The New York Herald Newspaper, August 17, 1856, Page 4

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4 EW YORK HERALD, SUNP*’) angust 11, 1858. A I Hollana; . a nEEEIEITINEIEREEEEEE IEEE er tee ee NEW YORK HERALD. wasekeer 2. ef taciianls 8 heen: oh soe revolution, and unbtsppy Spain, the victim of are not usually reminded of their past vir’ what similar document, which he retracted 3 | intervention by Congtiés” and “8 in ae hd Ain weal family quarrels, is "gain In the hands of political courage until there is a chance of the | it, soon as he got back to this country, stating that | the Territories.” hit leaves Pansas to the fol- panne = In anotb« - ‘ JAMES GORDON BESNETE, | 0h pera decirhatrpede er mbrip h failing them. Again, the Sanit ani lusions to he wrote it under the presure of Costa | lowing routine—first, to settl’ment by slavehold- | ™atadors, __ EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR, Staten" gine ~ Began. at npodial Cicet at | Violence, in the Enquirer, Ys auncais for the sup-| Ricans. The same trick has been practised | ers with their slave property; secondly, to the} Rypony of qm CoMMITTER oF Wars axp pression of liberty Gr thought and speech and | in Cuba, and forms, in fact, a familiar fea-| recognition of the inst'.cution as a constitutional action—which oy the way may be read as a| ture of Spanish tactics. Under these circum-| right in the adoption, of State government; and commentary or seholiist on Preston Brooks’ let- | stances we are entitled to look upon this anti- | thirdly, to the advatesion of the Territory as a ter, declining to go to Niagara—show that the | Walker manifesto as merely a Costa Rican dodge | slave State, and, the acquisition of a new and vir- ularm is na superficial or evanescent feeling. The | t® damage the man of whom tke serviles of Cen- | gin market for; Virginia slaves, which we take to South are afiaié ; not afraid of the North, but | tral America entertain such a mortal dread. be the true neaning of Mr. Wise’s remark that of themselves—of the 528,000 non-slaveholding | | Whitt on this’subject, we take the opportunity | Mr. Buche.nan is as sound upon the Kansas ques- voters, for whom Fremont would be the best | °foticing the fact that there are at present tying | tion as u'pon the Missouri compromise. poesible President, and who in case of need could | of te Nicaraguan canst vevernl English vessels- | We have no objection to the admission of Kan- very qui¢kly elect him, in spite of the landed | °fWar, mounting altogether about 180 guts | casas a slave State. On the other hand,-we ariszoeracy. There ave various gurtuises afloat as to the object | maintain that ber admission in this character But a still more important viewto take of these | Of the presence of this fleet. The most probakle | would be the best policy for the future peace of articies is their Dearing on the attitude of South- | ¢XPlanetion of it iv'the fact that Mr. Manning, } the Union; and that there ean be no peace short ern slavebolders, We published the other day a | the Buetish Consut'at Leon, has been in the kabit | of some such concession to the South, from series of articles from South Carolina papers, show- | °f furnishing tho different admiristrations of | time to time, by way of a self-sus- ing that in that State the largest slaveholders hed | Nioatagua with oans to help them through their | taining talance of power in the United always been the strongest Union men, and that necessities, ané'chat England is about bed avail | States Senate. But in this controversy the cry of disunion had fuvariakty come from | berwlf of the ‘pretext of this gentleman's claims | with Mr. Wise, we also maintain that his the nomslavebolding portion of the community. | ®#-inet Walker's governmentito tarry out certain | remarks upon the great increase in the price of We have now @ paper of the standing ef the | ects whidh she has in view. niggers, from the extension of slave territory on Richmond Examiner which assures us that in the | We notice, also, that oar late Envoy to St. | the south side of the Miseouri line, will apply to event of the election of an dbolition President Dongingo,‘General Cazenean, and -his politically } ye Southern acquisition of the immense territory “the slavehalders vould be found craven advo- | #¢oomplished lady, are at present in Nicaragua. | of Kansas on the north side of that line. Major cates of expatiients, compromises and submission.” | We hope that these movements are not to b’ | Buford, the active South Carolina pioneer in The fact ig undoubtedly as this well informea:| ‘#keu @ significant of fesh troubles and com-| Kansas, says that the Territory is admirably journal states i, So far from talking of dis- | Plicatiens in that quarter, It would be too bad | ggapted to slave labor, And why not? It lies union, tye large slavehdiders of Virginia, like | ROW tot we are on tke eve of an apparently just behind Missouri, in the same latitudes, and those of South'Carolina, would’ be'the very frst | equitéble settlement of Central American affairs. | with the same soil and products, as the wealthy to prea’ submicsion to*authority, and would:en- | '@ have old sores re-opened and the work of} dave holding Missouri counties on the Kansas force Tamralty “to the governmes! with all the | ‘tplmacy to do over again. border. Hemp, corn and tobacco are the great energyp¥bat-avense of their responsibilities and | Gewerner Wise on Mr. Bechanan—Kansas | *taples of [those Missouri slave holding border their stke im the public welfare would inrpire. and the'Price of Niggers. counties; and actual experiments show that these Nor qua tte othervise. Ofvall kinds ef pro- fhe Buchanan democracy ¢f this State having | articles thrive better in the same soil, of a fresher per (theirs is the kind that i¢ most likely’ io be | becn considerably bothered with the Virginia ra- | and richer quality, across the line in Kansas. aft atte by ‘politteal’ disturbarce; a seri@is riot | t#.cation speech of Governor Wise, in reference It is folly, then, for Mr. Wise to deny the soft 0 daiitt take away belf their income; and ‘any ap- } % the prospective'price of niggers with the elec: | impeachment that the price of niggers is an im- } wouch tovivil wat would be certain to render the | tion of Mr. Buchanan, application was made to | portant Virginia item in the Kansas question. wry subsistence of the weak:hiest of them an un- § heGovernor by Mr. Butts, of the Rochester Union, | Admit Kansas as a slave State, and the demand séslediproblem. ‘To suppose that’ they who live | for en explanation, and @ prompt answer was re- | there for niggers will soon raise the price of that ‘in ‘the! brittlest of houses aze going test the ex-} turned. From this answer, Mr. Butts has pub | staple, even in Accomac and the remotest re- «wuple -ef coneutsions ané stone threwing is a} lished the following extracts, fully explaining { cesses of the Dismal Swamp. In his ratification ipoliteway of aecusing them of gener! insanity.,] what Governor Wise did say upon the question ai | speech, Mr. Wise did not say this in so many Whe, then, is going to fulfil the prediction of { issue:— words; but doubtless his Virginia audience went the late Mr.-Fillmore aed Mr. Buekenan about away from that mecting with “sound slaves,” the revolt atid secession of the South, in the event ‘Missouri Compromise,” “California,” “three of'€olonelFremont’s election?’ Ger Southern thousand dollars,” “golden five thousand,” *Kan- eotemporaries are pranpt to repiy: The noa- sas,’ “Buchanan gold mines,” “State rights,” slavéholting whites. “Sound on Kansss as on Missouri compromise,” ‘Bat what have they to quarrel about? The Sound niggers,” ‘Three thousand dollars,” “Five most violent partizans of abolition seek no inter- thousand,” “Kensas and non-intervention,” all ference-with them. On the contrary, the whole mixed up together. If we have been led astray, efforts of the anti-slavery party tend to raise and from similar associations of ideas, it is because improve’ and benefit them—to free them from they were suggested by Mr. Wise in his grand the competition of slave labor—to place them notions of néggers and slave territory before the in a society where labor shall+#e honored, not delighted Virginia democracy. despised—to set them on a perfect footing of We cannot accept the declaration to Mr, Butts, equalityywith their neighbors. ~ Surely it cannot of Rochester, that the admission of Kansas as fe gravely: pretended that they are going to a slave State “will not affect the price of slaves take ap: arms to resist these boons. Whatever in Virginia -at all.” This opinion is for New wight be the consequences of abolition upon the York consumption, and Mr. Wise knows, or ought slaveboMer, it certainly could not burt the man to know, letter than to believe it himself. Kan- who owns no slaves and whose only connection sas is capable of offering profitable field work or contact with the system of slavery is being for niggers in the culture of hemp, corn and undereold by slave labor, andoutvoted by the tobacco, to the number of perbaps full two hun- owners of slave property. Bx. the Southern dred thousand slaves. This would be equivalent editors are too sensible to believe anything of the to a market for the whole surplus product of Vir- kind. The extracts we have made from the South ginia. of twenty thousand niggers a year, for ten Corelina Times and the Richmond Enquirer show years to come. This, too, is what we suppose to very plainly that, at bottom, these Southern men be the true interpretation of Mr. Wise’s opinion know perfectly well that the non-slaveholders of the soundness of Mr. Buchanan on the Kansas would not fight, or put themselves to any incon- question. It is Kansas as a slave State. We venience either to maintain slavery or to pro- have no objection to this; we are in favor of it in mote dirunion—simply because they would have This letter, upon its face, is evidently written | constitutional view; but why should our demo- no interest in. doing either, and. a large interest for the latitude of York State, and to quiet the | cratic leaders attempt to dodge the question? in not doing the latter. nerves of the shaky democracy of the Van | Cannot democracy at Richmond and democracy Wisat, then, is the key to these anomalies: | Buren Baflalo school. The ratification speech | at Rochester ride together on the same horse? Simply this: When we hear Southern speeches, under consideration was published et full length | We should like to know. or read Southern journals, we hear and read poli. | the New York Heratp. In that branch of ticiass only, who are not the South, or any res- the speech which discusses the Missoarl compro- | yy spaieu Dirvicviaies.—One great cause pectable or influential part of it. Great slave. | Mise, Mr. Wise, alluding to the Oregon bill in | oF the constant political distractions which pro- owners will no more stoop to the devices required Congress in 1846, eays:-— duce 0 mach misery in Spain, is the family of politicians in the South than rich and good We ted the South equinbrium of slave power lathe Usian ‘ini we hea | quarrel which has eo long divided the reigning men will here: in both sections of the country the trade of politics is left to the anost insignifi- Means ON THe Tantrr—This document proves: two things: First, that Mr. Speaker Banks: hes thought moré of political partizanship. than of the public good in the composition of his committees; aud secondly, that Mr. Campbell of Ohio is @ very unfit man to be placed in a position.where he can exercise influ- ence over the commercial interests of the coua-- try. It will suffice—to establish these assertione- —to say that the performance which Mr. Camp- bell has just reported to the House as the report: of the Commiitee of Ways and Means on the ta- riff is the lame-t, most schoolboy sort of essay in. Savor of protec ion that we ever remember to have read. One needs to hear in mind that Mr. Campbell comes from Ohio, and naturally knows nothing of trade beyord what be may have secn in smallr country stores, in order to realize the possibility of any sane person. at the present day, under- taking to prove to Congress that we had best pay double prices for our cutlery and our dry goods, in order that certain parties here may make for- tures, It is absolutely necessary, we repeat, to remember that this Mr. Campbell perhaps never saw the inside of a merchant's office or read a+ single work on commercial economy ti}] he found himself Chairman. of the Committee*6n Ways and* Means, if we want to understand how such arrant’ nonsense as we find in this report came to be printed at the public expense. On questions of farming, railroads and pigs Mr. Campbell would; doubtless do better. It is too late in the day to argue the question. of free trade aud protection, Mr. Campbell must allow us to take some things for granted ; we cannot give up «pace to proving: for his bene~ fit that the certh moves, or that twice two is four; nor can we indulge bim in a refutation of protec- tive theories which were exploded whea he was a very young man. He will find, if he reads or inguires on the subject. that the propositions which be advances in his report and seems to consider as new, were all fully discusced. and set- tled fifteen or twenty years ago, and. that the people of this country have made up. their minds on all of them. They are not more likely, at the present day, to revert to the old plan of taxing themeelves in a hody for the benefit of a handful of manufacturers, iban they are to abolish railroads and set up the old lines of stages once miore. We are not very sure that we are justified in taking ary notice of such bald’ nonsense as the veport-coptains from beginning.toend. Still, as it Dears the name of the Committee of Ways and Means we will give the net results of Mr. Camp- bell’s study of the commereial history of the country, in the three resojations in which he sums them up bimeclf:— First—The ot of duties below the rates” which protect ovr wwe mdeety from the iicalry of fo- reign comn, ne same Rind, is a proportionate enbancemmgt (f euch imports, and & corresponding in- crease ot revenue from customs, which eiher ap- proach, « que) or © ue [rom custome of the 264 {8 Certuia 10 disappoint- of the custome in pi opor- Pres nt in the vicinity of Quarantine. The three PS ties arrested ona charge of siding to demolish de barricade got out o. a writ of habeas corpus, returnable on Tuesday, In'the afternoon there was a meeting of the ‘Castleton Board of Health, at which it was decidr.d not wivisable at preeent to re- OF MUSIC, Fourteenth .—Deaua’ place the barrivide, Br. Lea presented a report wACAREM] ua asp Pageccuto—Pux Wioo" it’ vicee | showing no case’ of yellow fever in town. A com- Past Heart Never Won Park Lagy—Huser gysox, ac. mittee was app cited te wait on the Commissioners of Ewigratior, and urge more rigid enforcement of ervrick N. W- CORNER OF NASSAU AND FULTON 8T?. AMUSEMENTS TO-MORROW EVENING. pth nt YS GARDEN, Broadwey—Mu. Buryron’s Nicut— Ps 4 ey ned the Quaranti ne laws. BOWERY THEATRE, Powery—Liva iy Naw Youn— | Several -captains‘of the infected vessels anchored DaNciKG—POCABONTAR at Graveriend Bay appeared before the Commis- CHINESE SPILDING, 339 Broad.way—Ermorux Pan- | Sioners ©f Healtk yesterday, and protested against camasces, BF Yas (MuirSaLL MiseRanis, being yemoved ts Southwest Spit, as directed by a = > | rercks‘tion of the Board passed the previous da; New York, Sunday, August 17, 1856, ‘The “doard adhered to its former action, and nay === | aforther resdtution directing the captains to make Whe News. the necessary preliminary arrangements for the ‘The United States Senate yesterday petaed the | cemoval of their vessels forthwith. The Health Of- dill to extend the time for Texas craditers to pre-'| cer took occasion to state the fact, in view of cor- sent their “aims. The consideratiom efthe House } recting emy misapprehension the peblic might have Dill for tB> settlement of claims of officers of the } derived from any misstatements read in the papers, Revolution, was postponed until thethird Monday | that no*party or baggage of any description was in December. The veto by the President of the | allowed'to pasa out of the hospital gate without a Patapsco River baprovement bill was at first sus- | properpermit. tained, but aiterw ands reconsideree during the even- The steamship Arabia, from Boston for Liverpool, ing session, and paseed over the President's veto. | which reached Halifax leaking badly, left that place ‘The House bill ter lighthouse appropriations was | yesterday afternoon. She was still leaking, and bad passed. At the evening session the Post office Ap- | exira pumps and two spare boats put on board. Her propriation bill, amended eo as to provide fora | commander is instructed to put into St. Johas, New- semi-monthly averlénu mail to California, was also | foundjand,i* the ship makes too much water, A passed. The Desmoines Rapids Dill was passed | number of paseengers were unwilling to proceed in over the President's veto by a vote of 30 to 14. | her, and will wait at Rulfax for the Canada, unless After several -conferences, the Senate receded | the Atlantic calls thero. from their amendments to the Civil Appropri- From Antigua we have advices dated at St ation bill, ‘except the one relating to books'| Jchus on 20th of July. The Weekly Register of for members, and the bill paszed. Inthe House | July 15, has the followmg items:—The bark of Represemtstives the bill making the usual ap- | Eliza, from London, srrived on Saturday, with 163 propriatian fer ocean mail service, with the amend: | immigrants from the Cape de Verd Islands, where ment to give notice of the termination of the coa- | she called to take them on board. This is the tract giving add tional compersation to the Collins | second arrival of this hardy class of immigrants, line, was adepted. The Senate bill extending to | which this vessel bas b-ought during the present dramatic 2athors the benet of copyright, was pass- | year. It was reported a few weeks since that the ed. Dering the evening session. great confusion | people of the Cape de Verd Islands woald not mi- prevailed, and freeuent mestages were interchanged | grate,an abundant sapply of provisions in their, between’ the twohouses. The bill to protect Ameri- | own country having allayed the desire for re- | can ckizensin the discovery of guano islands was | moval to another and more prosperous part | passed. The bilto station aeteam revenue cutter J of the world. But the snecess of the Hiiza | ‘at the port of New York was adopted. The House } would lead to the suppesition that therm | receded from their Kansas amendments. Attwo | must bave bean some mistake «nm the o'clock this morning both honses were iu session, | subject. The coanwry has heea blessed with a heat, with a prospect of continuing for several hoars. } fal! of rain. On’Taursday night and Fridsy we hei Mat‘ers appee red to be progressing favorably. some very heavy-showers, and the island is already ‘Whe despetch of our Wastington correspondent | chgwing the benaiciai results they have prodaecd. farvishes us with some in‘eresting items respecting | A private letter ‘rom }emerara states that a kind the doings of Congress. Mr. Mason has not re- | of caterpilier “has appeared in the olony in -veat quested toe recalled from Paris, bu: will remain | numbers, and ie-rapidly- destroying all tiads of vege there during the continuance of Mr. Pierce iu office. } tation; even the grass, is devoured by them, and the Francis P. Blair, the intimate and confidential friend | foliage cf trees and plants soon disappeara whei ef General Jackson, is abowt to publish a reply to | they attack it/leaving nothing bat the bare atems and theesseults made on him by Cave Jobnson, in which | brancbes. Brey hav ealso commenced on the canes, ‘he givee General Jackson's opinion of Mr. Sucha | and had comecquently created great uneisiness on aan. He discusses the story of ‘ bargain and cor- | account of thoic devew ation. ruption” between Adams ead Clay at length, aud We publish in our Jegal intelligence a decision of shows conclusively by documents that Mr. Buchanan | Judge Maynard, of ‘the Murine Court, in a case which was be author of the charge. involvesgrect interest to carriers and immizrauta Phe storm of the 10th, fith and. 12th inst.,which | 1: appears ti2t a ledy, coming from Europe to the vistted the vicinity of New Orlean 6, was of the most | United States, paid a certain sum for conveyance of tervible character. Themost disa strous effects, our | herself.anétaggage to New York; a portion of the despatch informs us, were felt at a summer resort, | baggage wae left behind, and the agents promised calicd Last Island, a short distance: > above New Or- | to s-nd it by the next vessel; ic came, bat was con- lears, which is represented'to hav e had every house } signed to ansther party, who re-consigned it to some swept from it, and to have: been c: »mpletely inunda- | other person. Onthe lady applying tor her bag- ted. Two hundred persons, it is es timated, lost their | gage she was told that a lien of $59 (more than the lives on this island. Grand Ca illou Island, an- | passage money), for expenses, &c., was held against other watering place, bei also. saffered severe- | it. This the owner refused to pay, as the carriage ty; the extent of the loss «of life was mot | of ber baggage was included in the passage knewn, but it was reported that thirty bo- | momey thatsbe had paid. The decision of the Court, dies bad been found on ene end‘ of the island. | which we nov publish, will place the circumstances The damage to tbe sugar, cotton, and corn crops | in their trae light. We have always exposed frauds are said to be almost inca’culabl ¢. The banks of | upon wmmigrants (and they are multifarions). Judge the river at Bayou Sera bed cay ‘ed in, carrying | MoCarthy.concurred with his associates in the decis- away three hundred residences. 3 “he dead bodies | ion om the merits of the case, though he dissented at Last Island were plundered of money and vala- | trom them-on certain legal propositions which had ables by a set of pirates whe inha Dit it. All the | no bearing on the merits. particulars that bave been receive: 1 will be tound The cotecn market yesterday exhibited more among our telegraphic news. strength, avithout quotable change in prices. The From the report of the City dmapect: wwe learn that | sales embraced about 1,200 bales, part for export. there were 651 deaths in the city last week,being an | The receipts of flour were very light, av 1 prices for increase of 24 over those of tho aveek ; wevious. The | common to,good and extra State brands were firn- following is a comparative statement of the mortality | er. The market for prime new white Southern for the two weeks:— and Western wheat was firmer, and sales reached —— = Ricemoyn, Va., July 28, 1855. + Jsaac Betts, Esq Dea Sm—Io reply to yours of the 23d, touching th: penojpg canvars let me say that [ anxiously sympathiz> wth your sentiments and feelings. Tae diterence be. tween the North ana South, touching slavery , ought to b an honert differaes. It is so, 1am confident, with tra patriots aud democrats. I assure you that ask no insu «n carth to be a pro layery man in sentiment or ack Leave you honestly to your own convictions, coutrotiing Your own Weividval condret, and your comduct ay a citi zen in your own State, Tam’ content that you should or yourrelf and your State, be an antisivery maa an vcier, And Jam sure that you will honestly leave tae mm my State, 10 my election, pro-slavery.; and that you will Lot attemyerto deprive me of my equar'rights or law fol property w the Union of states. “We agree to disagroe and leave the subject where the cobstitotion found it au: jolt to the e@rbitrament ef the federal compact. Br epilation disturbs the compact itself; and-it is that abour which there es #ectioval strife apd bittersess. You aud } cay, let the subiect alome—simply let thetews reign. The seiaiore aay, thors « higher Jaw; amd unis makes the niisenief,” i i ae a ee Now, as to myself. the Herarn, Trtbuws and Times bave ‘aid most menoaciously, that “+1 spoke as to the ipiluence © the tute of as on the value of slave property.’ } never utiered 2 word on that topic tm the speech t» which they attribute the remark. To prove it, I send you several copies oLthe speech. My opinionwas, and is, tat the aduotasiom of Kaveas, with or without slavery, will not sfiect the price of slaves iu Virginia at all, What 1 uri line to the Yue Se, ard the allowing of vegro slavery in Califorai would have atiected the p in Virginia, by wereasing their'value to dig goli. 1 & ive sail more that it would have freea all the breadsta‘T growing slave tater—bave deft siavery ouly to the large sotton growing ond suger growing and the gold mining States, and bave ‘hus diminished the federal power of the tlave States: and further, it would have enabled the slave owners wo Fe ¢ their slaves at a larger profit than they cau now seil them. . Secopt—The tie dneticn of Cuties below th Orives Toarufecturing em 4a consequent "pon a re~ ‘nt of adeqonte protection: 1 Inbor into agriculture tly increaze: the reve- ¢ lands aad from fore co » all deficiency in the cas- toms and greatly overposnes it, and go tends toa plethora. in the treasury, foetead of !imiting ite income and re~ ptraiping is ove! tow, Third— The in * » @ HENRY A, WISE ee ee Ce efivets of ihe same po ley Is tu ex bavet the sources of ne ional and lecividual prozperity, rnd by its traction to bankrupt the treasury and pros- srate the enterprise of the count-y; leaving debt, public vud private tw puu b the extravegance which i induced nd indulged. If the reader can contrive a more silly, ronsensical sentence than the last of these propo- sitions, we should like to see it. And to think that it comes from the Committee of Ways and Means is really pitiable. However, Mr. Campbell's report will not mat- ter much. Of course it is already consigned to the Tomb of the Capulets. Some day. perhaps, Mr. Campbell will regret his share in it; for assn- scquired by the Texas annexation, and ite pro-siavery family. Both domestic and foreign wars have ee would bave been preserved by running the Missour: ine to the Pacisic. Mr. Poik cousended jt did so extend— | grown out of this circumstance, and the end is everybody ele except Mr. Calhoun, $0 contended ; but ‘ Men, Women. « Girls. To'a!. | to $170 per bushel. Red was steady, at $155 | cantif notthe most worthless clase in the com- | {} tpite of friend or ive he offered bis sinendment to the | NOt yet. The present Queen holds her sceptre é Wee aE SE cee BB SMG] e150. wake ota and common tots were dull and | munity. ‘These Southern politicians ride the | regex Di, whieh goecoded that did hot soaxtend, and | iMegelly in the-opinion of the Spanish abeolutists. po saueua Steere cabaar ar aetna irregular. Gera sold freely, but closed at easier rates; soandemixed brought Gle.a 62jc. Pork was Wek heavy, with of mess at $19 50 a $19 62}. Lard was fun, with salea in bbls. at 13¢., and af- \erwards held higher. Sugars were quiet, while prices were unghanged. The sales comprised 209 a 800 bhds. Caba, and 100 do. New Orleans, at prices given clsewbor. Freights were steady, with mo- derate engagemants of grain to Liverpool, at 6)c. a The. in balk and..bage, Te the Sonth Desivous of Disunton? Two very remexkable articles have lately ap- , the one ia ihe Richmond Enquirer and the in the Re 1 Leaminer, on the subject of the division @ y in the South, and reply- jog to the Herat’: eoggestion that the interests of the veholéers and the non-slaveholding gestion of the.brain, 4 of croup, 26 of dropay in the i idemicaily the same. Taken ia head, 5 of typhoid fever, 5 of typhus foyer, 5 of he bateh of extracts from hooping cough. of infammation ef the longs, § of | South Carolina papers which we gave the other smallpox, 15 ot teething, and 6 of old ege. There |] dwy. those articles thy ight upon the South- Until 1714 the Spanish crown descended to the sions .of the. Southern people—their jealousy, Buchs a folk, mat and oh otheee - | next inheritor, male or female, but the Salic their spite, their sectional hatreds—by abusing | over a climatory lise, and did ren tothe Pacite.’ Toco’ | law was introduced in the reign of Philip V., pe “ri and pig Ae just = many of our a's mmjriy='was to conned hat we Dad pt te xe who was of French descent, and the States of the iti keep alive a bitter feeling Lero against | ‘ct of the line to the Pacitio—and was to leave ustotbe | kingdom settled the succession in his male the South by-misrepresentations of its people, its Soe chats tents tien eee ar ee descendants, in preference to the females, though hobby of slavery, and try to arouse the base pas- | to the South. He made it a apbical line, applying ‘The number of deaths among, childrei 2 was 523 only to terri acquired from France and Spain Mr. —anincresse over those of the previous we ek of 37— of wkom 311 were under 1 year, and 49 ¢ under 5 years of age; of-cdults there wase decrea # of 15 deaths <juring the week. ‘The following were among the principal c; wses of death the past week, compared .with those of the week proceding:— Tux Orena.— We loarp that Max Marctzek, the accom- Plithed moé:tro of last season, bay taken the Academy of Music for tweive hights in September. Madanve Lagrange and other favorite artists will aid in producing several of the best operas, Police Intelligence, THEER CENTS ON THE SOAP—TKY YOUR WIND—TsST YOUR STRENGTH— CABALISTIC “DELUSIONS.” Painiek Gray, Francis West, and Charles Brown, ibe firet a native of Ireland, the second balling from Caluntta, and the third a full blooted native, were taken into custo- dy by the Fourth ward polios, on Yriday efernoon, op charge of following tilerel occupation, and ferthering the ends cf pickpockets, in the neighborhood of Chatham aud Oliver streets. Mr. Gray, according to the poticomen’s testi mony, tools up his quarters in the vacant jot caused by the extenston of the Powery, and establirbed a petit gambiiug atair, termed “Three Cents on the Soap,” by which aay num- ber of three three cent pices wore drawn from te purses of “Yhe green omen"? Francis Wert (“Try your wind"’) amused the by#tand- ere by trying (ie Ftrength of coasumptive persons’ 2 tie real fee of two centr, He denounced, ske"p aac Weck endirg Week. nding Aug 9. Ae gle. aye roth tered Marasmus (inéantiie)..., 1 at 5a There weve a'so 4 deaths of bronchitis, 5 of con- be velued thus to Virginia 2 We now get a thousand dol Neither the ultra Southerners nor the ultxe North- nand VIL, the father of the present Queen, by five thousand, or even three thousand, will show our of st until ion. hen 4 them, in order to vecure their individac) aims “did pot take it. Taat was not Mr. Bachanan’: who received the name of Maria Isabella. The length they may bark at each other a long time lors fur wound slow ; we would then have gotten from erners believe what they say. Knowing human ttechie bas, Goo bitsan ot actoos wouia nak sommpoe This mouarch had four wives, the last being id pot take it. Taat war not Mr. Bachanan’s and promote their, political advancement. For eame year he abolished the Salic law, and in minion of Jvck Frost, but then free sollism couldn't bave Here we find the distict declaration in behalf | bis will, and appointed her mother as the regent rand dollars for a sound slave, would have gotten In 1833, however, when the King was supposed abd of couree would He voted down without that admis society and its.morals. In _ cases the ohject | MOR. | The cost of not running that tine to the Pcie my | they might be nearer in blood. And this coa- ia the same—mere reonal a i . , 7 ‘erdi- pe gerandizement, pe RO seed 9 TM lade ng pe tinued to be the case until the reign of Ferdi mire g Colttornta; tour bundred Bousend multipled nature, and how easy it is to awaken the meaner | sate Virginia for her loes in rot roving the line on to tbe | Christina, daughter of Francis 1, King of Na- passions in .the human breast, they wade on | Maciflc The North bad dived (he jive. They had the | pies, By her, he had a daughter born in 1830, ‘mult. Had it so been fixed, © ebo ghins and giztard teet,”* a time, it is natural they should sueceal. &. Tolnion of duck Froey, but then free soll coulen’t have order t the succession to the daugh f 5 . 8o jo ensure su jon iter o! 2 a © ‘ long as the North and South are kept atarm's Frentees oie. annutermne his young wife, he named her as his successor in of Mr. Buchanan, that bad his Missouri line policy | (in case of bis death), until Isabella arrived at heen adopted, the Virginians, “ instead of a thou- { the age of 18 years. without doing much barm; and the masses in both sections, enjoying the diversion, will lei the politicians bave their way. But let the two par- were 27 stiliborn.cores, 5 prematase births,and 15 | ern Sates that iy much neoded at the present | ties once approach within reach—let the wild | from three to five thousand dollars for an opera- | to be at the point of death, his Ministers, to gain ae Gomeecann a eS ae deaths from violent causes. In the public instito Ime. schemes of disunion aud civil war once draw near | tive in the gold mines of California.” Next fol- } the favor of the heir-presumptive, the King’s ite scored ‘Me wnsionae, und all thine witnio reach of bis voico, that bis machine was able to work miracles epeatedly tested. “Only two coutsa blow. No » allowed in the case of healthy tod! vituals.’” ries Brown (muscle man) would make prize fight creo peactable gentlemen, whether they world or pot. ‘This art of strengibening the frame was procured from celebrated shoulder bitter dong business in W. Market, ond would be imparted to any of the crowd for the of “one ert; walk up, gent! , Dow's your cent.’ Several persons, regardiess of the ay —_ ‘ing bloodvessrls, were indoced by the pt appeal to attempt a trial of strength, w! it performed, would throw Monsiear Gregoire in the a apd would hand down their names to fame ctornal—(in + the Five Poirts). While these (philantropic testers of strength, wind and» aim were making ihe most Demosthenic appeals to the bu/pitisted, @ pang of well Crgapized thieves were basily employed in the rear ground feeling aud pickiog the ckets of those whe had the luck to bo in possession of tions of the city there were 37 deaths. The drift of the article in the Enquirer is to The mortality of the past vom, with the corres: | ...¢ the South upon ite quand against “persons in ponding week of the years 1854 and 1855,camperes | 11... Sowh, not loyal 4» Somthern interests.” It Mo. of Deaths, | thir Uke Miey should “we guarded against’ —that 922 | “the myency of the ease demands extreme mea- brother, Charles Maria Isidore, better known as Don Carloe, obtained from the sick man, in a moment of unconsciousness, a restoration of the Salic law. Unfortunately for them he recovered, dismissed his ministry, and repudiated their measures. He dicd in 1833. The Queen Dow- ager areumed the regency, the Cortes unani- mouely sided with her, and passed a bill excluding Don Carlos from the throne, From that moment a fierce civil war broke out, known as the war of the Christinos and Carlists, one of the bloodiest avd moet cruel ever known in Spain. It lasted many years, and ¢o sadly beaten were the a practical realization—and the people will draw back and the political Jeaders will find themselves brought suddenly to a stand. If such men as Mr. Tocmbs and Mr. Fillmore ever have the misfortune toreech this point in the political history of their country their tate will be .a warning to political speculators for ever afterward. Jows what Mr. Wise said on the Kansas question, to wit:— Yet, though thus proposed by the South and by Ba chanan, the pharixces au? hypocrites who are now how!. ing over the repes! of the Mistoori comy , Werethe very men to oppore the extension of Missouri bi endo make Wa dred fact. Their reproach to Mr. ebaran and to the South is equalled only ta injustice by the reproseh which some Southern men ha ve cast in up braiding Mr. Buchanan for the proposed extension of the tue to he Pacife. The generous ard jest Douglas has NicaRacean Arvains—WALKER AND His As- Sle aconeeen trey aly & SAILANTS.—Elsewhene will be found the cireular chenan was equally sound op the Kansan Nebvaate Wil / ; 4 «mber of nor of the Cabinet of the American prisoners taken st Santa Rosa, to | «ben that measure was proposed and passed. He didi which we made a brief reference yesterday. We hate know that Mr. P. would have proposed or “* publish it lees for the iwirinsic interest or value wng A Week eas A +683 ee a Week ending Aug 10, 1566...... - 62 | sures "tat “an example of,prampt and adequate The atxve will demonecrate, together with the ab- { punich wen. is needed “—that “the poople should sence of disease in an epitemic form, how anneve* | be mored ig lant in ridding the community of = sae agar Teatedia reference to the bealth: | i n00 ye, mig.” &e., de. The article in the Ar- temoae aminer, on ther hand, exhausts its off. The foliowing table give the clawtfeation of | Oru". it rrotetyrpleasr doar pe aecoensehad iseases, and Ce total number of deaths adhere ; 7 sascha : aor dente the emer of Geathe cused BY | ‘cen the + Wesholder and the poor white, and each disease, during the two.weeks ending 9. Aug. 16. | that of the ty Wehe latter ix the mere inveterate fech © mensore af the time; but it bad parsed; had re pealed the Mirseurt compromise; had returned us to dais quo ante 181°-20: it had but foilowe* out the com @, Rercseee 5 h “ f 4, * | sem) . sh | Opponent of slelition. Itsays that “the non- of its statements than as a curiows specimen of | promise mearures of 18¢0, whieh had already, viotatod Queen's troops for a time, that a legionary force | Mme ean il A Genorahe organ® 7 | elaveholders \ waild take the Jead in urging | Central American tactics. As we have already | Stn iver in have been lento our original. rights | Of $000 men was raised in England for her | neforo Justi Welsh. at the Lower Police Cor, wusre Longe, throat, 1 | Prompt and sun Waery measures in the event of | stated, four of these seven prisonersare foreigners; | ander vhe constiteoe. Hie Mende of Penayivanis, in | assistance, and sent over under the command of Saterdy comet ots, an Bormseete Bn bs p A, SPO eae af | the clection of antatbolition President: amd among | hut were they all Americans it would confer no | ROmmaune Nite Xt Narr ee encple ee non inter’ | Gen. De Lacy Evans. It was not till 1839, hy the | ‘nd pureued their respective necupations in pece. Thoy> Siilbore bnd premature biribe.. 5. 2 holders « Wy Would be found the craven | more importance on this docament. It must be reas ertoiay, Po srien, leaving the ans wise and moderate policy of Espartero, as well pomes, ood are by soutt auing suka wen has Stomach, bowels at ae Caer, pe «of cxpe. \enits, compromises and sub- | remembered that there wes a wholesalekutchery, | of all to be euarced by the constitution: and immediately | a8 his good generalsbip, that quiet was restored Saeco Uocertain seat and generat fevers Unknown Cripary organe serstpees » # 4 "q The following is a comparative of the Several important « ‘Onsiderations avise from a desths jn eo-h ward during the last foreight:— study of these position ® As the two journals in —Deathe woh ating question tepresent the d *mocracy of Virginia, it res @ "Fi | ie @ fair inference from the bitternoss of their HY language and the vehemen % of their argument | against Walker, we think that we have a right to 26 | that the demoeratic leaders wnd leading politi- | oe wme thet they do not represent the free and 21 | cians of the State are somewhat afraid that the wiecntrolled opinions of the persons whose names { | j ' Coroners’ Inquests. Pata, Accnest is a Les Yarn—Ooronrr Perry Feld an inquest yesterday at the lomber yord of J.. Luryee, 268 Cherry street, upon the body of a colored man pamed Eéward Drummond, who was jsstantiy: iiled by @ pile of lumber falling epon bim. The de ast wee 68 yoars of age, Verdict ‘Accidental deat ‘The Nixereesta Wasp Caer or Scrroeen Viorgrer. he inquest in the case of William H. Shaw, who wae fourd cot about the head and lying insonsibie in Sixty first street, by the Nineteenth ward police, was co) Coroner Hills. The decensed, it intexicated, and received his infv ing vpen the corbstena Verdict—''Death tion of ibe brain prodheed yb intemperance,’ Dearn ny Prowse —Coroner Hills held an foquost yesterday at the foot of Whiteball street upon the body of ‘a boy, about 11 years of age, named A, Shnliz, who came to hs death by drowning. ‘The deceased, it appea A similar* view is advocated by the | im cold blood, of te American prisoners, after wm eed dite platform is we ‘\dentfioation the battle of Sonta Rora, and caae tives of toon wih eeimeatures Ts Mew thaw seven men were spared is prima facie evi- denoe (let they were reserved for some partiewlar object of their captors. Without examining the « the arguments used in this manifesto and the Queen’s authority established. Don Carlos retired to France, subsequently to Eag- and, and ie eince dead. Assoon as the Queen Regent felt herself secure, enon; that measure. Here the express declaration that “Mr. Bu- ebanan is equally sound on the Kansas-Nebraska bill,” undoubtedly refers to the nigger question, | she began to discover her dislike of liberalism, aid if not to the price of niggers we have mis- | and having an accidental majority in the Cortes, takn its application. To support this appliea- | she destroyed at a blow some of the dearest and tion we may refer to other portions of the speech, | most ancient rights of the municipal corpora- in whieh the Governor says of Mr. Buchanan that | tions. This led to a revolt, a declaration against “he has heen especially faithful on the subject of | the law by Bepartero, the dismissal of her minis- slavery,” and that “when the issue of annexation try, and the dissolution of the Cortes, She soon of Texas arose, he contented not himself by go- | afterwards resigned her authority and retired to ing for a messure whieh would admit a State | Marseilles. with or without clave ty about her,’ imt he went In 1841 ehe attempted to regain her position, ‘ondividedly and unspe.tt’ for a measure which | and the notorious O'Donnell seized on Pampeluna | yas a stroling mutician, god oa sundry occasinns won! admitted a State, a new state, net with or with- } in her name. The insurrection was put down, | smure! ~~ = heathy ry Woat with tae ont, but with slavery already estallished aa her | and the payment of her pension suspended. She Fed on te exten On forey honk Wonkcete aad a opposite theory to the one they support will pre- J aie subreriued to it, The language and senti- 42 | vail among the meses. The Lnyirer would ) ment ® | hardly devote a heavy column é proving that 25 4 slavery is e:blesing to the “white trash,” i¢ it 7 | did not fear that these same white trash were | neous expression of discontent and resent- © } beginning to believe that it was an fajary. Nor } ment on the part of Walker's old soldiera 2 would the Lrominer be so careful to impute to | It te evidently penned by hands accustomed to 5! | the non-elaveholdens all the aesaults that » | the fabrication of political pronunciamentos, and of the circular bear too strong an im- prees of Spanish grandiloquence and artifice to be easily passed upon us as the sponta- 23 » iain necataey way! tant 99 be vestol was ent the Ne pp cy eee Ce a heen made upon abolitionists, and generally to | the poor prisoners were in all probability com. | ‘peculiar inetitution. is now in Paris, and is said to be constantly in- esis . Fa, slip oa tho Xow York 29 2 ; | give them eredit for a unfform adherence to the | pelled to father it, under the influence of threats, We see, too, in the foregoing extract on Kan- | triguing to bring about her return to Madrid, } victently in contact with the fenders, and bevore sania 2 seupeeeeeees ance orld be rendered him be was drowned, The de) ens, (hat Mr. Wise accepts Mr. Buchanan as ocou- | The Queen, a gay and dissipated woman, is led | (eared, song with several other persona, wae stand) pying » platform “excluding the idea of squatter | ty her favoriten of the hour into all kinds Of | on te oxreme ete of he bow, wad was (nus expand § soyercignty,”” aad adopting “the princigte gf non. ? yyisconduet, pnd fe onge more in the midst of @ f carb.” Deconsed wg & native of Germany. . ‘The nativity table. ‘gives 538 aa natives of the peculiar poliey of which it i¢ the champion, did it | What confirms this supposition is the fact that Mr, United States: 59 of Ireland; 30 of Germany; 10 of | not apprehend the possibility of a sudden change | Phill) Toohey, when a prisoner in the hands of England; 2 of British Amerig.; 1 of Franse; Lot’ of rcytimont pra contegt om ‘bytr y Mea ! the Costa Moons was forced to publish @ some.

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