The New York Herald Newspaper, April 26, 1857, Page 8

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8 NEW Minnescta. D ahienty ecw. The seiclery in Mallet, Bive Basi; and ‘ail farther mutive for the independance of their | Ferrier in ite whole ée " * int gg — KeTING OF CIT: | Le Rewr counties are convoy suneyed y Ui deytroda- may the feet of would be at oned removed; | pian Sea to the of shore ‘What he ay oe oo a ee ee et widand by him je er CRRA ye eer OF TROOPBS Hone, ether in pitfermne, of ee, a re one vane aeeeanancaasenate inich dense le fore on the all the weight and of an | who once to love me, Weill, Frank, what must | The British stenmabiy) Gra Laie . pany A ve Apri 17.) serves_ore by far too near the south bend Minne- from the Persians would have regained all their Saree ie perfectly im accordance with the opinion feelings now be? Have you no amactence? After | ierday f Seow, Capt Danean, eatled the si Pew! pee Jo COPPESpaBdeT.t of 7 ‘The satilers of thove countion have Mug WOemour ging oo Tae gn eee Ae ng ee age Seer poy we Wing me ‘two weeks ago last Monday that, csme pre ada gt Dope iwenly fmt cabin passengers jow a jeter from - and T+bould ‘surprised torious would have bound them for ever Foglish. seven bi Mankato. The Whiter was writwen on pe the Persia rae eerie sf De peveetaret what , You would live with we, and that your divorce ‘eabin, 0 wan ee Hee eaten of tne excuse for a genera) uprising them. op eet care shoukl given up and that you would send your New Line or Strawsmrs—A new line of stearash! pa se rie circulated 18 Wie cy were greatly | obee proveke a general depend pon : of | lawyer, Mr. Dana, up, week, t0 see me, and the Very | been established to run? semi mobthly between Bremen, Loo) next did you not tell Edward you would never | don and New York. The see ane y tine comalate of the Queen of " wi be driven from their prosent reservations. The for | oF operative enough. Hence the entered into | possible. Segersied tnt werigus disturbances Rave @ocurfed is | (10 TS" tn that portion of the Territory won'd be an addi- | by Sir A. Barnes with the princes of Afighani-in did not | "That which caused the faiture of the first Rasslan have broken eve des Fo ale oe ides oa South, Indiana, Argo, and Jason, of about 2.500 tons éach, "A body of Indians, ttappears, trescherousty attacked Lhe tional stimuthnt to get rid of the Indians. ep een SO eutborities at Calcutia. These oS ees Rvs, ee years ago, was the fact keep. But now I ‘certainly think that you had ne inten- | OF ™! have been bullt in dhe most substantial manver, a the town of Spriagtivkd, on the Watonwa river, Bat a few days will tell the worst probably. ‘were not to mortify in the least degree what- | the ventured into the desert without a sufficient | tion ofkeeping those promises when you made them. Frank, pioneer of the line will jeave Bremen for London und Elibiee farts county, on tne ‘2d of April, kilbog seven men, | PARTICULARS OF THY MABSACREK AT SPRINGFIELD, am the traditional course and oid policy of the Fast lutia | number —_ and without baving @ sustaining place, | had I treated you in such a manner you would havespurned York, touching at Kouthampton, on the 2h of ihe p three, and carrying off four women, The la Since receiving the above letéer, the particulars of the They, therefore, perristed im the purpose of | or a But they have learned wisdom by ex- | me from. It seems ux if you bad done enough now | Month, and thereafter they will leave semi-monthly from Sees proseers stacked the settlers at @pirit lake, and wisearye ud Wriacay iu Bive Fat Qauny phar oonn ‘Asjehantan & angle power, to wet as such a8 4 me, tnd, have Gout! upon the Sam Of Ara a the ee tiem oe deneeen Wea kak sara to Uk | won and New York. Yes Vaale oe erent maanicre . The ner kil f v | counterpoie reason, their tions. ‘already a“ y owned ropean an gaveral men. | Tho socne of the Bpirit lake massacre, | Oe nat Witham Wond, Goorge M. Wood, Mr Chareh, 4 timo cere nameny, | about me as you did before you received your sentence, | Aiseriean Steam Bhippitg Company of London aslo despatched vp the Persian Gulf to intimidate the Shah by at | without having letters el ew we ty 5 ademonstration made in the very heart of his ¢ Ourvly on the Ossplan foa, viz | w mine) read’ in comy' as you did? aud wharhave you | Wh, <Agent in, New York, C1 Sand, Raq. We wish iho and then to oblige him to abandon’ the siege of Herat, the | Gowrieff, they have now established another at | done it for? Was it net to try and see if you could not ruin |" pexy Siur ManeRVA, ashore near company 'irterisied ak io wan dine to we a8 "mouih ofthe Lamba, which is the moet cansira: | wo ul further and ina grate doyete Dulid your own | geen Hog here Bentparaaes ew high end into Afghani ee renee: to ostablich there the sole legiti- | DI ‘the streams by which country tying betwoen | character up? What an unfair way for a husband to ruin | cargo. The crew have arrived tn the city, rate exthortep ct hereditary Shah, who was wre ‘the Cuspian Sea and ie Smey now pratt her tfien ed his own cnaracter up! The day may Barx Counter, before reporied abandoned, was a good Reagan, ever ee 08 Of this vast country. The Raven Wee Panes 0S ene) extent from its | come When you will be sorry you trealed Nellie 80, | se] of 283 tons register, Dull at Black Rock ii tor reel is famous expedition against Ca- From the point at which the Embah is no longer | when, in after years, she may have’ shown to the world | Dunham & Dimon, of this city, rating 4 alae at 00 oul are 100 well known, as also what tremendous efforts | navigable, they bave dug s series of wells, reaching to | that she was not as "bad a person as er Ausband tried to | and only partially ‘covered by {range Rise: So inna bet jo Jows, near the Suate line “—. patel Killed at Springtield, as fur as could be | and Jasiah Stewart are among the number. senrained, were Messrs. William and Geo. M, Wood, | The attack war withent provocation, and was uisis- wart. Mr. Wm. Wood was formerly a re | pected by the settlers. Mr, William Wood, a trader, wnd fe-ni of Mankato. The names of but two of tho women | an ald settler of Ma had been proceading to bave a earried off have boen ascertained—Mrs, Marvel and @ Miss | talk with the Indians om bank of the river, when he was shot dead and his hie After this. oral ex | Massacre took place, in all who wore riand armod arely = & is ee i Cader Me remaining settlers at Springfield fortifed themeel Sa house, and thus eacaped being murdered. Such was | suffered more or lest. Those who w Gar suddenness of the aly attack that buttwolndians | escaped. Two Indians were killed-—one having been shot | it eost the English subeoqs to re ‘the destruction | the northern extremity of the Sea of Aral. They have | make out to be, and wish to be el ished | on.freight money. | Bhe had on board 918 bales W: Wed and one of these was stot by Mo Church | by Mrs. Church, who loaded guns for che men in one of | of their army. After all Pie Huliok coals ese raccnod im | settled here in this country mittary colonles of Cusacks, | you to forgive me. Frank, clipe eS aig softer, § bbl sugar, 68-d0 tallow, 10.d0 grease, 1 honor to the brave wouan) who loaded the guns for | the houges. Several women were taken (prisoners by the object they aimed at, namely: to form Afigha- | whose business it is to take charge of those wells of water. | never more shall we meet; notwithstanding you have Bo ee oes nab. fae. oe anes, » for Partiea ia Howton, men. the Indians, among whom are Mrs. Marvel and Miss | nistan into a ingle empire, were ob! to content | These colonists have alao been to cultivate the | (hus treated me I shall always loe you. You recollect I . pes Cot Deekin af 'A Mr. Slocum, residing twenty miles from Mankato, be. | Gardner, 2 themselves with merely raising siege of . They ad in the neighborhood, and having dane so, it has | was when first I went astray, and you might have BB dh ys forgo] ‘a Tot and frame Rock land, Mo) hensive of i attack from the Indians, sent to | — Thirty-eight volunteers left Mankato, under Capt. Lewis, | alerwards mado separate perates with the Afisian en found thatthe land is more ve and fertile | lived with me again, and I should huve tried so hard to | morning, Sth inst, on Gardner's Tal Page a « Inland a Bawkato for assistance. Thirty-eight volunteers, under | immediately on receipt of the intelligence of Uie maassacro, ¥ Liew end thick westhor. ‘The ¥ ee ome Giger” , whom they had sougs ivost of their powers. | than it had been before . is therefore evident | make you happy. But perhaps God has so ordered it, | er! eemmand of Dr. Lewi-,left that plice and reached Sio- | The company reached Slccum, on the Watonwa river, on Poet Mohamed retained bis dominion in Caboul, md | tbata Russian army ‘would’ bo. able fo march from the | and. all Tor: he’ beat, for l donot weirs ne could ever | and with the exception of the rigging, sails, . ke, while a tee eecimpt was tunie craw | the eveng of the 1ith, whore, they meta body of Lich | Keben-di-khan continued to reign in Candahar,eabjet otly | mouth of the Embah on the Caplan to the Su | have been happy together, after treating me in the manner | Pari Be OR On ay She party into an ambuscade, bat it failed. The volunteers | ans encamped, who on their approach fled, throwing their | to the condition of engaging to clive Herat if Vessia | of | Aral without | euifering for want of water or | have trerted me. You have not only tried to ruin me but | 4702", The G0 was 8 Fone ee er and: oder wana then fortitied and occupied Slocum’s house, where they | hatehets in the air, firing Dack as they ran. The company |. should again attempt to obtain possession of that place. ovisions. On the Sea of Aral, a frmiils has | have told such stories without the slightest foundation for | Rocalaud. There Was Do insurauce on elther segeel or carge wore eurrounded by one hundred and fifty Indiaus. This | killed four Indians. ‘This however was but an ontpost; for At the same (me, Lowever, that an English army was constructed and island of the sea has been | them. ‘The following is a telegraphic despatch to Ellwood Walter! Ywas on Saturday night le immediately afterwards one hundred and fifty armed Ln- | destroyed by the Aifyhans in (..voul, an expedition made } taken of, 80 that flouila can disembark and But I will not write so, for well 1 know you are suffer- | Ry, Becretary hfe oe Unnerevlacees the Russian against Khiv met with the same fete. | land & ian comps d'armée at the mouths of the Oxas, a | ing as well as myself. Would I could do anything to con- ¥ Wi April 24, “A party of ily volunteers from St, Peters and Traverse, | dians made their appearance and showed fight. wader Capt. Dodd, passed through Mankato on Sunday test, | ‘They therefore sent word to St Peter for assistanor, @@a expected to reach Slocum’s the sameevening. Ab when Gen. Dodd and fifty volunwers started for the eoone ‘eier party was to have followed on Monday of war. Myo next news will probably bring us ylt ofthe | — Intelligence reached Faribault, calling on Gen. Sh esemiater between Capt. Dodd's party and the Indians, | for assistance, who immediately raived a company vo! We-have no doubt of dhe result. unteers and vtarted for Mankato, accompanied by Alexan- Mankato, April 12, 18 der Faribault, and several Indian runners. Some ef these A twinform the pubho through | runners had returned, confirming the ramors f the ms- columns, {affairs on the Des Moines aud | bacros in Blue Earth county, and stating that at least forty y arty Sj The messengers which bad | settlers had beon massacred near the Big Bend. despatched to Fort Ridgley, together with the sol ‘A company had also been raised at Prescott, W: @ers, jeit here on the ng of the 20d ult. and proceed- | were on the Time and Tide ready to start, when 08 to Epringticid on the Des Moines, 15 miles from the sceage | from Fort Spelling arrived, stating that troops sufficient *@ depredations. They reached Spri i= connter defeat cave Rew spirits and) freeh courage 10 | ‘few days? fou visions and # [ , But the Russians. have not remained contented with | will permit you. I am very glad to hear that you are | the ways. eucceed when they attempted to go beyond ‘the limits | doing allthis. On the Caspian Sea, 160 miles eouth of the | reated so kindly by the jailor’s family—for you deserve to Kcun Rerxcea Foes, before reported lost, was built at Bell assigned by nature. ‘seemed to be a certain ant | Embah, they have founded a new city called Alexandrof, | be treated well. I know you are suring; how I wish | fst, Me, in 1848, 136 tona register, rating A2, owned in Belfast unawcidable grave for the ant aAffihanistan for | and from this city to the southern extremity of the Sea of | hat I could visit you, and have ono sweet kiss from | Valued wt $4,000, supposed insured at the Bastward. the English. ween these twocountries moreover 6 vast | Aral they have established another line of wells of water, | Frank’s lips; but I suppose I cannot ever visit you, nor |) ScHR Ricuary THowrsox, Intely ashore on Chapaquidse, was region of country extended, nearly a ttiousand miks in | under the caro of other military colonists, Tom whois | ever write to you ugain, Would 1 could write you often; | Set ol 20th inst, apparently without damage, length and xbout five hundred miles in breadth, over | years were spent, and an entire corps d’armée was em- | but even that privilage I cannot take. My heartis almost Whaleship Nile, at Greenport, has been sold to parties th which no. European foot had ever passed, Ail acdoants | ploved im the execution of this great work, by which Rus- | broken now. "I long to lie down and die. Would it not be | © break up. concurred in representing this wast region as consiting | sia has secured to herself the possession of all that part of | happiness for you? It cortainly would be for me. How | (,UAUNCuEp—Thore was to have heen launched from the yard only of sandy deserts and uninbabitable plains, which even | Tartary comprised betwoen the Caspian Bea and the Bea of | are you feeling, Frank? Are you happy? Are you well? | Of wywumApraham & Rone, Baltimore, on the 2bkh inst a the few hordes of wandering Tartars scarcely ever ven- | Aral. Tam not happy? far from it. suppose I should be bappier | gy deer ama death Henkas fret epee eos Drenith of bea tured to traverse, Between the sale, on the oneside, By mean: of this work she can now make herself mas- | if 1 was well; but my heart is very painful. I cannot | via, is ‘design rincipatly for the South American trade, and and the le of Bukaria ov the other side of these vast | ter of Khiva whenever she . Furthermore, since | sleep nights with it, but sit up most all the night. But | will be commanded by Capt Moor, of Baltimore. c deserts, there never had existed any relations of commerce | the year 1853, the Khan of Khiva has been a mere vassal | 1 expect it will break soon, and then it will soon get At Machias 15th inst, a fine sehr’ of 147 tons, called Amel or any kind whatever, which was taken to hea mauifest | of die Cyar of Russia. For, whatever power holds in its | well. Oh! dear Frank, how I have wished you wero | bulltby John Bhaw, and owned by A Ww, PE Do Of the barrennassaf allthe countriessituated between | hands the mocths of the Oxus, that power has all the Tar- | with me since my heart has become so painful. Nights, | CapeBanbord, late of sche’ New York Faker eee OF ferat and the Sea of Aral. Thas then itgecmed asi! nu. | taré at his fort, the Oxus being the great artery @€ the | when I lie awake, I think if Frank were only with me, 1 sua " ture herself had undertaken to plant large and inpasable | whole of Tartary—indeed, it may be bail to be WilPenty | know it would not be as painful. Dear mother has been | guspanmine REG; lotions to Masiness. barriers between the several possessions of the Eaglish } one. very kind to me; she «its up nearly all night with me, 1 | ¢¥4"4* I Se See ae KEIO and Russians in Asia, “es tae tow hostile calieion be: It is evident, therefore, that @ Russian army, starting | seem to cufler more nights than daytimes, for I sit up ‘The following translation of @ communication addressed bj tween these two great Rurops ers impossible in Asia, | from Astracan, may be disembarked at Alexandrof, und in ] nearly all day. It seeins as if my cup of sorrow was full, | Mehemed Fund to Mr. John P. Brown, the United states Oon| Such being the cas», Fugland had no cause toentertanfear | a week's time may be to the mouths of the | almost to overflowing. Last night,in my anguish, I laid | #ul-General at Constantinople, together with the tariff of san of any Power whatsoever except Persia, and to secure her | Oxus. It would then be able to ascend this great river, | and thought—Can it be Frank that charges his Nellio with | try dues by which it was accompanied, is ished tor Qgainet Persia all that was necessary was tw watchover | followed by the flotilla of the Sea of Aral, earrying its ar: | that erime, and making it as public as he has? But it was | iMormation of Amerioan shipanasiors and having bust and preserve the independence of Afyhanitsan. England | wllery and all the necessary eupplies. The Oxusis navigable | too true: it was done. Frank, when you left me, could you D fed to the Departomiat of Sixte' be ta felt still more confident in her security after the conquest | as far up as Balkh and Khulm, that is to say, into the very | not have suid, Nellie is my wife, I have loved her, and as eral, under date of March 18, 1867:—. nl of Seinde and of the kingdom of Lahore. The river In- | heart ofthe ancient Bartriana. On arriving atthe confluence | I have, I will not try to ruin her, but leave ber as she is? DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN APP AIKS OF THE SURLIME PORTE. dus was not a secure line of defence. It wak not quite | of the Oxus with the river Khulm, the army would be at | But instead of that, you have done all you could to de. The quarantine regulations which bave been formed for certain that an enemy. could be provented from crossing | the foot of the chain of mountains called by the ancients | grade me; but no matter now; I will nod blame you; you | benesit nos only of the Ouoman empire, but probably for pome point or auother' river the whole length of which | Paropamisus, and by the moderns Hindou-Koush. Tho | ure my Lusband for the present. I will not tall against | Sect eeyulauons of the whole of Europe. the au cantagon ‘was nearly five hundred miles. ven the presen ‘an | army would then cross these mountains at the gorge or | you, nor aay aught that shall make you unhappy. izsh- | which God be praised, are visible, have attained rr enemy on the left bank. of the Indus would of itselfalono | opening of Bamian, when it would arrive at Caboul. Af | ing mueh happiness, peace, with anuch love, if you ac- | eesree of perfection.’ The dues’ which have been de suificient to make the world call in question the high | ter this all it would have to do would be to follow the ee Tremain your true wife. NELLIE. heretofore proving insufficient for covering expenses, the pretensions and ebaracter of the Enelish Power, and a | couse of the river of Caboul, which falls into the Indus, aulk, should it be your pleasure, 1 will be so happy to | {onan goverument has been subjected 1 & considerable 9 Engle battle lost would place the whole northern part of | 1p order to arrive on the banks of the latter river. ‘This is | receive any note or leiter which you tnay write me. iy Sama) Silanes aidcennenas tania te ‘the Indian peninsula in the power of the invaders. We may | the route by which Alexander the Great arrived on the 2. poe vag ing pwn peep cent pose op Aid bo convinced of this when we remember the edict pro- | Indus. By tis, same road Nadir Shah, « century ago, for the wotial expenses. duced throughout Hindostan by the defeat Sir Henry Gough. | penetr TLMINGTON, from Khiva, having all necessary pro- | tribute to your happiness, but I cannot. T hope, dear hus- ‘The achr Two Marys, from Conway, loaded with naval stor ‘Dpliee at ite command. band, you will make vourself as happy ss elteanstances | putin here leaking, aid Wil have t dlacharge carko and field on Saturday , 4th despuched, The people of Prescott volunteered “af April, the soldiers still in doubt as to the correctness of the =: , but upon eut: town, what their sur Axenthnan arrived at Prescott, who left Mankato on wo find that th ns hed been thera; thaton | the 14th, who states that up 0 that date Mankato bad not y, April 2, a bund of Sioux had attucked the town, | been . but that some fifty murders had been com- seven, wounded three and carried four women into | mitted by Sionx Indians in Biue Farth county, When he eapevity y despatched a compa: | left Mankato 140 Indians were encamped four miles from x forcement aud provisions. Among | Mankato, and it is presumed that it is against this baud Wood, George Mr. | that G Dodd was marching. The settlers hud ail fed @mred and Jortah Stewart from their homes, and were leaving the country or gather- ‘Me atiack wa- without provocation aud unsusp ad by | ing for mutual protection. Great alarm was everywhere *@ee settlers. Wm. Wood was an oid resident of Mankato | felt. All the Indians beyond the Minnesota river were said wué a trader at Springfield. to be ussuming @ hostile attitude, Rumors were rise of an RB appears that in the commencement he went ont to the | alliance between the Sioux and Chippewa: awk of the river to talk to the Indians, and as he turued ——_—— about to co home he was chot dead and immediately set | The Rivalry Exist Between England nid @ fre, his bogly, when found, being awfully burned. Russia in Asias eral of the citizens were temporarily absent, but [lvauslated for the New York Herald, from La Patric, of Sime returned. Those that fortitled themmelves esc Ports, of April 2, 1 murdered. Two Indians were killed; one w, ‘The burriers which natare and political joalonsy have In- irs. Church, who joaded guns for the in terposed between the civilized nation y the Houses, The hates of the women taken prisoners we | richest countries of the world in th ily seen to @ vot know, with Ue excoption of two, Mrs. Mar «i | be gradually falling down. ‘The Pacific Ocean is at the pre- @ Mise Gardner sent day become a rendezvous and point of meeting for all Gheflins, tho messenger, who was first sont to the | nations, The Japanese, of their own accord, begin to re- fart, has fine! returned from Springfield, and says he | lax the severity of their exclusive policy ; China, too, will Darled five men in one crave the day before he left. Ho | soon be obliged to make similar coucesions to Western tuto India and advaneed as far as Dethi. In this view of the case the subject has been dipenssed at Chillianwallub, by the Sikhs. The conquest, therefore, |" No-serious obstacle, therefore, would be able toarrest | MABITIME INTELLIGENCE. general Cosel of Health in the presence of the c ‘ocala Peached Isaac Slocum’s, on the Watonwa river, twenty | commerce, by dint of force, while the wandering popula- y . wes from Mankato Thursday last, an’ reached this | tions of Central Asia, the tribes which Jead a pastoral ani | of Seinde and of the kingdom of Lahore, while it made [ tho march of a Russian army from the month of the Oxus | “or pate pte eho] pond eb 8 Et =) C - un sent dow unse disciplined and civilized | the English masters of the whole course of the Indus, } to the banks of the upper Indus, unless it should happen thoee sentiment of equity which uaimale the sub «tne Py lod life are being graduall; by Russia. Thus ft is that Rurope seems in the present age to be directing all her energies and activity towards the Fastern world. It may, therefore, very posstblyghap- pen that two at east of the great Powers of Europe will danger) by from its rise in India to its mouths in the Gulf of Persia, | that the English, instead of waiting for him under the ‘eve 10 ‘gud at the same time they have drawn up. ie sab chabled them to advance tir ine of deface forward ho: | walls of Peshanar, should go We meet th anpreacity on. | SUPE i | wee ° 10.2 | tanuten on cane which render te Sestonar Pen ¥ 6 river, behind which they could safely retire and | ery, and prepare against his approach by occupying Port * coples of this report aforementioned, as well as ze their troops in ease Of a defeat. Parallel | boul aud ite territory. of How York, Ayetl 25, 10e¥. Hisfinre now commnicatd wr your Iegation iy he nate ra With the Indus from Hinden Kowsh to the Golf } But the Russians “would not confine themselves to de aie. het n done ers, Your exoole Mey reached bowit again in Asia the fierce stroggle which was termina. eased to observe that in this report, it ts, khow Gan ere Chowen captain, | ted for a titue in Furope by the treaty of Paris. ‘The ques- | of Persia there exten's a long chain of mountains, | monstrations threatening the upper Indus; they would fol- | steainship Florida, Crowell, Savannab—s 1. Mitehil eens cere wis he quarancee Gaul of lial acmemenes wed with Went, Gece” tole | tion arises, whether Bnglebd has any reason to fear for ber | forming the boundary of Aftghanistan. This loug moun’ | low the example given them by the conquering Tartars. | | Rieamsbip Marion, 2 Charleston Xpattord, ‘Tileston | thes are very moderate, and it is hoped that this fact wil tain range can only bo crossed at two places,ore on the | We have before stated that the chain of the Afghanistan | & reparded by your exeelleney as a new f » Indians, who im. } Indian possessions? Whether any danger from Russia is . - 4 mediately ran at the appearance of the whites, throwiug | te be apprehended on her part? "Will the oppasing forces north, opposite the country of Caboul, st the place where | mountains runa parallel with tho course of the ladus, | pSteamship Jamestown, Parrish, Norfolk, &o—fudiam & | td Sacdocntion of Oe yeore oe nd Beir hatchet: into the wr and firing at the whites. Tho | of England and Russia ever moet together in hostile array | the Indus leaves Thibet and enters India; the other atthe | Now there tsa line of fortresses and fortified cities | “'Rhip Storm King, Callaghan, San Francisso—Wo! u request that, ‘As the rtsld nie bone can Witter sumediately charsed upon tiem and illed four, | Gh the plains of the Fast? These are question into which | routh of Atflunistan, opposite Candahar, which are called | which extend parallel with this chain of mountains, and | hip Florence, Diamaresq, Hong Kong-—« elt Ge ton Re Mone of the wintce were injuged, wil the exception of | We will inquire, and for the purpose of aiding us in their | the passes of Rolon. “Ttis atthe laet mentioned point that | coramand the whole plain or plateau of Central Asia, “Com- | Ship Philadelphia, Poole, oor TK 0 good ae to mane such inetructions'ae will insure ee man, who received a slight wound solution we ho information de- | the armies of England twice penetrated into the country of | mencing with them from the north and proceediag south. ip Centurion, Cauikins, Liverpo: fh rion, Cat proper co-operation herea!ver for its execution, 8, Was the signa nd m wd (0% S . A " 5 a it edd i eobe (BIS), appears, was the cignal, aud immed rived from Mon , the first who | the Afghans. At both those passes, where they open into | ward, their names are in that order as follows poets ener, oS ee Monanew 19, 1273.—(Sept. 19, 1886) MEHEMED FUND. Germ of the whites te tho house, it was surrounde har ever travel qa, by. | the opposite territory, the English have erected powerful | Khubn, Jialkh, Shibberghan, Meimara, Kalenough, | RS")! “nee a a ——| about 150 Indian B.A moneenger, who has Nich the Engush and Reselan possessions nt separated | fortreeses, vis Pralawor, opposite Hindon Rowh, and | Herat,’ Subzar and Furrah. 'Military force, or mors | Hark Gecan Heine’ Means Sivinudad--Neamiut & Hota ET Dende meee peach other, Thikarpore, opposite the passe: of Bolon. Behind these | probably and more effectively, would soon Rark Reindeer, Allen, Union Island—% Mayhew. 1. The dues for the visit of recognition, payat le by aurived, brings the above stat Word was sent to Traverse des Sous asexistance, and this morning fifty of 1h Peter arrived under (Captain Dexid’s u nt, wh ch is correct. an Ottoman port ranting dues in case of thelr of health. ‘The dues for she visit of ition on arrivah— upwards will, op -entering nm 3 piastres, upwards arriving at an St. Peters fi cont! gold, entof India forms an immense triangle, two | forts are bridges crected over the Indus, one at Atto) open the gates of any one of these fortified places Bark lg Boule, New Orleane—Robson & Fosdick. veane] enterit sof whuch are waterod by the ocean, while the base | where the river Cabou! falls into the Indus, the other to the Rusvians. There they would find ample stores Brig Vi tw), Cashelin, Stockholm—Funck & Meineke. 2 The cis formed by Oie mountains of Thibet inan | Yaruk ou the lower Indus: In case of any reverse the | snd provisions, and the means of re-equipping their cavalry | Hit Adelphi. Brower, Fara —J Biabop & Oo. | a ve wit probably ty chain. Thus it will be poroived that | Fuglixh are thus Jed to fall back upon the left bunk, | and repairing their carriages and wagons. Once masters | Bre SP riuker, Oroshy, Trinkdad— 4 Bd Peers. : = wey left o'clock this after- | nature has provided for the defence of In by means of | while they also ha Woy these bridges the mans of pour- | of Herat, they would be in a condition to march against Brig W_B Nash, Nash, San Juan, Cuba—C & BJ Peters. ss F Been. Anoiher reinforcement will be up from Travorse | the strongest barriers. There ix only one pwiut at which | ing troops atany time into the country from the right bank dahar and the lower Indus. This road to the Indus, by Brig T M Mayhew, Harvey, Bermuda—Wm M Smith. wther will pay per ton 2 piastros, fm the morning to join the party, The cettlers from that | this vaxt region may be said to be vulnerable, and thatisthe | of the river. It ts therefore not to bo deniod that ti Herat and Candahar, and across the mountain pase Brig Dumbarton (Br), Lockbart, Halifax—D R DeWolte. weis of # tons and under will pay, without any methhorhood, and in fact all through the country, are | nortwe.t point of the triangle, There it is that a succes. { the recent conquests of the English have been the means of of Belon, has this great advantage: that it leads straight Brig Crawtord, Small, Sele Epp Talbot & Co, | gard to the port from which Uwy arrive, per ton, 1 paste. wing inte town with their far ins, called steppes, |daced one above the other | giving totheiremrire a much etronger frontier than tt pre- | tothe Indus below the point where that river recel Se eee Tht A peWolte. a rt nrar te eda tnchen tue tow OF Sprin Seen ne a abet: etaircane enc state boing | eiousty possossod,wiilo at the eatoe tim their syrtemn of de: | teto ite streams the waters of fa last tributary; whereas | Schr Seven sitar, Orewtey, Suckmoville Fampeen & | dividual places, > aren foreach day and cade i as We etaled berore, womtry, extonding trom the shores of the | fence, organived on the pian {tts at present, presents iusur- | the read by the gorge and passes of Bamran and Caboul | Hunter. , rig. Soe B. Dues on goods disinfected in the t~ Gaal and is correet. The other is corr ws fur we the Himalaya mountiin:. Hero | mountable obmtwcles inthe way of any Asiaticarmy. Would | only leads to the Punjab, and in order to penetrate into Se eT Holbrook, New Grieans—W 8 Rrown. 4 woke, 2, plastres, hides, ger 105 pieces, 5p r nn Sale Y “7 By Aiterent messengers, Who are going to and from Slo | the great river Indus, receiving in ike Course all thestreams } it be so, however, if they had « Furopean army to contend | India by this way, the tive large rivers which water the insom. Johnson, Newbern—Dvis & Holmen, #, not in bales, for each’ 100 skins, 23 pineirea @am™ to this place, Unbiased by the fever of excitement | by which Central Asla ts watered, rushes into the eeean | with? And, first of all, Jet us ask, could a Paoeian eruy country of the Sikhs have Brat te be crowed in siooeasion, hburg, Harris, Richmond—C H Pierson. ele during the tame voynrts and alarm, if spared, 1 will give you further intelligence | with # power and rapidity exceeding that of al! oor | ever penetrate into the country #0 far as the river Indus | If we su , therefore, that the Russians male their ndorvoort, Wicks, Alesapdrin—Merril.& Abbott, | sucssactvaly i woman ports, will nov pay Ube di sived. nv Tver since the time of Alexander the Groat this | Rver since the expedition against Cabou!, the opinion has | principal demonetrations ‘to the south, by way of Herat, "Rustis, dayne, Bultimoar—Merrili & Abbott Gosy unay enter only, and ‘that te: Ge Geet port @ OF THE CITIZENS OF ST. PAUL. hus always been the corner at which foreign people ha prevailed almost universally that the very idea of the ad- | etill it would be of ppeeny for them to ocenpy the more Bebr roma Amelia, Harding, Philadelphia—Jas Hand rt V. Children under seven years of age and the poor Pursuant to notice an adjourned mer of the various no into India with their invading forces. ‘The | vance of a Russian army across Central Avia i to be re- | northern ronte, if it were for no other purpose than that Sloop Khode Island, Hull, Providence —Master, exetopt from the dues levied in favor of the lagareto. ‘ourt House ou the 14th inet Indus, natwithetanding its great breadth, and the rapidity | garded as an absolute chimera. Such has been the geno- | of making a diversion, and of preventing any division | Slows S Hall. Churel vig te) Bs Edwards, Art. VI. The following are exempt from all quaranvine a @omiticns was hell at the ‘The object of the meeting ‘having been stated by the | Of a nae tadis of Genera no Fada lp ed SPE RD, § ta8re per. - a arm from marching out —_ oo mal, z @batr, to be to hear the report of the Special Gommittee on | WTost the Invading hordes of Gel wid. ledge of the progress already mmede vy Rasela | sud thereby placing themse! in the rear of the Russian en Wi - ™ Revelations, appointed al « previous eon The Ra Inh wie are the only people who have con. | willgindpate We shall new proceed is prove saistreteet. | line of operations.” Military and rcieniific mon wil take | | Scamship Caledonia, "Laytield, Ralitrmore, 48 hours, with | that’ grey dono commercial buslanas inthe parc wise TT. liovecmorth, from that committee ia the absence | quered India by wn invasion made on the eke of the ea, | ty how unfounded this opizion is. great pleasare in exumining into nl! these details, which | Mase) 14 i Crome | ae ae eons Hetuch, epoke BE | may dius enter. $. Monta. ef the Charman, submitter the following preatable and | Mive never entertained any serivas fyars of the Hindoo | | We bave shown where the vulnerable points of the | will be found tn the work of Mons. Ferrier in relation to | “Steamship Piedmont, Post "Hallinors, 70-houre, with mdse, | «Ar Vil. Allother dues heretofore established, au? not us the result of the labors of the committee, | Those people enervaied by the | AngioIndian empire are to be found, and also what are | the different roads an army might take to go from Herat to | to HB Cromwell ¢ Ras ; toned in the presen: tarifl, are suppressed, f ig'the mecting tat tbey had beon unanitaoudy: | Climate, aud weakened as to national unity by the ayetem | the defensive resources oc tho Rnglish on that continent. | Cabal, Or to Candahar; bow such an army would have to | | hip Jane Teuderson fof Balilmore) Foster, Moneilion, Feb Consramznorsn, July 33, 106, alithe n ors, aad d been carefully | of castes, Could not be excited to reveit against their con- Let us now tingnire into and ascertain the means of ag- | be supplied with provisions and forage; how artillery, &c., 15, with madee, t Boyd & Hine 0 a) 4 ven by Weir religion, While such is tho | gression which are in the power of Rus-ia would be transported, &c., &e., but we abstala from enter: | lands in wf Steamer jand, Philadeiphia—sandiord's Line, | ervabiished in the pre . ARRIVED. 1. Ships of war. 2 Vessels driven in by stra of wi 1g articles Whalemen, Arr ot New Redford, 24h, bark Canton Packet, Rord a, lew of recoweiling all erebees an o in regard to the proposed aaa Hindoo popniation, tt te quite different Within the courte of the bet fifteen years Rusela has | mg upon them in this article. It is the first time that the parade md Hilo Now nolulu Dee 1, Wytonueke L Whereas, the Congress of the United St man race inhabiting India, who are | become sole and sovereign muster of the whole Caspian | topography of Central Asia has been studied tn a military Ne replied, ship I taken on the wh, 2) do bi auctioned peeper t the northwest region of the eountry Sea. Tho pirates, by whom it was previasly § point of view. Mons. Ferrier has done more: he is the | Leonidas; tost'our jifhoom and everything waehed, edrried | 25 bbl= wh oll and 10,900 1 bad a roush | " Dat vid te socndante of t have been wholly exterminated; the froedon o first Furopean who has penetrated into the couniry of the | @Way bohstays and'injured fiqurebea t two months from Cape Horn to Pernambues, hvd of Hindestan. ‘Tbese men, who are much stroni nd | On its waters hus bee taken entirely away Emaks, of the Hazarahs, of the Taymounis, tribes of Tartar Ship Advance (of Datmariscotta), Child, Liverpao Mareh 26, , and the remaluder of the ‘ | more warhke ty Exg. | a large flvct of ships of war und transport ships has been | descent, who are in continual warfare with the Afghans. | (uM indce ond 617 passengers to Walsh, base. Hh . nie wake t f lsh, whera they regard bein ne the spoilers of heir iu. | constructed, and, luctip, a great military aad goutnorial | The liter never traverse the territory of these pe on Ue Hauks spoke ship Humber, from Liveepeal for Hail 5 ng it See ons erick “ P heritam enemies of their religion. In them | port has been created by Russia on the sorthorn extremi- | take long circuits to avoid them, certain as thoy are to inst, Int from th Guy Mond always found rebelliow subjects and of this orean at Ashounuleh, oppotite Asterubad, | moet either with death or captivity if caught among them. close reefed tapsatia, lost all thre: mall, Weather moderate, rs wil this, thesc Muswilman tribes, | Bvery time Rusin bas a quarrel with Persia she always | These tribes would be sure to join any conqueror who | Yr! verything attached 5, lon @ W. py i | Would subject the Affjlans by force or oblige thei to sub- prove lg Tg La aT na Has been eleven days N ¥ it to those who are fond of conjectures to guess | pliot on board six days, iih, experienced a aevers gale frum | Al bark Cowsack, Tripp. Ochotsk Sea, Honotula N Eby N, baroinetes pe, 4, Korotenge Dee 11, with 10) bbls wh, ®) deep on ed Ot Ship Annawan, McNair, New ¢ Tha bone. Sent home 90 Ibs bone. Reports, spoke Dee lat 198, lon 180 2) W, Ocmulgee, West, of and for Hole, nothing sinen leaving the Sandwich Valance, Raph Caroline, at Greenport 19th, has 10) BUie Sp and 80 t the foot of the Himalaya: and | threatens to seize upon the latter fortress and 00 he Indus, hold, as it w ae a pledge of good behavior. This fortoomman ls the | mit hy negotiation. ald at ap cole? rated Caspian ports, and Russia bas frequentiy en. | We lea ‘ it be supposed | deavored by negotiat the cession of it when | What would be the effect which the appearance of an army io Cowral Ada a power | ever that P whe sir means er bY foul, shall | Of 30,000 Russians and 50,000 Persians on the banks of the ‘of the Mongols, or enppose | become marter of Acts he tudepentence of Persia | Indus would have upon the ralere and people of Hin. vival of the days of Nadir |] will thenceforth ne b " dostan, and to end out on which side the ny conqueror, unfurling ui ate. The English East ers Of suCcE: do wh | India Company would, it strikes us, have great ditficu! 1), Minturn Ports. to bring together army of more than twenty tho Kark Leo, W Axnovo, PR, Aprit ort bi Gem of the Faylish and forty or tity thousand Sepoys. They could | Ways fon York Idgt sels a, Rand, for Go dos Hannibal mrownsien of heavy miles of Nandy Hoot aes ee. bility ef the march | Dot assemble alargor force without weakening too much of 9 Raseian arty te th First, let us suppose it | the garrisons of the fortitied places. Hence the foroos on | to be under the shadow of an efensive nad cu al. | both sides would be pretty equally balanced. It is quite xt, which b rer, w vory | bullelent for ns, without ing to ponetrate into the had been same invater the eapposition of her res | Beerets of futurity, to proved by the new light whieh 1 him againet the Png weting the 1 iy of Persia in a war with Bng- | we poswena at the pr ny any upon the geography of Gen them together into | land, in which the former Power would remain neutral, | tal Asia. that the idea Oa Russlen army going rome day at | oF other to knock at the gatos of Lidia te Mot a drown nor x Fnglsh totter to it foun Tet os now then inqui whieh the conquest ted to the Prylish with: wgh how much more terri equpire of <.theul and Was oblig aul wif in at S404, lon 7) 80, spoke Dark noe April 2—In port sebe Fearless, Manson, for Bo m, March Wn port brig Calvert, Witlard, Go tay, Hid bits, brig Monte Christa, Salem. with suenr, to | philadelphia with sugar, Philadelphibe yi Not Mattern, Siesta Oorauuitter wu Home Ports, aeROSTON, Apri! Bt--Aer stoner John P Law phi "1 raw, Phite: New York f England, from | let it be sapped that a Ruslan army ix ee nen ie; | bark Kim, r, Philadel “Wichardes coment Of Doseorw or at Keoar: chimera, na sotne of the wisest men have hitherto ought rye: a, he; Albert. Phuro,, Allems a; Ae danger of the kind wo whieh it will de: na, 19 day cm Albany. hi fro such a igual for two briga. | ¢ in waiting to : re also naturally flows from what has rs sailing thig army will | Predeped, and ft ts Uhie:—Ii Cabout and Herat commund then a Ravin army | the two several routes whieh lead frem Contra! ntrated at Aeterubad and <be poured Indin-—the one on the north and the other on th nin fifteen daye efter leaving Mowow. If it | Aigbanistan—it is manifostly most ersential for the safety ali army ft would 0 able to follow the | aud security of tho AngloTndian empire thet beth these nell, William A + Admiral, tw invade Atip * yo carayane as fara: Meched, then tarning | strong places should be held by thew who are faithful and " f emit, Tah atte, © De Bary, Savy, dev ned browne in favor of the Knglieh. ‘On the otbe ‘outhiward Could asceud the Her-food ax fer | firm frienda of the Engli-h. Purhape there ase some per- | ine meiner? * line Masa had 3 Wen in WY Weneer’e ape Afighane were bo Yower. But if the two Powers eh Krull, Waccamaw ise; amd from. the Hi lander and an . HATH, anes S-Ad hark Then, HEI DGRPORT, Apri: 24 Aer schte John Joes, L fonwte This row paces trv which are rick and pop whe fertile country, in | fons who may be inclined to gon little further, and who rig Samnel Prench (of Keetpert), Mrown, Sierra Loone, | The caravan with | Will be of the opiniog that {t is for the interest of the Fng- | March 18, with Mdex, Ae, tn J A Machado, 7 and whieh wentat tie rate | Leh to posses aud cooupy themselves the only two rig John Hovnien, Peaster. Port wa Prines, htupleted the journcy along | Joints by which an cntrauoe can be made into their em- | fptre. to A Kullker & Modman, Maw been ft this high ays. Bat if, onthe odber hand, | pire. They may Uink that the English oaght keep the | NS Noraney, Fl Mosia, JH Kents hrs W Ru lo Alfved b was not bound to rn destroy cach oth pe wered th well, nnd war | it bay 4), aud it wns wished | keye of their own house thenvelves, founding wich acon. | T Owen A Ben. | Bith tn Fi Parmer. Albany to yng! he ievteion of In | not aliagether to ext: saunutry through which it | ehven upon the principle that it is alwaye better t meet & venmol's mat, Nad th * Ransom, Clarks, dected advisable b |. when Por felt under thd power of me Yte march it ip three columns, | 3 danger half way and imedvance, rather thaw to wait Ul) attached, after of m half WN" York. 1 Reais officers Wo take firt conquered ant then digmombared different re The first eotutnn might, | i comes home to one's doors nn It saw another m AM, April 24, 10 AMareng §, ea ship th Persia was to be fearéd, a: being | on ioaving Asterabad, foliow the course of the river Gou. wa Staaten fete oe ee } soy gg om, ee a » dvsands elution wns tnaniz te become a tool in the hands of Ruse Now i: | ghan by that route which was explored by Mons, Mowrariex. The Dalton Divorce Case. compelied te eeud for | hy HR ay Se Hioneg the Mayor b ’ mor ower, baving lovt so maven an ite | In its march it would eros over the verritory inhabiued by ANOTHRR INTENSELY EXCITING SCENK AT COURT. bulwarks, split mutin, & Passing. Wind BW. r 7 Fane thy thee “DRS By r, wae seen making an effort bo compen | the Kurdes, and would trike the 1: spood at te {Frotn the Boston Traveller, Aprii 24) Hrig Orinoco (of Cherryficdd), Johnson, Nu DARIEN, April 14—In port sehr Josiah He 0, for ys {dea ebtet house Ue ong Tew noquisition® on ia southern. Yenna | place where it t# lost inthe mune. }rom this point the | in the fupreme Court rday the prose with sao, te Tw ay Tener) b) C & tie, Conn, next day. a at rane tle day a in | columns would ascend the r, is, Carden, April 9, ARTOWN, April Ih—Arr brig Chet, MeGrogor, | tend her empire over Afghanivtir tn Herat. The second oo | of deeply interesting character. Sorae the territory whieb ele had ceded to | lama might pursue the Meshed rou: and the Uurd, | which pased between Mr. and Mrs. Dal ay family, which formerly reigned | marching more to the right, might proceed ina straight | the jury on the part of to the whole country, had no other posession than | direction to Herat, through Toarvhiz Kaff and Goarian. | feeling whieh Herat. A pew family, the Parukizy, ruled over | There would be no necessity for euch an army to bring the | to te toering aitiar of Band provisions roa darn From bim ws awe odieer at Forth ron and for Calaie; sche Oneon, Ai ache » Ampley, pahvonecic ean, April 4, wih and; Jobn Tyler, Davis, Wilmingtow Bomen; 2 4 rd, with | eryants Mnshe Nioee tee Tn pi ue dale, Arroge PR. Aprti®, with | Above repodied: also, sche Oisero, raat, LT EN ray oe other vessels before reported, hers amb: the ma ur of thve Rioux outras int to hin Honor the Mayor: 6 al the other parw of the land, Dest Mohammed, | artillery required for s siege li the way from Burope, for | membered Uw ii which nd eryppiied ber | 4) rr Tram belonging to tie family, reigned ‘over Cahoul! | there are in the arena! at Tv herar 00 pleoes antiery ier. Deion « det for three Tae pa ; rm ALL RIVER, Spr Bnd hrs Met yointed Alderman Chembiin, Kluone and | sud Jeliaiahad Kelon-4i Khon, ble half tredier, reined | of the largest calibre, which have been ‘east und mounted | werk: witerw od wrgethor at | berres Moxkeracpe k teen ish toe Rumeiat ANE | 20 used Hevwn, Heald, Halianares a Wiikey, over Candakar; while her brothers of thia farhity were | by Baropran engineers, and also there ure abunduut inewan | te ts ; What witnes. | miles, took « heavy SH eulr with rain and ihiek weather; had artha Wrightingum, Wrightington, {Prom the Chisago Press, April 20.) lords over the other secondary cities and plies of the | ot transport. As we the viet of eneh an army, of great bappiness. He was | haw Ca Kem, AM, the wind hauled round sud Small, NYork. ie. Pate Saaoanors, Aprti 26, 2852 country. Persia made an offer to al! Qhese princes to gon. | the immense plan of Khorasan woul! » abundant! ovr tiet to Jail, €0 await the result of | Seniy to WaW. and blew eo hard TLawokor ky Anse ne ion Tre thr Apeit 14 17. 4 | punter to them ther several Sates nnd goveretgnues, pro. | every Kind of provision, rtwithetss ihr It tac tenn repre oft x 10 the death of Sumner, | [ch lasted ten bours, when ei cee erties eee 2 ac trad | vides would acknowledge her er the nominal | sented by Burnes ond Kinnard as being nodiing bot n cvoks, frequently visited by bis | {ysudaj) ht veered souut us RR nnd a en 1M SW vr from | “overeign Power, At the same time she offered to drive | desert. The Rhab of Pv-rsia has repestediy parched aftmion i h her letters full of Fanti) Thursday Dumarsacmiay Memyare Hieteen, fort |; chem Bop ka le | Gal due Suddoay family from Hewat ar beiuy tbe comracn | of 90,000 oF 40,000 men actos te piain-of Khorg-an, with. | Uw: snevt ardent expryssions ‘and tolicitude. He “kine thew had fight wind: j | Ani. Salk m Wel, Mai Ma fe, Banka, fovmy of the princes OF the Merukisy faaahly, In con. | ont taking any provistous with hi: army or providig magn. | was eventually discharged on ball, tut. by the. advice of 4 dau TI Deputy, Neil, Piva phia x Watton Ore formity with these propositions on the part Of Poriia, a | sdmes. In these case, the armies lure’ pever suered | counsel and the persuamons of bie fumtly und friends be rane Ap bomen ee for Pree a incense - ¢ smareing Ue peters, an pocret treaty was concluded between Kohen di Khan aod | for want of provisions, although, at Weir approach, the | did not go nenr hie wife afterwards are. bie ban ee j | for Provincetown, tld acl thas were moving & Pervia, under tho epectal guarantee of tho Russian Ambas- tion whom they plundered withont merey, always |. Brom that me tll the day of his weatence, March 2, dtr, | acle’Robert fatken tf Provinesiawnn fiver dervaieApeti | war tue Portiamts & mewn a i. Rommore were alse edeta tador, the condition of which orders that. Kobeo.4i-Khee Say, AWE Carved OE wits thers cit tas Taba nenka. | Dhaheon roftered to live wish bie wily, and cutie tho. imer: |S wihentes, Or, tr bane Ghat, ef Haters ink ean | A Banrndy Pais wi destroyed, and Uat tw citizen should do homage to the Shah of Perea us hit waewl, and | remove. In 1838, durtfiy wll the nine months that the | eal the interview took place in which John H. Cobarn toe. | fom NB. low Geek jowd omey. w 1 Sey ans, shumaly rmurdured.. The ‘on that io retary the Shab ebould give lim the posession of | seige of Herat , the Perian ariny, aecordiny to the | Uflet be listened to confeasions of erimlaality, On the 14 ‘ Sag werry,, Mansaallio, Aon thet ght the inteliewuer brought the folow Herat. It was in the oxecntion of this testy Gat the | account of Bir Jobn McNeil, eulevted’ almost entirely | of March Mre. Dulton received u libel for divores, signed ips & Co; vewel © ORR ee in army marched upon Herat in the pear 1808, and the resources supplied from the neighbOrhood of | by ber husband, thon undergoing the sentence of the law Kehr Indianola, np mewend), Mo fo es Lut sage to that ety. " Herat and, Goarien, without having seomatesnie oigh: | aad cm the followityg day wrese him a soowt touching Ieucr’ | days, vatheoton, Ae, tolayin & urhac ween or. Pere, Apel Wo, 1807 Bot Guc intermeddling on the port of Penta in the boring districts of Furral und t, which «fe far more ‘All the letiora to which we have referred were tend io | . Geir Kate Brigham, Norwn, Savannah, 9 days, with eution, hers p¢ host | family affairs of the princes and rulers of Afighantetan Protective. A Roseian tich' would pay for what | oMurt yestorday, and during the whole time Mrs. Dalton | ?2usham & Dimen. Tinahsp, Bay., Breretary o the hes Nelom. with port of bert Winrgnene fanned at St Theta, Remain a 6AM Ww * Juntaw, and Tena, ts AUHT, Apel 2 & AM—Pansing i, 14 Passing one Voltp, | Darky IB mes | eee » Ad A lerttige cettonent 5 te have Come Quint tne Ir « alton Ore. tebabitants Some forty men le't Mankato yorterday, and aBke number leave here today. Send ‘without dewy | Atlghane and the Persians recipro- | the pmmallest ‘upon this two hours of excitement Mr. Gove was | lor forse! ering amnmuniven wud provisions hove opt with dhe | tally, The Rnglish naturally reasoned thus: If Russian While one divieion af the army might be foft te carry on | called to the stand, till tnuch affected. t give his teeti- Nebr Beil B Rirong, completety fall, ‘Wie plane of the Engileh ast India prec to conrume, would bo eure to man the whole | was Weepin¢, and even Mr. Gere, her father, himvelf was | hunih cr Porsenna: el 8 aa7% whe kumber, to GD Te Company and the policy handed down to it by ite prede- of the surrounding eeontry flocking in crowde | much A. The doepeet illness prevailed im cow Sehr LS yu te " coucrs. This Jolley was to orpure the Persate to tie of thelr proviinne, ‘ilared by the prospect of | atd the tnowt intense Intereet was maulfeted, Following | Scranton 2 Talican “Tae capertented Sets bemy eeoteany Mowt, Wilmington, 12 day< tereon, Wilmingicn, ali or nearly all the provisions we thw intrigue guoseeds in aniting Pereis and Afighanitwn, and | he Of Herat, the remainder of the Rusdan foreas, | mony, and he had'hardily answered halla dozen questions, | Sehr North Caroiinn, oa Dodd bas jtaken the ooramaand, and \ | ineonsitating: the intior vavsass of the Tereian ewnpere, | continuing thete march, would aren ‘under ua seals of | when’ Mra, Drilon (ri tack lato ber mother's arms, | fenrehiong, kis: Weekes dare i ak takes this to the fort tnd art.ng C what is to hinder Rosaia, tn of time, from bringing | Qandabar, where they would not be loug detained, thie | her face flushed to the temples, and ino momeut | Sehr Mary Jane, Murch, Norfolk, 7 aeys telph ol. Pmith, the commandant nt Port hp Lng, metivieey | @ll Ube Mabomnetan States of northweet of India into a | City not being ina condition to mvintain o vinge, From | was tusemsible, = Mr. Emerson, her brother-in-law, Sehr Emma Tuttle, Corneil, \ irginia. Ann. Blower, H Renith, Teoeiving the above Hows, deepetohed uire companies | Mimilar alliance with Portia, this forming « mighty Mas | Qundahar to the Indus the ariny would follow the road | nd others of ber relations, took her tm their arins Bele Mary Kilen, Hylston. Virginia Knit, Dryden, Bia Ann ster! Share » fully armed and Ogeipped, for the coeur of | fulman confederntion, embracing all the evantrie: -stuated | which the Rawlieh took when Wiey invaded and bore her Schr Wm Henry, tharcee yd May Queen, Pay L ee Se the court room, followed by her | Rel Xbe, Warren, Virgin Between the Carpia Hoa and the banks of the Indus end hung helplessly tack ovor te | Shr W's hoot Lemme ace My i Affrnantiegan, from 0, that inetead of tia rinyg to elim ap the aanious parents, | Het bead the Suvled)! It was foresren that the day might eotme | beighte of the Paw of Rolan, which the Ruyileh had to do, | shoulders of Mr. room, and with fuched cherks, eyes 4 toed, Rind Le ee Cir’, froma. a ra . When ab armas ef two hondre! thousand Mueuluans, om, | they will have the tore racy tak of deacondiry those | closed, wid month bail disclosing her white tevth, The | Schr Lavinia’ Sophine’ Virk mi Dee” panel te, sare TH ee cored by Puropean, maght ebow Heelf on tbe banks ofthe | tooumlan hembts. Sv Joho McNeil, though he hae bern | presented a beautifel but ead pict Kehr Three thotvers, Wi San Tet Nek anda brig. Passing out, barks 5 Indus. Soh bedng the view of the case, fear. | Gunlod af @Pewsitnict ond un alarmbt, was viet | Me, Tatoo himself wa: evidently warmed, ane after his Howth, Det a ee arr chin . megota Fiver, Several commilloes were appoutedaune to | sewed wpon the kngiish government of Indin, ant | fed ia writing t& Lord Mimomton, atier the event of | wile left the rom, sat Uke a matue, with his Nuids over My FAT Peters, ‘ WARE ORD, ADL EAT nd e Kine 6 arma and ammunition—another to rae volun | drove & the adeqtion of the most dicastrone [ 1808, @s follows: is mouth, 4s frying te subdue bie feelings, whatever “he Park. Pag tag he 7 dara toni, Malet Heaney Philwieinhin C96 fis tere ueilier ino@'y, Ke. So te promwet was, Gnd | hueautes, Gir Alecander Rarues, howeper, who | “Tbo Country comprised betwaen the frontions oF Rerria | dey may have been, hie fuce meanwhile bethg crimson, fine, Ulorh, Mochign’ Gikeinn Hedge, and Urine. Nexon, PR ia, Dome nome of the patric of our young biesd-—whieb had | we et thet te tn Afivhanictan, wae fa from | abd the Lodus is truch relier and tone Fertile 1 hed | Tem minnter elapred, and all remained Preathles-ly await Rowen for Philadeiphis att’ ond 1 Russell, Buller, N York. Been “rpuling ? fer seme Ume—would tind proper vent. | Participating ip thes fears. This gentleman posmotsec | any idea of. J can amire your torhip ne!! the Lorn grt hed proceeding? when word war Poriiana, 0 x MF nD, April were Oy te Sods Vormteers were plenty, and the prospect wus Uhal they ruch © perlect knowledge af the countay, and euch jist} te configuration of the et) nor k in induced Judge Merrick to order an ad. Robinaon, Philadephia. dard, G Bo Sd apres Field, Nay Mi each have o good chance to get 6 land warrant for | O04 renetble poltiesl views, that he was fully Gapible of | of tmlwietenoe would be found to prémont any for UW day. 4 Philadelphia. — we “Th hy a Scual pervioe”” Inthe * ware.” Gol. Stith, however, | forming @ corre: judement pin the fae In quecti Olstavios Whatever to tn mare of «large army from | _ Mra. Dalton, on being ewrried to the wttaront cicrk's Walloon Preti ment io be ot ay fem word t the commitiore Uhot dhe tapops ke hed sent Hie knew that Trot} RIE, Mie sty Df abou), wh the borders of Georgin ws far ns Condanar, for & fuom, remained. tn the ‘sagne condition for over fittoen ti wasn, Pro videnon, “wore more Chan eufhiciont to drive three U yen the Humber true lire sont intelligent ne wll the moet powertal of | according to my ciew of the cane, ae fier as tho ee utes, Hetwit the yigornas applitation of the Hark ity grow. W rx hundred” Todiane before tiem. Se, tor tae | the Baruliny femlly, wae elvagetioer oppo 4a Uwe ww f far indeod trom the mature OF the variogs connteies which | Grual reatoratives me the physician who had been | rucher & Limon! neo Com dlr Ww fedinn wo Perey Wet fun” tovkes as if it had been epiied. Persian @lence fu Invading army would hove te puss Qirowgh presenti tor arrived, ahe was fiiet boginniag to revive from the Mion Gun task mae tenes trig, Moesengore beve arrived today, whe report the b ; a paged which tndured the over (ndivid p= fl rt mey for the eecnrity of fotin againet F mt | . Suleaquentty, however, ehe recovered euffictently t y SATLED. Fading cae ike bat 0s the iret news, artic hes toned els Of Chis family to enter inte curb an allixoce was the | am of opinion that, on the «© it woukt he remark | Be eble to bear removal to her home in « vetich ° & ipa Gi (AP, Glangow, Cprhia, Sovennch; Me ny Weems rong Govire which each bat of being ‘com. | ably tarorabke to ack wn undertading’ I tect more } COUR Lig, ke gho tonching Setlcr referred rim Vbarncer Temanens, Werth be re cnn a tasme fund of Indians wr are } SEO Hi dasa, tne proper Course for the Bagh rt i called wen to express this cpition Th Oe ed Ks, DALTON'S LETTER, US rieam friente Niagara di not come Inaide Wve Toot bat pruemente near Mankato mnitied | Upon : rere rir | Aecided forms, inaemuch as it night: bu . mardert ot rt Late howe exe would ave been fol) Iu with this desire of those | tom of what formerly Cotsiieret to tw theese and 1 | MY Pian Ftewmaye—t thonglit 1 shoul take this ivkege ns be & | Bity to write to you, Your preition, ‘Wind during the day, WW; at munnet, NNW {nformadun whieh wera. well to receive ‘it, the a Jetter T shall ever write Frank, this 1 Misrellanerae and [nanstere } a ‘The posmabtp Varomnmus, 8,298 tone burtheo, aud 8410 i ii i y horse power, D be Wines, taster, wid) be open for the tree ta

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