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AMERICAN SPAS. jhe Way the Americans Get Throogh the NEVESINK HIGHLANDS. Taowrson's ATLANTIC PAVILION Nevesixx Hroutanpes, N. J., aug 19, 1866. The Herald, Politics and the Pushions at the Watering Places--A Running Reoww of there Regvons— A Promaae of the Gorpel, “Pobtice—polities—the Hexarp, apers, these days, are stuffed with politis.”” y the complaint of the dear creatures arouad us, who refer a lighter newspaper diet. They say that the IBKALD nas shamefully neglected the fashions, ful- , beauties and gossip of the wateriag places this , and they demand some reparstion. They yy that for years past the farbionable correspon nce of the Hexaro had been the crownlag glory o paper, rich in that aclightful chitehat, and ro ce, and poetry and nonrenre which are the orange blossoms of existeue t) our summer tterflies in the country. We way that all this has been in a great measure d the latest fashions could gainet ee the Sea View House, io) = the bell Af 7i:7f iis He f= These are our orders. In the Herp has done m resque and health-imparting waters seashores into public notice, and that a little , @ little more enterprise and would, in two or three years, , highlands and lowlands, seaside along our who! 4 g inthe matter of the fashions we fact, we have no fashions 55 33 . We have none of the | nothing of the fi a on js of:fact people here for a display of niacom- p nonsense; and we find the if ruffians, the yellow fever, Con; In addition to ail an interesting bridal precedence over all of from town, which the morning and one in the evening from York, and vice verga; except in very stormy ‘When the seas are rolling mountains high, And the raging wiads do blow. nd thas far, we oe no running agrou! pm perenne — s — ¢ last passengers, wil ention of several hours on the ok, was & common ovcnrrence, di steamboats, hotels, real es- , and all concerned, from the loss of existing will not wait for the leased to aay, there has have shown that, as the boat, the boat, by waiting ntbe tide, can get through with either fifty or much all the accessories of civi- Nd Within a radius of two or three miles on of several thousand, said that we spend the Sabbath here like hen, and that next summer we shall have a miy- hary, and perhaps achurch. Se mote it be! nochurch. An Newronr, R. L, Ang. 13, 1856. certs and Concert Gocrs—Newport Audiences— iety at the Watering Places—Scandal and ip—The late Mr. Ring, §¢., 6c. our last the musical feature has been most pinent here. At the concert on the §th inst., d Signor Guidi and Carl Wels, with Madame q and Mr. Aptomas. The weather, how- , was not propitious, and the audience much er than it might otherwise have been; or we our concert-going people may have re- themselves for the great affair of last evening — La Grange and Mr. Gottschalk’s grand mu- entertainment—which came off in the Ocean dining hall, as per programme—a very hy one by the way—as it gave both the singer pianist a very fair opportunity to display their excellencies of style and execution. fe reached the Ocean House and entered the long some half hour previous to the of the doors, and found the hall and spa, filled with the greatest jam of the . It was evidently a general turn out—a sort nium gatherum of everybody—a most liberal , by the by, when translated in its wateriag sense, as it means millionaires and milliners, and blacklegs, upper crust and under crast. ‘an ambassador with a lovely woman at his side, the keeper of a New York “ hell,” and there e Pollywog, the celebrated modiste, crushes ork she has just sent home to one of her very customers. In a word, the town sends forth its eepers, the cottages their “ aristocracy,” and otels their guests, bad, good and indiffent, to the throng who now crowd up with their in their white-kidded hands, to hear, in too cases, alas! what they have neither brains to eciate nor the education to nnderstand. -—from your dusty heated air—come, take ou- let us glide amon; , in the tired nif Pareests, iitto pants, boots unexcoy le hat crushed up in din the other, a deal of hair on the lip, an eye glass—@ /a Titmouse—(this isan jonal feature)—acrewed into the left eye—add 1, @ patent segar case, m over the breast w! better round the neck )—and then thank Heaven got throngh with the Newport summer male nuisance, which is more or less copied lookers on, as means or inclination will you exclaim—“ Are there no there are. It by no means 3 becanse a young Man dresses in the fashion But there is a class of is you just as forci hot weather nage im. n come the ladies—snd women, Yon sum overd rd briefly--your comment b almost insensjbly reqyoing them is necessarily an ass, America which remin long cared animal as NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1856. to dollars apd cents; appraise the angel ia blue, jewelry inetuded, at 82.600, while the dowsger in ple marks over doable that sum. We won't men- hoops—they are, we understand, alaost explod- ing, and the Graces f rbid that we shoald biow them up. We almost lost a laty friend under one the other evening, and were about makiog an investigation, bet our ng oe We are beginning to be- Neve the story of three children having mn lost under a first clara one of that sort; but we won't «niarge, a8 we have just remarked, on or ander this heao, aa we might be counted rude. Then comes the other extreme of the argament. We don't object to seeing @ large, pice, well chalked, aud parti sularly clean pair of shoulders, not to mention accessories, even though the said shoulders be displayed to an eatent which renders it something of a mystery ag to how ite fair owser keeps her on; but still there is a point where liberality ceases to be a vir. tue; and we tee no reason why the possessor of thensands shoud throw sway that peirl without price—mosesty—by exhibiting her person to an ex- tent which would call the blush of shame to a sieaple conptry girl's cheek. ‘¢ are digressing, ond, perchance, getting old Baidiel to boot. us back, then, to the Ocean House hall, for the doors are opened a! last, and Ip they go. slike and satiny, eter tran ue, alarming patteroe— some ele away, languid sir, some brow Of abx ous Care, rome a em.le, come witha suirk— * Your pardew, I . P've trod on your skirt;”” Some, se they trundie their hoops sioug, Ineoube the garb of the motley throvg. “Don't © to Mies 5 , her My dear Mr. Fitznoedie, how delighted J am: I raw you out driving that exquisite span.” So im they go ius siiks and emins, Wooderful, strange, alarming patterns; ia i her success in The room was crowded, and the andience, all considered, exceedingly As , who are here, and entertained trate Regpen ches ele The Vi f Tang, yoo Gh we jy at the House, in city, on Sun- day last, was note member of the Newport ber, as stated in commuantcation from vidence, but a New York 1 He was, we be- lieve, a member of the Yi Club, as we are in- fermsed Ghat, Ge onions of Sho zedes the harbor were hoisted at half mast on day following his decease. Mrs. Bostwick, assisted by Brignoli and Albites, gives @ concert at the Ocean to-morrow LAKE MOHEGAN. Lage Mommoan, dug. 20, 1856. The Lakes of Northern New Vork—Swies Scenery ata few Hours’ Distance from Old Gotham, §e. the being carpeted with lilies, that the belies of fashio: able ‘ their . ; i s tay F208 i ii = H FF s : F iLEaqi ie Hille He i g SEug i i i Ee uf eget It his sida evening, py boareisg co. 4 . i £ : i 3 t : CATSKILL MOUNTAINS. Carsxit, Mountarns, Ang. 9, 1866. Fashion in the Mountaina-- The Purewit of Heal’ under Difficutties— Philosophy the best Travelline Companion, &¢., §c. Tired of the “noise and confusion’ of Niagere and Saratoga, I sought for comparative repose. Eves here, at an elevation of some three thousand for above the placid bosom of the noble Hudson, sur rounded by the romantic scenery of primeval fo rests, looking down apon the fertile valleyy of six different §tates of the Union breathing air fresh from th: fountains «© heaven, and contemplating the sublime mye teries of uncontaminated nature-even bere | an disappointed—disappointed not in the grandear © the scenery—not in the bracing purity « te» mountain atmosphere--not in the eweet meloty o natore’s wild music, but in the tranquillity | bed hoped to find at this remote place. Here, a else where, fashion intrudes her deepotiam and frost sate the projects of health seekers and lovers of quie like myeelf. Social enjoyment is not available ot a wa'ering place to those who pretend to seek it there. § «re tematic training in the forms and castoms of « snob bish aristocracy is all that most visiters obtain for their money. It may be & nauseous draught to many, but fashion prescribes, and the patient must swallow the dose. But to a “ philosopher ” the place is one of very rich “ diggins.” He may be diegavted with the six weeks-in-the yeararistocrat—he may contemn the precociousness of masters and mnmees juet entering their teens and rejvicing in cocktalls ‘and prope and Raed dresses—he may frown old maida in pantellettes and dresses too short a! both enda—he a waiting for bie breok feat, feel hungry sitting at the dinner table, and go to bed supperlese, but just as these feelings are a ‘ther to make him unhappy in his own phi hy comes to tne rescue. He remembers and soiiloquises, pper little Prenchmaa who sa’ opposite to him at the festive board. and reflects whether that lady dressed in a straw-colored and rather loose lawn was worthy the attention she received—how she intruded in another lady’s room, how she quarrelled with the waiters, how she complained to the stew- ard, how she told the landlord to “mind his owa va- siners,” and finally tock her departure ina passion early in the morning ~ how she insisted u' seat in the stage coach, and how her i husband deposited his precious treasure inside and himself, braced his back where in May; here ware and the prattle of laughing waters ae “4 peemnenny a overhang ed on tl woof a ipice Delaware, while far abvve, to an elevation of nearly two thousand feet above tide-water, rise the moun- tains of the Gap. This has been a place of Philad than New York resort. but with cees now afforded by railroad from the latter place, New York visiters must surely increase, rious must theee mountains appear when on the gorgeous livery of antumn! How del in those cool days to explore the mountain paths and seek those lofty summits whence the view is #0 is most romantically took a seat on the to against a trunk, pulled his hat over his his segar, and traveiled for pleasure! reeervoirs of silks and linen thumped against hig ribs—if he was raised aud dropped unceremoniously upon his uncushioned seat—i ed his chapeau under the wheels of the coaca, ve to his troubled spirit, and hilosophy smiled, and taraed t» 8 i the branches kuock- H 28 F fashion whispered 3 i 5 i Of course, among some three or four hundred visiters there are always ‘“‘snobs” to be found, bus they seem to have a sort of market value, and the more they swell the less they are rated. considered, we think there is more sociability here than is generally found at fashionable summer re- e company is very fluctuating, though , like the old woman's measles. through the seasou, owing, sant rides, the change - sameness of the scenery, i F The view of the combined valleys of Cherry Creek and the Delaware from peints near the hotel wants but a Castle Howard in the centre to re semble much the representations of the Vale of Avoca, for here “the bright waters meet;” kere i+ the “purest of crystal and brightest of magic of streamlet and bill, lees much “more exquisite still.” thore, then, who have only heard or read of lelaware Water Gap be assured the half beauties has not been described to them. BEF FEE i ; People come and ps, to the want of jeness of the weather, and the inconvenience of communication. i ae iF a g 4 a? TOWN OF HULL. Hunt, Mass., August 10, 1855. Fog on the White Mountains—Expensive Travel- ling— From the Mountains to Boston— Matters and Things at the Modern Athens —Nahant— Voyage to Hull—Presidential Prospects, &c., &c. That rain which I told you about, made us take a respectful but still decided farewell of the White Mountains. Mount Washington, as if regretting our departure, hid its head in a fog night-cap, and Mount Jefferson rolled itself up ina blanket of the same material. The storm bad done much injury to the roads,and thus many persons were detained prisoners in the very bad hotels which abound in this region. It is not because the prices are low that the hotels are bad. No,sir; the tourist to the White Mountains is bled at every pore. Staging is from eight cents toashilling per mile. Five dollars is the charge fora horseback ride of five miles, and other things on the same pleasant acale. I thought it was strange, taking the beauty of the locality into account, that there were no more New Yorkers at the Mountains, but the matter was soon ex- We are perfectly willing to pay fora thing when we have it, bad for our simple, innocent country friends to make us pay for the thing and not get it. That's what they do at the White Mountains. Butas Ores- tes says, they may possibly get civilized one of these days—in the which blessed hope we leave our White Mountain friends for the present. From the White Mountains to Boston, via Port- land, the distance is two hundred miles—the price of passage is four dollars—time ten hours. F'right- fal rate of speed, that twenty miles an hour! There ought to be some law against it. Boston is the same clean, quiet, comfortable, or- derly city as ever. A right pleasant place {s Bos- ton, and much frequented by strangers at this pe- riod of the year. The wandering Bostonian always likes to go home, and always likes to go away again; but he never loses his respect and affection for the place of his nativity. Boston boys may be found all over the habitable and uninhabitable globe, from Calcutta to Oregon, and from the Cape of Good Hope to Smith's Sound, but they will all return one day or another to the the Tri-Mocnt city, and «ll be sure of a cordial greeting. The Bostonians have a degree of steadfastness which is exceedingly tosee, They hold fast to their friends, ith once plighted is rarely broken. Hua- dreds of Bostonians, some time estran, Common, will be glad%o know that wi their steps homeward same Lenicon that blessed Boston is very comfortable worthy burghers are cool and comfortabl Yonxers, August 10, 1856. A Visit to Catskili—View from the Mountain—- Scene Painting by a Lover of Nature—The Cas- cade at the Sawmill—.A Storm in the Cloud Re- gions—A Reluctant Departure, §c., §c. The other day we left the Hudson river at the town of Catskill, and proceeded in a stage coach westward twelve miles, to the range of muntainsoa which stands the hotel. The country is lovely with alternate gentle and abrupt elevations during the last eight miles, We passed over the famed hi'l where Rip Van Winkle took a protracted slumber, and saw a correc: portrait of himself just awaking. On a near approach to the Mountain House, the at- mosphere being humid, we found ourselves enve- loped in a cloud at an elevation of half a mile above the river. Fancy the residence to stand on an im. mense solid flat rock, a few feet back from a perpen- dicular front, which descends abraptly two hundred feet into a wooded valley of many miles in extent, and from thence sloping gently off into a highly cultivated plain two thousand two hundred feet be 4 z i E 3 i of the monsters, who are wary enough the machinations of angler. Out in the ba; for those who like it. Pulling up a nine pound as hauling to the surface the same weight of 3 Over to our left hand is the site of Minot’s Ledge hthouse; you will remember that the ight, oo \- walled freah, pare air that revives the sin! in , and gives elasticity to those who Fp @ heat iad never be done, and that more more than a million of dollars will to do it. To use an entirely ne iF i : r fi i Ege i 3 it i & g dl i u will be met with the thelr de; just now, and its emselves in their In their beautiful wk—the “Common,” dear to the heart of every ton boy—they have capital music two nights during the week, and old and and matrons, do congregate in hear the same. It is paid for pense being about $3 : i i | UE Gi AY tH : e ? i i i i ul! for theseason. It is cheap atthat. It refines, adorns and civilizes humanity; and when our Central Park is presentable, I expect to eee the Henap going in for Dodworth’s Band there on every summer evening. While the Bostonians can enjoy their moonlight strolls on the Common, and hear the chefs d'owvres layed by their excellent bands, they have the sea-shore, or the jowever, to some ext P & é ina’ 2 a wander to the spa, mountain side. They do it, tent. A great many of them fly to that rock-bound peninsula, Nahant. We went to Nahant by land, ing at Chelsea beach, which is not fashion- able--more’s the pity—for, as a drive, it is superior being longer and harder. over the beach we took the route through Lynn (the shoe town) to Nahant,which is distant fourteen miles from \. ito the bay on the north side ita heights we can splendid marine view. All so: furnished to kill old father Time, and it would ia & Fy After a glorious i 723 i z a = Miss J. M. Devenges, | the eminent English ac From Nahant we went to Hull, a celebrated cily side of the bay. Hull has twenty-eight voters, who, I believe, are mostly for Fremont saying is,“ As gocs Hull so beta. The population of sent is increased by some two or three hundred !} 5» tonians, who have come down for the sea air. business men can sleep here, and be in town by nine The steamboat ower. best of officers, makes fr Hall almost as near Boston ew bag Wy was formerly Onr explorations around and about Boston ha been of much profit. In summer it est of cities, and no where can the much from the anno: tE u Fiat Hy = seit who is all New York, ve stern, says it’s the settles the ag. o'clock in the morning. a om stem to his expansi he ever was in—and that E Z i ig 4 iE Orr Nantucket Hansor, Ang. 18, 1856. A Cruise with the New England Yacht Club— Fishing off Powder Hole Harbor—How Bluefish and Cod are Taken—Fishing for Ducks, §c., &¢. When I last wrote, we—that is to say, the New England Yacht Clab—were in Edgartown, Martha's Vineyard. I propose to-day to may something about the cod and bluefishing in this région, which may be interesting to your readers. On Monday morn ing, August 11, we left the “Vineyard” for Moni- moy,at Cape Malabar, the south easternmost extre- mity of Cape Cod. We stopped on our way, and lay at anchor at Cape Poag, for the purpose of digging cod bait, which is nothing more nor less than long clams. In the afternoon a free and strong southwest breeze set us over to Monimoy in very short order. The Powder Hole—for 0 the harbor is called—is the only safe harbor or anchorage in this vicinity. The original name of the harbor was Powder Horn, from the fancied resemblance of the land bounding the harbor to that useful implement. bor, at fishing seasons, when easterly storms are threatening, is filled with codfishing schooners. They flock in by hundreds. There are no houses here, several stores and fish drying and packing houses being the only buildings on the land, which is nothing but a long and crooked sand spit, one of the most uninviting and inhospitable looking places conceivable. We found here the United States sar- veying schooner Gallatin, Lieat. Houston command- ing, which is on the coast survey in this regiou. The bluefishing in the “apa” as they are called, is excellent sport; most New tion, and we bit leep ; there were no fluger was no! quite comme i! in the Atlantic from my win Vashstnas tray bad © secon a & reniing by that graceful ‘an call Jerusalem road. air ly esteemed, and much admired ' the little people, wh. to kick up all sorts of dia cs: the residents there is a freedom from Sgreeable watering places. a AROUND BOSTON. Boston, Aug. 16, 185 5. Boston to Cohasset—Raihoay Mishaps—Voyage to the Glades House—The Scenery in the Vieinity Minot’s Ledge Light House— Fish and Fishing A Ride Over Jerusalem Road—Back to Boston Opening of the Amusement Season, §c., &c. Reterning from Hull to our snug quarters in ti) city, we took a peep at the only places of amusemen: epen—the Boston Museum and Dan Rice's Cir. At the Moseom they were working throngh th, very jolly and amusing play,“ The Stranger,” whiv' come to porswe me. The performance was no do very fine, The company is a very fine one, inci. toe Mr. W. Warren, W. H. Smith, B. Thompson, F. Keach, J. Davies, PF. Whitman, J. H. Ring, Mr Skerritt, Mra. Vincent, Mrs. J. M. Field, Mrs. Reiv forth, and others, Mise Eliza Logan, a great fac rite with the Bostonians, is the first star, and wi!) 'y play an engagement here. Recovering from the effect of the small po then of “ The Stranger” which we saw, we mids a excursion to Cobneret, @ town on the south shore, about thirty miles from the city. We went by the Old Colony Railway, linked too stromgly | concern as there is on the face of ) erermee speed & avout ten miles an hour; but we DELAWARE WATER GAP. Decawane Waren Gar, Ang. 12, 1856. Schooley's mountain required too much staging and the famour Gap finally brongbt a» # enery of sume portions of the route may vie with that of the Erte Railroad. The somewhat motctonons plaing of central Jerwey ore mm ceeded by the beautifwily wooded hills and fertile valee of the westere part whieh gradually merge into the beid features of the Sbawangunk Mountains whose culminating potot of wul/imi y - found ot this romantic «pet. Eves from the win dows of the care, in thety rapid passage, some hice of this place may he formed but i le et till seated Upem the piazza of the Kivtehinmy House thet iw full grander male appercet, gloomy gorge. far below you the beactiful Delaware pursues ite winding way by ite wide the railrond is | geen, over which the long enake-like trains of coal care ere constantly pew ing and to the left etret bes the valley of the Delaware, with cultivate! Gelds, short! green meadows, apd rich fellows for erie milex The Gap is corteinly popular, Namber are erarce Wut to report to the or take & journey to Stronde may be the mow! be vatifal Yorkers who are Sporta are familiar with the manner in which it is carried on—no} at anchor and with bart, but ander full sail, with a hook towing out astern. The hook bas a long handle of lead or bone, and as it is drawn rapidly through the water resembles a small fish swimming on the miface ; the binefish, which feed on the smaller fish bite, at this deceptive hook, and are caught and drawn on board. This, as you may conceive, isa peculiarly pleasant style of fishing. You avoid both the tronble of handling and putting on bait, and the tedioneness of rolling lazily at anchor. The places where blue fish run are mostly tide ourrents, and their presence may be recognize’ either by their own jumps into the air or by the ing of the gulls, which hang over same tarerine gt Smell Geb’ chat the pieeGan jemp atten (On the right is the y. “tide rip,” m aka method feasible, And pow a word shout ond fishing. It ia out of my power to give statistics or a, ty or a history, of cod fisheries; these belong + nomical and political treatises. I simply wisb ol men fond of sport how and where they can fiww \%, and view the subject with asporteman’s eye. 1) .@ first place, then, buy a line. Anybody in a co: : le region can tell you what is a proper line, Yo@ w with find it about as large as a clotoesi.: hooks to correapond. Then dig or buy bushel of fresh clams. Take also @ numb “bony or white fish,” and small fresh mackerel, if ou can get them : the latter are the best bait ; a6 i you capnot get them, clams will do the businese. Get 8 piles toset you on Crab Ledge, abo.: som miles from theshore. Then drop your line to the bottom with a good heavy , such as wilt rocure for the purpose from those who sell thents The 8 will secon commence. You will find youre self obliged to pull with a great deal of force, aa@ at the expiration of an hour or two of Spot, JOUR, arms will be too fatigued to keep up the fun. . bap gH fish caught is, of course, the cod, but a fine haddock or pollock—both most beautifal and sweet tasting fieh—will sometimes reward your taprens: and’ thunders are cocasiovelly. polled oe mapreys jounders are occ: to the ‘tnoyance of the fisher; but on the Whole, te Tun of cod is very steady. for let, Now the haglet is a bird, wa nots povtig ony geben a sense feed i Res sport yesterday are a8 of dk, though without a flat bil the feat a dirty brown, the belly white. They ara not fit for food, being tough fishy; nor would one wish to eat them after seeing them eat. By throwing overboard garbage, which pose Se after and eat with great voracity, they can be "ced the vessel for any kength of time. P. , or Mom ther Cary’s chickens—much emaller and leas offensive quarreling, wrangling: aud, crying. for the. # ui , wrangling and crying for thrown overboard,-an will swim up tothe of. the vessel and look up for a bit of meat aa much eagerness and tameness a8 @ By fase tening a piece of cod liver toa hook they cam be caught and drawn on deck as fast as codfish. When on deck they are too helpiess to fly, as their short legs and web feet will not give a risq from a solid surface. So much for fowl. Last —_ we perme to a, and ats, pleasan , in company with the officer revenue Lg Dad mentioned. We are now off for Nantucket, where I shall mail this. I may send another letter about Nantucket, if we there long enough; but for the present I must Sketch of O'Donnell, the New Spanish Dic= tator. The recent coup d'état in Madrid has again con- centrated public attention upon the princtpal actor in the scene, Count Abisbal O'Donnell. He is now quite an old man, having been born in 1770. His parents were Irish, and residents of Andalusia. At the age of fifteen he entered the Royal Guards, and served against the French from 1793 to 1795, with great distinction. In the invasion of Spain in 1808, when the crown was given by Napoleon to his bro- ther Joseph, O’Donnell was very active against the French, and in the course of the war which followed the revolution, he rose to the rank of Mareschal de Camp. In 1813 he was given the title of Count, ag # farther recompense for his activity. In 1814, after the return of Ferdinand the 7th to Spain, O’Donnell was banished by the Cortes for having assailed them falsely in some written docu ments; but when that patriotic body and the consti~ tation they had adopted were both overthrown by the King, O'Donnell was taken into favor, made Captain-General of Seville, and subsequently Com= mander-in-chief of the Spanish army. In 1819 he was placed at the head of a large body of troops assembled at Cadiz, designed to reconquer Spanish America; but the expedition was frustrated by & mutiny which broke out into opposition to the royal authority. A revolution followed, and thé Cortes, with Riejo at its head, once moré gave constitutional liberty to Spain. Unbap- pily this was of short continuance. Louis XVIII, of France sent a large army into Spain, under the command of the Duke D’ Angouleme, and thongta Ballasteros and Mina and Riego did all they could so sustain themselves, they were overthrown. The la ter, as is well known, was taken prisoner a! C.'#, and afterwards suffered a horrible death, In 1629 Ferdinand married Christina, a daughter of the King of Naples, by whom he had issue im 1830, the present Queen Isabella. In order to secure to her the succession to the throne, he abolished the Salic law, which otherwise would have given suc- cession to bis brother, Don Carlos. On the death of Ferdinand, Christina became ign, the Uarilista rose in arms, and for 2 number years hostilities were carried on with the most bitter and cruelty. In 1840 the war was terminated by the fog emerge tay wp rey flight of Don Carlos at work which ‘red the foundation of §) liberty insecare. O'Donnell, who im 1833 had made chief of the staff by Gen. Espartero, in 1840 attached to the interests of Christina, the Cortes. But in that very year the Erinn sus Popa a Wa an oke out in Pampelana an rl pro heau.n” "t artisans in the former, aad General Leon in the latier piace. aliste in ‘ing their . at Espartero, overlooking the misconduct of O’Donnell, gain took him into favor. In 1543 the aathority of partero was overthrown, and Narvaez came inte power; and O'Donnell, who helped him to his sue- received Governor - Betore Geo. W. Morton, Raq. ANOTHER CHARGE OF SMUGGLING DISMISSED. Av@, 21.—The Unied States wa. Charles Perris and Rich- ard Jones.—The defendants are cha ge! under the act of Congress of March 20, 1770, with lamding from the brig Margaret twenty kegs of tamarinds rubject to doty, « ity out the ‘of the Collector, It was proved on ie part of the United States that on the 13th inst. one of the ong officers, on information received by bim, went te ‘and there found @ boat ted to the Deths w up twenty casks of tamarinds on board: #aj them to have stolen, the officer tok them in and subsequently anderstoo! they belonged te Jones, one af the defendants. Shortly after meetin med the tamarind s ome from the Margaret, Smith, (2 Washington, C. ©. reports, 31 landing of the tanarivds 0 as to Constitute an ofesce under the 50th section of the act, the defendants pot bav- ing landed the same; nor are they chargeable under tbe 27th section, which makes the unlading an offence, ax nak applies only to the captain or mate, Jofea dant are discharged Layixe Down of tae Nawrocest Seeman Caris.—The submarine cable is laid, and Nantacket Jone spot no more. The marry took place and now our island ts con by living with at Continent, The cable was inid y: esterday, fom it Point, Ns Monomy ['vint, oe ot, ~dinante oe thirteen suleo-sthe jong vt - ‘oO shore. Mr. &. C. , who as well ae put the cable down, hae groat cause of rl Setinat meee tee ented ive the ful ¥ sing the occasion demands, We congratulate te lanabrncts of ovr island on this auspicious opening of ‘With them, we say may the Union never be dissolved. <e Nantucket Enquirer, avg. 20.