat he ng! addr oe much occupancy and dominion, she agrees that she wil | Moequitocoast) Theret " * make ure Of that machinery for those purpoaes no Lng. perred in any cider para whe her onthe: Sprain Gorin | oy # war Detveen Great Britaly ond spun, nothing wan farther f:om ais purpose than the election | filed bis place. Hence, Mr. Maroy feols himself an under | "‘Weears bs miivate totes from TB. berks if the machinery is proserved at all, it must coas.i- | (main Jand)or in anv of the is ands ehatcoaver dapendea: on | the Belige setitement had besa atrosy « tute now, as heretofore, a ¢ lony, an cecapstion, a dy | thr atoresald Spanish Continen’, and for whatever reason it | Sastown, But Great Briain was, coring minton, and therefore the machioery iteelf must coae os eg Fetarn authin the die ot | weilas de‘ore it, occupying te Balize, In sud adine etter from Governor Meriweth Ewell arrived in Independence tha! 22d of October, after a pleerant trip across the Plains. he Governor reaebed home cafely on the first of Novem- of Mz, Banks, but he desirod :hat thenational American § | 0 obligation efther to ‘he President or any of his very | «nv ‘eimrour rou Cont, at rac, ae | who stand on the twelfth section of the Philadelphia p tive ftlen }, and his revention in the Cabinet, as I have tated, arises from no love for the man, who claim ized 1/ the British construction is right, then Great B itnia ine, auditor thes 1 the goxce of eighteen | t,he Spanish ile, he did oot etfeo: nor ¢ Platform ss tho corner stone of their party, ae patriots | mastery over the President, and who { bu concede! nothing provnt and, nothing f.fare, wie Ot bin Brttannie Majenty” (Senale toe Th volte Pee Pt | change so the mate oF extent if her poe eee Tir tebimaiell Ga Me, Teas, } frente fling arse rwhp do @1a8 We | ber, ad would leave for Wasbiogton about the middle ¢ United Staves have concefei everything, eqnally pro- | The same protectorale came again ander the reriew-ct ] WOeD peuce was restored, she mate no treaty of boun- | My, ACMPMREY Manamatt, (K.N.) of Ky., seid that his | , ch day brings with i+ a nope ¢ something may | ““Qarvied in Santa Fe, on the 2th De Srancee eis Coarrat Bree Deneatiewird | sharene ra ie ie Parties a 1788, ig maxing @ beng el Sonter iterel Whe te ee bu friends could never procure & tatistastory response from Lk abi See aitiion, tae peor of (ie, House. (Up 0 | Rev, DD, Lone; Ur. hiner C. Tuttle, § mat of tte iae ‘One ean scarcely hia gravity when he finas | forther treaty. By aiticlo first it was stl salsted as fol. | 9 Ueornuyy sting Comme: ctl treerioe c | the demosrate regarding the measures tne la: fom Tria urelosy tO FOF more hpor the watiecr hac tine | UPited States Drogcone, end Mre. Garollae Sherer, bot Lord Clarena the other band, arguing taat the Bri- ‘ Te diary, Wee oreey. OF TSG, oo tess a teen Ree ee ee Er Te Ae er ee eestor ane canject thon tat | of Sie cme wane. * Le eee emer onauegenmee cenmotaatity. | wintrane jestyrn rubogs and ctbarootoniete why have Ferree dge tite Wh coco med ret ite, Bilize cated, and dented that they hed the right to calsulate on _ guberbood: oS Me chiartoerery where perceptible in the | General Garland, Assistant Adjutant General Nichol Bia exliogem ts tiv: Great Betain haw e2lontes, oosape: | couniry of the moriiies, ns well ane locged. Great Brliwte oon inuod sc sol on thie gemena | 2BY line of principle to dcive the Amerisaas to the wall, | “*” aes pic and Coloxfel Grayson have returned from Alburquerque, «minions in Central Ameries; the United | and ibe islands sdiavent, without exceotion, situated beyond | mevii the question of in'er-ocenmis nasages nc-ovs the | dy forcing them to choose between Beaks and Orr, [Correspondence of the Albany Journal, gad resumed thelr dutice at heacquarters. Dr. De Leon, have none, If Great Britaiw relinquish her colo- prenatal neue aaa tree tie position | Ttheur aiose, In 1811, the Bei ish Pariivment paswea a | Mz. Coun, (dem.) of Ga., acid that as he was deter Wasrmmerds, Jan, 3 1866 ED Saas cata eco emae ne rare nies, ocoupations and dominions, she surrenders s4van- | j.,glish: (or ihe uses mpeciind 1a the third aricleat ise proay, | 8%, entitled “Am act for the more offus'ual puntsament ieshambinaen tee iis. Pa ; Religion in Washington—The President at Church. | that places. His ‘place be funday, tages without recetving any equivalents. Bat iv ts to be | couventis, an In addition to the country already panel's, | of murders sod man-laugn'ers, commiited Ia piases not | *oTmiped not to v « Fuller, even in the event Orr | qaQyn icy ue made as tae place. c@ here will be filled by Surgeon Sri Minot ecteuien conbations sak Gamsiaions | Sopuesct icine owen whee byw com ula, | within bis Majesty's demiuions.”” The preatable le in | Bald not be elected, he would be acting in bad faith | Towl where the princi oat churoh of the city wa, orf Mejor Kendricks Comeogiact cin, parina’. Beeet pene meron; and, sreondly, they had ‘sategontet The Hue apecifiea in the other artio'es of the tenehy a there worde:— wore be to favor the resolution. He would act irrespeo- | the answer was, ‘ Tam I cannot inform you, sir, | town a few deys ogoand is stopping at hesdquarters. eal ta to oetabliah colonies, occupations and dominions | the boundaries ot the special poaession of the English, ye retementin the Bay “« 7 There by victue of the contract and two treaties extond | were the Kio Houdo vm the north and the river Sinan nm | SEMae he enae Das or setlemen Melon rena pce | Mr. Cox auld he would vote for any man who main. | charthentnad kane aot boonpin onein sister voor | where he will be stationed for the present, and 64 to them by Mearagua, whore title thoy hed to be ps- . tonether with ‘the Amal inland of Casino, St | wen in te poseersion avd within the protacion of his Majemy, | tains the conatitational guarantees and reserved rights | Afver & diligent search of more than en hour, the | weck Costaet tus, Siwy £0: that port during the, past Tamount to that of Great Britain. T avoid this conflict Key,’’ or Cayo Ossino and “he cluster of small but not within the territory and dominion of his Majesty, by | of the ftates. No 'y lee should, in this peeutiar | church was disecvered, partly concealed by other duild- Du “4 iy 2 ¥ in W. Davi Ist United States Detween themrelves, the partion agree to abandon Con- | islands which are situaced opposi'e that part of the o nat | perconsreetding within that setuement. condition of affs prevent bim from dissharging his | ings ,and farnishing a striking contrast to the other pub- i ia rom Fort Stacton, has in town some Wheres: wous murders and mansiaughters have been | tive of all combinations, but it a not in my line,” The question was repeated to | Majer Bey, payers, has been orcered to Fort sien, it tra! America to the States existing there, to whom it be- | occupied hy the cutters at distange of eight leagues Pariiament amended th‘s statute, in 1819, by sucther, {| duty to his country. If the course indi 4 longi. from the river Stban, a place which has always foe | «Lich re-effirmed that Bailae was not within’ the terri. | Oobb, of Georgia, was puzruod, the Uoumamais Lak | Be tettioes te, the a7 Te wanoeiaioally, joe Ben . & iptain McFarran, amistant quartermaster U. & A, the Arwrean anrument Gran. Pitancon. | nnd wall asaped to Wat porpnn” Br aridieseren:n, | (vie una damishs of Crt Heian.” Thave almady | Oganie not improved by age. Jt is o!4, out of repair; and trom | more. Copia. Meee own December 28, trem Fort Fill” don that ) « jenee er Ae yt eo ler men . ipecifien no limitations vr medifoutions; and the language | #i0n, were rerowed and condrmed with now and more | (hi Tlalize ae privileges granted by tke treaty with spain aren Tous efene 1 vote Sor Me | ee aoe wan ove ally cistogelahed {ron raat’ | Union, where ho haa been ordered for duty. He ih as Orr. lip dis i * hih confoseedly Works them vat, equally worksa com- | #tingapt restrictions, (Senate Doc. 78, vol. x), p. 21.) | £1786, ir, Linpusy, (K. N.,) of Mo., never eculd vote for the x felestes ag 3g £ “a ang grt) _ otbere plain Tos and we are ploaved that he has received

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