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4 NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 185%. News from Mexico. Our Minnesota Correspondence. Our Vermont Correspondence. to the Rescue, fraud. Hier starting Cemoemney wil sevct tho Important from the Sioux Indian Agency— OUR ACAPULOO CORRESPONDENCE. Sauvr Pavt, Minnesota, July 9, 1857. Bcpney, Vermont, July 18, 1887, trom fos Rehiond aminer, July 14] f Se ye right of the of at as toframe pabwge-teré:'s Sen = Acarctoo, June 28, 188%. | The Delegates to the Constitutional Oonvention-—Ahticipated | Visit oan Old Fashioned Vermont Summer Retreat—The | ,earl "Ue oucry alout Kansas, Walter aed ihe ad: clneng to tte great Pins tae fas atete nants [Fy ser, Brotieten taeion caster tai sex exueny, envtven Communication with Mexico City Cut off—Vicario's Thivd | Trouble in its Organization—Souihern Members of Oon- Last of @ Good Old Race of Landlords—A Lineal De- | ministretion, and it will be found in sum and substance to | to rule; and, alike and adversity, pur in this city yeaterday, having left the agency on Thursday ff . fh Attack on Foaula—4A Church Leveled and Siaty Persons | gress Investing in Free Lands, dc, dc. scendant of Lord Chesterfield and the Great Clarendon— coneiet of nothing bas opgcsticn to, the eubeniasien of the that great democratic maxim, is the best policy.” | morning last. From Mr. wo lara some interesting Kiled—Fouala Oity, its Pepulation and Curious Old | ‘The delegates to the Constitutional Convention, which ts | Old Oustoms in their Place, de. endtitstion ober to Be wo Se iv walien Queen Victoria at Manchester. ee ae eee of the band of savages 4 tion. Nene wenld ones t the cleans, ivocacy of the pa » the noted leader rages Church— Rebellion at Ohdapa— Alvares auent - to mest on the 13th, are beginning to come in; andthe | When | left New York on my usual summer trip, I did measure by Walker if the measure itself was aooeptable LORD PALMERSTON AND CARraIx HUDSON OF THE Whose depredations now form so sad a page in the history cum People—Government Forces Sent to Open ‘ay feeling im reference to the politics of the Convention, | notexpect to find myself in this out of the way spot. | to them. ‘one would object to an honest convention de- AG ARA. i nating this or that class as voters ‘the ratifoation ‘The Liverpool Mercury, of July 1, describ! Vio- On Monday last, the 20th inst., Mr. Flandrau, the agems the Captial—Keeping of Oorpus Ohristi Day—Prenden' | which has been waxing strong ever since the canvass | Chance, however, or rather the inducements held out to cw rejection, i they deatred it to be by popular vote | toria’s visit to Rey EE IT casino far dir for the mouz, reselved intelligence tht three. {ndisney, Oomonfort ant the Archbishop—The Late Anti Gambling | prior to the election opened, is just now up to fever heat. | me by persons who bad visited this region, tempted me | at ali ThejConvention whioh shall cause the constitution | the distinguished visiers who accepted the invitation of | members of Ink paduta’s band, were lurking in the Decree—An Official Haul—The House Letting Tax Reve-| Tho contest was a bitter one, and the ruses resorted to by | to direct my steps bere, and I have no reason to fell dis. | to be submit ve committee to be present, and for whom | Beighborhood of the Yellow Medicine agency. He imme- “ : to | seats were reserved on the dais, or in the transept, were | diately despatched a trusty Indian to tho band muie—S. John's Day Feast—Mortality in the Alvarez | voth parties in different localities would challenge the ad- | satisfied at baving turned out of tho old beaten track. submit carrying in it, and along It the' power to do- Lord Palmerston, the Nioaragaan minister consul, and | of harboring the murderers, and upou his that asom : i E i ; Fe A Family. miration of even New York politicians, The republicans | Beside the attractions of boautiful scenery and pure | signate the voters to whom the subi shall be. Captain Hudson, of the American frigate Niagara, witha | of Ink padu-ta was certainly fa the neighborhood, and ‘The disadvantage under which I labor in sending news | have a majority of the delegates beyond question, but | mountain air, I must tell you that my curiosity was ox- objection to “actual retidenta,”’ to ade settlers at | number of his officers. “ sj Tegeaniy owe others of the band, Mr. Flandrau promptly 4s the cutting off or closing up of all communication from | there are several very nice points yet to be settled, and | cited to see & man {who amongst summer touriata is pro- | {Dé time,” and fo thie, that and the oiher ciate of ie | a eg peak ced. have bees oon | Baviug procured fram Fort Ridgely’ doiasbene bald pretext | were heard, which joved to have been ooca- Baving procured from Fort Rid; ‘a dotachment of his point to the city of Mextoo. “Long is the road and | which it is very possible to settle in such shape that the | nounced to be a model landlord, and who, keeping « small ay of Lord’ Palmorsion, who with his | Company D, 10th infantry, rape pe Lisutenams into the transept. after him came the Farl Barvey, left the agency ences the Ssacerenep and nothing more, sored marrow is tho path that leadeth unto’? the capital, the dis: | republicans cannot control the body. roadside hotel, has, by the tonhemmie of his mannersand | the Convention—the convention having AR 3 Fs 1U, at two o’clook on W. Ganoe being just three hundred and thirty miles, and the In the first place, there is the removal of the capital. | the art which he possesses of making every one contented 4 of the major power to submit the constitution for popalar remarkably bale and in epirita, stood for a | They were also accompanied b; et te ene only power by which you are able to arrive there from | Most of the republicans come from the southern portion of | and happy under his roof, made himself rich and estab- ratification, Ail the violent objections we bear are levelled age Say re faethe lie eg a but On whose integrity the utmost reliance could be slased” Bere ts either by horse or mule back; though I have in- | the Territory, and are for the removal of the capitol to St. | lished for himself an enviable reputation amongst the | ®tthe proposition to submit; whatever may be said | acroiw the floor befere the dais, and conversed with | Among them was Hotou-wash-te, or Beautiful Voice, one di Pe t detalis, of mode and manner. being all ver! several the second whom he shook hands with | of the Indians who risked his life to secure the release of justriously worked for a year pastto procure a grant to| Peter. The law of Congress calling the Convention calls it good fellows of the Green Mountain State. Deeeore, ea and bts uge 2 far as it does cso being parlismentary oppagent, the Right Hon. W. K. | Miss Gardiner. Construct @ wagon road, but of no avail. You will per- | to convene at the capital of the Territory, and itis said a Taking the steamer at the head of Lake George, and the Conveotion has autho- | Gladstone. Amongst the rest, he caused himself to be ‘about sunrise, the party arrived at an Indian village, om peach the main proposition. Ocive, then, that in the closing of this road we are cut off | very respectable number of delegates will mee! at | than making @ supplemental trip from Ticonderoga to | Fity to subailt, it has authority to desiguate the voters to | introduced to the American naval officers already alluded | the Yellow Medicine river, five miles from the agenoy. communication, . a immedia‘el, from all , and are unable to procare intelli: | St Poter under the disputed law of last wiater, | Chipman’s Point, in one of the Lake Champlain steamers, | Thom the tubmission shall be If Cee ie Conversa Jon with Capuin | They imme ‘ely surrounded the lodge in which Tak vo" ence of any nature from any part of the republic. This, | and insist that the Convention cannot legally meet at any | I found myself, on disembarking at the latter village, | and expedient that the Convention shall designate the royal party took their places on the dais—the Queen | Flandran, and ono of the Indian guides, he ‘then, ts my excuse for my inability to farniah you with | other point. Thus there are six delegates elected from | placed in ya uncomfortable alternative of either (ett ae peamae lan ‘The major carrics centre; the Prince Consort to her left haud; next to ed, and running from the lo! took ‘refuge in a vari information of events taking place throughout the republic, } the Pembina district, which covers the whole Red river | riding to Sudbury, a distance of ten miles over | the minor. There ls but one proposition the propa archer 6 the. lath | ere eee eres wae yt still * Prince of Wales and Prince Al’red. To tho right of, | hiding piace. Tke soldiers surr the ravine, and with Juan Vicario, the brigand, bi entered and taken | country in the northwest portion of the Territory, andex- | rough mountain roads, in a farmer’s cart, or Here is the whole question, then, from alpha to : | and next to her Majesty, stood Prince Frederick William | ditt discovered the Indian, upon whom ‘im @ possonsion of Yguala, with a ‘of about eight hundred | tends east tothe Mississippi river. Only the eastern sec. | of passing the night’ in an inn of the most | —Shall the conatitution be submitted to the tbe of Prussia; his betrothed, the Princess Royal, was athis , diately fired; inflicting several severe wounds, In- pangs eT ay to oppose him on bis entrance | 808 of the district ts the mits of the proposed | uninviting imaginable, I chose the former, | democracy of Kansas demand thatit shall, aud emo. | left. The whole group ‘were dressed very simply, and | dian returned the fire, witha double barrelied shot force Siate, and although that section contains a very considera- | and after being shaken almost to pieces, I arrived here craay of tbe Union second thetr demand. ' Mr. Keitt says | .tood thus much in contrast with the gay company In front | one of the cbarges struck the cartridge box of & soldiers fthat could have been of any assistance, bui suc’ ag there | blo population, unfortunately for Pembina, Ant ge about six inthe evening. On from the vehi- | nay; the ultra So:th clamor in choras, nay. of them, Her Majesty’s drosa was of black silk brocade, | Who thereupon rushed forward and bayoneted the savage. ‘was took refuge in the church, whieh the brigand, witn here the polla were opened happened to be the aie 1 aoe ta Uy a meee OF middle 009 5 of florid com- ‘Well, why should not the constitution be submitted to | with six flounces that were ly of crape, althou, Upon examining the body, several wounds were discover- Bis force, attacked and levelled to the ground, killing mits of the State as laid down by Congress. The six oe whom I at once Rc gee the ? What is the objection of the ultras? Strange bly they might be of sli ily Ughter mene tial. ed. The carcass of the murderer was left upon the ’ , delegates are demoorats by an undisputed majority, but | Mr. Hyde, the proprietor of the Sudbury Hotel, and the | to say the reason is not denied. We blush for the South [isjeety’s boutiot was of white tulle, with white flowers, | ground, and the party, after having secured his equaw, sixty odd of the citizens who took shelter therein. This is | the republicans say they will not admit them to seats in | most pular man in this reries ot the Seung, tad to know that the reason is avowed. The reason alleged is, | The Queen also wore @ transparent jacket, trimmed with | ¢f for the agency. ‘tho third time within a year that he has entered Yguala | the Convention. But St. y delegation of four | heard so much of him everywhere on my route that I was | that the people of Kansas would vote down such a consti- | velvet and wih white ruche round thosleeves. The | The Indian killed was a son of Ink-pa-du ta, who hay fand committed like depredations. members oocupy nati eae eae ig position. Under | exceedingly curious to analyse his character and to detect | tution as the clamorers would frame for them; and the | gloves were black. The dress of the Princeas Royal was | married with the ao Tndians, at the timo he was kill- the law, as construed by the Legislature last winter, there | wherein the secret of his influence lay. I was not in | effort is, to thrust upon them by political trick and con- | very similar. On account of the wet weather, or for some | ¢d, was on a visit to er-in law. He is tho identical: ‘The distance from Mexico to Yguala is one hundred and | were two delegates elected for every representative in thd | discovering that it consisted in pr Mien eae Efvazes ‘what could not be ones by fair, demo. | other reason unknown, ber Majesty's countenance was of | savage who dragged Mrs. Noble from the lodge of the twenty-nine miles, It is rather a pretty place, conaining | Legislature, and two for every Councilman. When the | fail to win men’s hearts. In the first place, he keeps the | cratic means. Such ia the hae of the ‘the chivalry”? rather gloomy aspect. Yankton chief who purcha‘ed her, and after having satte- ‘8 population of about three thousand, the majority ‘Votes were counted in the St, Anthony district a majority | best that I nave anywhere with on my route, ¢ South; such the lame and i conclusion of all ‘Tbe Princess Royal ‘appeared to be in very good apace ot a meee Spee, Bank bee = om a eee 4 table met were for the democratic candidates, but there-wero oor- | and in the next he lets those who tale up their females. Its beautiful and healthy situation, the millions | tain votes cast which did not specify whether they were | his house do pretty much as they plese, Tat ‘country 80 long. companied Ink-pa du t's son, fled, it is supposed, to the of fruit of every possible variety thet the Mexican | for councilmen or represeatative delegates. These the | this, that be is one of the most quaintly amiable - | A paltry fraud. A political juggle. A legal swindle upon | a whole bead and part of a long neck higher than the little | 0!d chief’s camp on Skunk lake, Th was foarod by — climate produces, and the most singularly consiructed, or- | Register excladed, throwing the majority into the hands | tlemenly men that remainto us of the old school of country | the people of Kaneas—ineisted upon, demanded, clamored | Princesa who is soon to be his wife. He is nearly as tall | Persons at theagency that he would seck to avenge derly, dirorderly and disproportioned church that éver | of the republicans, an? the certiicates of election were | land He gives himself noend of trouble to oblige | for, by ‘the chivalry,” por excellence—by the pink and | as Prince Albert, but considerably slighter in build, as be- | 80n’s death by oon Se frontier eottlements. ‘constru ‘South, fite bis age, His bearing was upright and manly. 'Hehas A great deal of dissatisfaction ex's‘ed among the Indians i : A g i i her intended more than once Prince A 2 3 E £ & : i e ty : i 3 3 : § 3 i i was icted, make it an agreeable stopping place for | accordingly given to the republican candidates. The | and humor his gaeate, and be isthe more to be admired | pick politicians of the the traveller. ‘The charch is built after the order of | Validity of the election of Major Flandeau, (dem.,) the In- | for this as ho t to be extre weakhy and oaly “Our tools in the Convention will frame constitution | a flat, oblong, and not lofty forehead, a face of ave- | when Mr. Brown left the agency, caused by the prompt every order of architecture that the world 1s familiar | “an Agent for the Sioux, it is also said will be contested | receives visiters for his amusement. for Kansas;”’ ‘it will be such as the People would repu- rage intelligence, and of light complexion, light whi:kers | retaliation of the agent in terminating the career of the with, beside one or two orders between a cross of the | 0m the ground of his being a non-resident of his district There are from fifty to sixty boardors here at present, | diate;”’ “we will take care to prevent ir votieg upon | and other face hair, and brown hair on bis head. A broad | murderer,and also upon the ground of the arres' of his Mexican and Indian, which architec's, as a general thing, | | Now, admitting the Pembina delegation, admitting the | principally families from New York and Brooklyn, who, | it;” “we will juggle itthrough a show of mock formall- | orange colored sash hung from his shoulders across bis | wife. Good feeling was parially restored, however, by ‘are pot familiar with demooratic St. Anthony delegation, giving Major Flandeau | disihing the bustle, excitement and frivolity of the fash- | ties,” and ‘we will accomplish by chicane what we could | breast, underneath the coat, from the left shoulder to the | the release of the squa ¢, vac um ¢ iscovered, had me -pa-du-ta, or their mur- I had got thus far in my letter, and would probably have | his seat, and the republicans still claim a majority of three | ionable watering places, are glad to find here aquiet retreat, | not have accomplished by straight-forward, honest, de- | right hip, and the star of royal kingsbip was appeaded to | Connection with the band of gone on fudulging in speculation on the political prospects | {0 8 fall house; but counting on she absence of certain | where they can enjoy pure air, charming scenery and a | mocratic practice.” ‘Such is of the’ pe- | his coat on the left side, The Prince Consort’s sash was | derous exploita, Of this country, had not fate thrust before me intelligence | representative gentlemen at St. Poter, and for other rea | good table, ata moderate expense. To-morrow a party of | culiar champions of the South; such attitude in which | blue. There was but a small force of soldiers at Fort Ridgely, of an ipteresting character 1 ht by Oapiain Thaddeus | 80D8, the democracy are sanguine—belligerently sanguine | from fifteen to twenty more are expected, and by the end | they are striving to place the South before the Union and {From the Liverpool Courier, July 1.) and this seemed to encourage the Indians in assul & Mou, son of Dr Valentine Mott New York, who arrived | —0! saving the organization for themselves. St. An- | of the week the house, which can accommodate aboutone | before the world; such the humiliating depth of dishonor ‘The arrangement of the seats in the centré of the build- | bold and haughty tone. Mr. Brown, ho ever, met ‘at this place last evening, having left Mexico on the 14th | thony democratic paper boldly asserts and reiterates that | hundred guests, will be full, The society here is extreme. | —with faith violated, p! broken and reputation blast. | ing enabled the corporation of Manchester, all (with one | Sberman’s battery of Flying Artillery twenty miles below inst. In a very feeble state of beslth. at Yguala the | "pleas the Pembina delegation are admitted, and the | ly good, and there is no fuss or trouble in the way of dress | ed-.in which they would sink the noble democracy of the | or two exceptions) in their robes—the Aldermen in scar- | Fort Ridgely on Friday; they would reach the agency forces of Vicario were encountered; but no violence or | democratic St Anthony delegation admitted the Conven. | or ceremony. Every one is at liberty to do as he pleases, | slaveholding States. let, the Councillors in purple—to sit in front seats, eome- | Sunday and their presence would undoubtedly produce @ evon molestation was offered to travellers, partisularly {¢ | ton shall never organize; and { have beard prominent St. | and the result is the most perfect comfort and ease. The fraud is infamous enough in Itself; but itis doubly | what to the rigbt and is front of the dais. Invited guests | Change in the conduct of the Indians. they were for-igners. Juan Antonio, the Indian who bas | Pat! democrats assert the same thing so empha'icaliy and ‘The bouse itself is one of the quaiatest and most pictur- | so in being in violation of express pledges given by the | occupied other seats in the same ravk around the three Capt. Bee, commandant at Fort Ridgely, our informams been holding out for a month past at Caelapa against Gen, | knowingly that I almost balieve something quite des pera‘e, | esque old epots that you can imagine. In its old cup- | democracy of the Union, and participated in, in the most | sides of the parallelogram, in which the dais formed the | *tates, receiv: d a letter from Hon. Joseph R, Brown, dated Alvarez, bas joined a part of his forces with Virario, aud | Under certain contiogencies, may have been determined | boards and angular contrivances, filling up every nook and | solemn maaner, by the ultras ives. From the very | central feature. at Bole-in:the Moontain, stating that upwar’s of one hun- ts now arrayed in opposition against the government, | 2. Look out for a free fight, and when it comes you may | receas of the low roofed but spacious frame balding, with | first agitation of the slave question under the Wilmot pro- In a very conspicuous place in front sat six gentlemen in | dred and fifty lodges of Yanktons had assembled cn the with @ force of four thousand men. Affairs at Chelapa | rely on an accurate list of the dead and wounded. I have | its grotesque crab like additions; in its funny old oil por- | viso, down to the eventful campaign of 1866, the people of | naval vniform, who gave their names as Caplain W. K. | Big Sioux. to resist the passage of Col. Nobie’s command were no nearer a settioment than they were ai my last | 6D too much legislative bluster to believe that any | traits staring at you with goggle eyes from the walls, and | the South have insisted that the exclusion of slavery from | Hudson, Commander Pennock, Lioutenant North, Lieut. Seek is territory. advices. This is the first event in the life of Gen. Alvarez | blood will be spilled on the question of a democratic or | bearing unmistakable evidence] of their pre-Raphaelite | any Territory could only be done by the people of the | Vennop, D. Washington, Eosign Moore, Ensign M’Eimy, 1 Democrat of the following day is givem Ghat opposition bas been made against him by his own | Fepublican president and secretary of the convention, but | origin: in its preservation of all the good old habits and | Terriiory in adopting their State constitution preparatory | and John Hudson. Cheso were the officers of the Vaited | Mr. Flandrau’s own account of the above affair, The twe a Tcall them his people, because they have never | there will be some rather loud talk. observances of a past age, and its abhorrence of modera | to s¢mi:sion as a State, This has been the uniform tenor | States frigate Niagara, which is abont to take across part | *gree substanually, Mr. Flandrau adds:— own any otber leader in peace or war, and the hostility | _ Colonel Orr, of South Carolina, is now in this city, and | notions and innovations, this queer old spot will long be | of the Southern language upon the subject for the last ten | of the great Atlantic telographic cable. On our way from the place where we had killed the In- against bim st the present time 1s solely on arcount of the | bas made investments here and at other points in | cherished in the hearte of many after its hospitable tires | years. The democrats vegas, assembled in State Sag BEPT dian we passed through a large camp, and met them all imprironment of their priest, though he is the guest of the | the Territory. Governor Aiken was here a short time | are extinguished and its jolly old owner has paid the debt | convention in February, 1848, od eolemply for the ‘The Filibusters of England at the East. naked, painted and armed, ready to give fight. They, Prefect bove, and officiates in the church occasionally. since for the same purpose, and quite a num. | cfnature. Let us hope for the sake of old things in | right of the people of the Territories to decide this question | [Translated for the New Yorx Axeaun, from Le Constitu- | however, did not fire, and on. Generals Megrete and Degollado bad left Mexico with a | ber of Southern M. C.s have recently become | general, that another generation or two shall have had | for themselves, exclusively of the right of any representa tionel of Paris, June 28.] I never eaw #0 much bustle and excitement among the force of one thonrand infantry, two hundred cavalry, and | largely interested in real estate in this Territory. | time to get a peep at the habits of their forefathers before | tive body whatever— Congress, Legislature, The East India Company has just planted the Knglish | Indians as the next tbree hours presented. They assom- wix pleces of artillery, for Yguala. Before this itis pro. | Even the Vice President of the United tates | the fell destroyer passes this way. It would improve | Territgrial Convenor, or any other body to act meee the island of Perim, at the entrance of the Strait of | bled at the house where we were,fabout 300 fein alt bable that # brush has taken place between these bellige. | OWDE property here, it is said, to the amount of $150,000— | somewhat the morals, though it might not smarten the | for them. Here was Virginia's solemn and emphatic re- cl mandeb. As a territorial acquisition this occupation | armed and naked, Lp Re my no positive det rents. At all events the road will now be open for an un- | ® Tatber signifi ant commentary as to the imporiance | manners of young New York, to take a short iesson insuch is the very opposite of important: the island of Perim can | That night the men we could and passed the interrupted communication with Mexico, Southern politicians placo on their own predictions of a dis- | a school. Toone, however, with republicans and citizens of one of | never be made a colony. It isa rook, of four or five | Whole night awaiting an It was generally believed that on Corpys Christi day, the | Solution of the Union; and the fact itself {s an tmportant | come here. Five meals a day, with snacks between, are | theifree and equal States of the Union, we do most car- | leagues in circumference, barron, destitute of water, and | | The Indians brought up the body, end bad a large and ‘Tith inst., some demonstration would be made by a por. | one ip its bearing upon the possibility of that event. For | too much for the stomachs of degenerate city men. nestly protest against the Winthrop and Wilmot provisos, | situated in a suffocating atmosphere. long council over it, and many speeches were made sia- tion of the “ fool multitude,” to make the day aire i ‘8 politician to legislate money out of his own pocket would Tho jetor of the Sudbury Hotel, I should tell you, | as ‘weaton ‘violations of the constitetion ‘and wilful assaults 48 a military station, this island is of importance. | lar in their object to that of Anthony over the body of Ose- epicuous, if precauticn was not taken to guard against sach | be a circumstance that even the wildest enthusiasts on the | 1s reported to bo a lineal descendant of the great Claren- | on the rights and interests of one portion of our confede- | It oes deep and secure haven. isely because | *ar, but they did not Mind a response sufficient to induco am cundlogeney. ‘With that idea and belief the President | Subject of a political milleniam never dreamed of, If the | don. Ido not know how this may do, but the Lord Chea- | racy; and we do most solemnly declare that there is no | It water and vegotation the heat is not injarious, and | attack. + forces in the neighbortag districts to concentra'e | fact should ever become general that Northern politicians a pong con ager must bave somehow mix- | power elther in Congress or @ Territorial Legiviatare, or | Do greater amount of men will be lost there than io the ip the city the day previous to the general jollification, to | 8r¢ extensively interested in real estate at the South, aud | ed up with bis family pedigree. apywhere else, save only in the people of « Territory in 1 climates. Its position whore tho strait of Bab- Theatrical and Musical Affairs. remain under arms and render the assistance required, | Southern politicians at the North, you coud never raise th wy ne of a State constitution, pre; to ad- | el maneeb is Nimto’s Garpay.—Jerome Ravel’s 4 comic fairy ehould ‘ passing events cast their ehadows before.” No: | another respectable dissoludon excitement in the country, | A Deacon Expelled from the Church for | mission into the Union, to prevent the migration ci. | sue of the Red Sea by the Mediterranean and the entrance i be thing, however, transpired to excite the suppostion | BOt even to carry a Presidential clection ; and the almost ve ‘fer Buchanan. tizen of any State, with bie , whether it be slaves | by the Indian tomime continues as & favorite as ever with the coateriained, but there was one incident took place | fabulous fortunes made in theeo Western Territories within | The Grand Rapids (sfich,) Inquirer contains a full report | or anything else, to any which may be acquired | were of a long entire p i ereees cae eee ae ne Donen te Seaman which even surpassed the great insult. of the | the last three years have done much and will do more to | of the trial, conviction and ex; from the church of | by the common blood and treasure of the people of all | prised The tricks and lons in which the Ravela {othe Ayuntamiento of Juevos Santo the iin | Dring about Wat state of things so far as Soutaerners are | Deacon G. P. Stebbins, of the town of Alpine, im that coun | the Sates. Side and thore of Arabie on the other. Fee cietee Tanne ene Een ae 7 OF Ape Tat the paricnar of which 1 Yaforaed you i concerned. In this view of the matter Tam not sure that | ty. He was the first deacon of the church to which he bo- ee saps velo eee miainy Cente ehaaten of When ‘ne wee! from that resolution down to within a f¢ past, bas been | likewise repeatedly witnessed them. ‘'Bianco’’ is again announced om i Berron’s Tixarne. —The management announce that the with | season at this house will close on Saturday; consequently ords:— wary ia se ‘cieoted. with cae fokele “ns {t would be well for all who have not seen the ee Resolved, That we recognise the right of the people of cal position. It is the scoond koy of the Red Sea | spectacle of the ‘‘Naiad Queen”? to do so prior to that all the Territories, including Kansas Nebraska, soting ich the company tabes into ite hands. The possession | Arran ve been made to give a series of musical through the fairly expressed will of the majority of of Aden did not up that sea #0 hermetically that a | { in this at edifice dur- residents, and whenever the number of their inhabitants | vessel could not escape the vigilance of the officers of the | !ng the of the summer, for which purpose @ cibeis et nae — Serj ernemen nh cten wary | oe tani tte PEs Rees omee | simmnea acer one and to be inflicted were 59 severe, that there | 4 : wm» | Issecond to but one in that ‘that Christ set up in very, ‘upon : war, 8 enter 5 ‘would be few indeed who would dare to break through ble in the Mississippi University.” | 1 iy oid And tat Governors Sale, Kgs of nalions, perfect equality with the other States. Red Sea, or to get out of it without the authorization of the | Wattack’s.—The lhughable little affair styled “A Mam the Waves, fearfu! of auffering the consequences. all mo ive the following as an act of justice to Professor | and Presidents of the United States, and the offices they | | The tect oa which the demooracy fought the | British government. Without a Head,” in whish Mr. Waloot plays his originat ey Gah ight bo soieed ws way of the banks was to beap- Barnard, but the controversy, so far as we are concerned, Bil, are of lene note than the Geneon in Chriet’s cbarch and ee prey the laggard and noon mney he Mi... pg oe eo partof Mr. Ob Top, is to be the re to charitable purposes, jos Caught fined " office ration Southern politicians—was, right rests Protect. ‘maritime . Oblivious Piece ExdTimpetemst ante propery a heeap tee gume ends with this publication: — ‘Soon after he was furnisbed with a list of the charges | the people of the Territories to form for themselves their | route which commences at the arsenals of Portsmouth and ee - Sotrese ant btn Age ‘wns found was to be confiscated, and in case TO THE EDITOR OF TNE HERALD. against him; and after a long and tedious Investigation, the | State costitutions, a principle which the ultras plumed | I’lymouth, and of which the fortified stations aro dibral- | Weed, follows ph Big 100 of < fy ggg i 2 the punishment Fag My attention has just been calied to two artic’es which | Council reported as follows: — a Ais neni gry Cone ee 1 Sees, Keon oak Aden, is on ematre conneal mi ere ean ee ite oe agen oe 9 oted. democratic go-abead . "ARTA, 5 , these mirrors of honor oppese Hons which offers trade strations dation. +8 Capitally supported ervor Baez was entrusted with this lookout, and hes | *PPeared In your journals of the 6th and 10th inst., headed | The council appointed by the Grand Rapids oi Ge Ubmiselon of euch a constitution as they would frame for | islands an immense and ever market. Thecom: | by Miss Jule Manners, Messra ‘Waloot, Davenport, aad seized, it is reported, over $500,000, nor bas a single dollar | “ The trouble in the University of Mississippi;”’ the first | ference to meet with Alj and Sparta church, hay pong at md because the people would vote it | mercial transactions of England with India are cstimated vorite artists. Deon applied to any charitable object. The inguiry Is now | being a reprint by you from a Southern paper, of the pro. | ¢xmined the testimony presented relating to the case down. They thus propose a fraud no; only mean and in- | at millions of tons, and the annual increase cf this trade is Otymric —The silvery current of public patronage com- made, what bas become of this fund? | osaings had Dea. G. P. Stebbins, present the following vin famous tn itself, but doubly so, in expressly viola- | calculated at hundreds of thousands of tons. The most re- | tinues to flow inte this soug litle box with an impetuosity The ‘so indignant that the good people | °*edings had at a general mecting of the under graduates | “Charge 1. Deception. tive of the most solemn public p edges. We tell them, that, | cent statistice show an increase of a bundred and sibbty- | thai threatens to compel the management to sock more sbould entertain a suspicion of wrong that he actually re | of the University, in consequence of an atrocious libel That, is our opinion, is not sustained. however hey mayjucosed in misleading public opin‘on for So oment ee Sagan nevenien of Re Ted seas | commodious quarters ere the fall season opens. All who signed his position. Strange lo say. the resignation was | against my brother, Dr. F. A. P. Barnard, President of the | 2. Unebristian conduct. : @ moment, the of the South, the honest | during the yoar 1806 cuit 's nothing compared to the de- | ike to laugh can indulge the propensity to thelr scoopted by the President, but on the following day the | Caiversit ppd ‘Gott Sustained, but removed by confession, except the last | masses of all parties in the Seuth—the honorable, law- | velopement given to the Interchange between | content by going to night and witnessing “ All the Wortd’e Governor asked jon to reca'l his document, which versity, printed and circu! through Y | specification, viz.: the accusation againat the church at the | Sbiding, faith keeping, chivalrous South herself, will re. | India and the metropolis when the raliroads and canals | 4 stage,’* Olympians,” ‘and the “ Man.” The was granted, and he is now, as usual, nightly climbing | Lewis Harper, State Geoloffst; and the secon’ a commu- | public meeting, which demands a more fall retraction and | {use to countenance 60 ‘monstrous a fraud, so bald a parti. | in course of execution shall be open to the public Upto | taau ‘embrace the names of Mrs. Messrs. Chan- pine yh thy Bowe poy quiely — down | nication of Lewis Harper in answer to tbe same. ae = RE s a rr paltry, yp py Wy the present Soares “oe cere ean frau, T. B. Johnston, Hall, &c. 1» Tt s ' lec! would su a . ansas > most rags taxes pe are nip og alee bears,” much to their die | ro articles demand afew words from me. Iathefire | 2% Publicly declaring that he would support slave! cerned out | *utailon obnoxious to her’ pesgin Ina repeble weere Imporing the products of Fogish menu | | Muwrxa.sy —Unexceptionsble programmes are offered Another decree bas been {asned, which must certainly | place, they are erroneously beaded; they refer to no | #o far as bis act in voting for Bachanan, he bas thrown | the will of the majority overrules, to be outvoted is to red years since Lord Clive laid the ty, White's Serevaders, at the American Masoum; by Gee, have a tendency to place Comonfort in a weaker and more | “trouble” in the University of Mississippi, for none exists, | his tnfluence in favor of slavery. suffer no di oT what State or land could the sons = Pe in that country by giving bat risty and Wood's Minst: at iid Broadway, and by feedle position Recently a law bas been enscted whereby In th A plnse, th ie H t N. K. Bvarts, Clerk. E G. GILLEY, Chairman. of the Sout [FI ee egg) shame, if the | tle, with a single Eoglish regiment and a few sepoys, to an | the Bryant Brothers, at 472 Broadway. The “ tbe owners and tenants of property are most unjustly | 1 the second place, the statemen’ of arper that The Freewill Baptiet church of ‘Alpive and Sparta, after Soutu, after pledging troth and honor to abide by the | army of ferty thousand men, commanded by the sove | opera’ ‘lourishes at all times, no matter how un} taxed. Perbaps it is the only course left to | “the atiack upon hischaracter” (alluding to the published | the Council of Ministers from the quarterly meeting had | “ecision of the people of Kansas upon their institutions, of Bengal. It required no less than « century to | tha searon or the weather; consequently the merits of the raise fends to carry on the government It certainly | proceedirgs of the students) « attributable to the | examined the above charges preferred against Deacon G. finding that she would be outvoted, Id succeed by art- the government of Bengal—now the government of | parties just pamed are too universally known and appresl- comes hard, and the feeling is in violent opposition against | students o! the Universit P. Svebbins, and exonerated bim from them ail on his ex- | fel jogglery and cunving trick in eluding « com: all Indis—think of commencing the mort urgent works of | ated to require eulogy at the present day, the decree.’ The example of the law 1s as follows:—Yoa ae gone entegp te quintien solely from the | Planation and invesication, not eatistied called Mr. Sieb- with her pledges? Her rabid ultra politicians may seek to | irrigation and travelling facilities. But however tardy they | powsny Tuxarms.—Mr. E. Eddy, the popular actor, am- are the owner of a house or prozerty for which you re- | spontareous impulses of thore honorable avd maaly feel ine before a single church ineeting, voted him clear on | biacken her fame by leading her into such a step; bat her | may have been, their execution will render incalculable | pounces that ue will open the old Bowery next Saturday ceive one bonéred dollars per month; on that one hundred | {ngs which, in young men, themecires membera of the | #!! Charges preferred against him, save voting for Mr. Ba- | Statd, sterling, honest democracy will have no part nor lot | service; and when all India shall be covered with railways | evening with a good stock company. Tis will be pl dollars you bave got to pay the government six percent, or | ('hiversity, could not fai. to be poe chanan for President of the Unitet States, excladed him | !2 the infamy, and will resist it to the bitter end. Dema- | and artificial rivers, the produc» and the commerce of this | ixformation to the old or thet cerabeomenea, wake fix dollars; apd | for renting the eame have got to pay to | famous libel, printed and exter for that one act by a majority of one. es and charlatans may practice upon her sober | country favored by nature, will be. developed to an extent | whom Mr. K. is a decided favorite ax an artist, who 1 or ¥ > ct y et all the arts of sophi: and deco of which we have as yet no idea, the government three per cert, or three dollars—making | one who, (> the high position of ‘The facts upon which the charges are founded are ag | fomouncy Oo s, Fec demntems wil tate: |” Sup bribcngeveruntens shows Walenelty ten atvibrevte Whn ths tess, slosh ood eduaeey with wise Die ‘esident of the | in all pine per coat on every one hundred dollars on every | ty united the sacred character of a minister of tne Gos. | follows: — | house in, Bexico Certainly a very nice income may be | pol. and these precocd 1 1 In the fall of 1854, previous to the Presidential election, | foresight, and prepares with constant solicitude the advent | accredit him,'be has m fair opportunity of woquii Gerived tn this way for the support of tho government, | Dat cumnown id, tus Freheons ean after thoy bed tase divsatisfuction took” place tm the churel about Stebbins Pages tn their Seomsionse 8 oft propery een eeaune the English peo: | an drome furteno ? eae © ut of ite popularity it ts quite another aifair. voting; he has for vine years beon kuown as a democrat poy ey . " The three daye recreation, commencing on St. Jobn’s ermore, it is simply false that “public rumor? | in thetown of Sparte. a man that decidedly supports the | institutions—they will not repadiate tho great State rights | greatness of the Indian a eee neers | on Oren COMRANE OE COURT—PERUGINI AGAINGE day, June 24, bave passed, and such another spree of men vee the Pre of the Lovversity (to whom Mr. | Cobstitotion of the United States. atthis period Elder princtple of allowing ie pore of each State the free aod they are #0 susceptible, #0 anxious, #0 jealous, we VESTVALI. and women--not drunken, bat of # convivial nature--1 would bave it believed the proceedings of tho | Brastus W. Norton asked him tf he voted tre liberty ticket, | Uatrammelied exercise of the prerogative of choosing their | may fay, of every shadow—not of rivalry, it is imposal- [From the Cinciuvat! Gazette, July 13.) never before witnesses. Every “creeping thing” in the dents stiributable) of impr oper conduct, He seid he did. Simeon Rouse asked him who he was | OWN institutions of self government. ble—but of commercial competition {n the Oriental reas. ‘The whimreys and periodical unimiableness of Italian horse, mule or jackass line, have been brought into requi | @ full year's unwearied labors ot going to vote for, for President Stebbing did not imme- We feol a sense of humiliation in arguing such a propo- | Because they enjoy almost a monopoly of that ocean they | operatic artiste have become proverbial. The peculiar sition t0 give fla’ to the’ afair. These three tara bave | sy -oved w comstitate = public ror diately answer. ‘Rouse raya, “You are not going to vote | sition; but what ad could the South derive from the | are rather inclined to conelnde that they alone can be inte. | power which coables humanity to execute bravaras and been looked forward to with a great deal of anxicty, and | * h‘residence of twenly years ia tine states of Alabamaand | for *lavery, are yout” Stebbius replied, “No,” and tra. | fraud and trick? How lon would a constitution last that | rested in gation and that no other merchandise than | Cadeozas, ‘nterpret Bellini, Donizetti and Verdi, or shine I suppose they have passed of much to the pleature of | stissirsippi. an exalted pro!rasioualap -cieutific reputauon, | Yélled on, as he had mot Rouse in the road, ‘For these | Was imposed upon Kansas against the sentiment of her | that of Fngland can be brought thore without tae concep- | in any way upon the lyric stage, seems to affect the thove who engaged in the foativities f& moral character of uneullied purity, and many years | abewers he was charged with deception. : people? | Not a year would elapse in the history of the new | tion of projects hostile to theif Indian possorsions The | ti> duct to euch an extent as to cause {t to overilow in My last informed you of the death of four erantchilaren | tntmore arte moet distibgusbed citizens of | . Steins admitted that he bad made the answers, but | State before a new constitution would be formed by com: | Tima, ing of the on of the Island of Perim, | humor, and generate the most unaccountable of caprices. of Gen. Alvarez, three of whom were of the family of | those Sint rendered the object of the libel. | ¢efended himeeif as followe:— pvt ye and pny o— raid — eto oe Li ayo Le that the ren RS peoulier aca high art masic and Se, D Diego, and one of the family of 1 Enoarpacion Alvarez, | jer's yenom’ “well ft . ¥ First. That the di tic ticket, which he di ‘ Score and exec: of an out public matn VO possession eo etween quavers and querrulourness, semi breves oua- £0, rarnilly ler's venom’ “well ko in those States; and he is too jemocratic ticket b he did rote, bed oe jon of the Red Sea. vity, has never been explained, and only can be upon the rons of the General Last night, doring the beighth of fe: | «well known’ bere, to need any defence from me. fupported the most liberty privciples of any ticket now in | The Inst state of the “Southern caure”’ in Kansas (God save tivities, news arrived that eath’had ‘cut off in the blos Though “far” trom the Stats of Mississippi, 1 hagpen to | ¥ORUe. That it gives to all new Sintes, shen annexed, or | te mark’) would be worse than the firet. The trick and tom of bis youth” D Focarnacien, on the morning of the | have in my postemdon documentary ertdence of the acca. | @t the time of annexation, the liberty to frame their own | !mporition, the broken faith and forfeited honor of r 26th, with smallpox. The scenes of mirth were in an in- | racy of my stater evidence to which are appended | Constitution as best sulted them, oaly it should be | the South, would be household words of infamy where centres of exchange will be established. | & vast diatonic scale, which It 's their duty to atcond and stant charged to roenes of madness and weeping. Such | tne names of citizens of M ihe tat ditio. | in Keeping with the constitution of the United | i Kapeas, which would become for all time « | Eastern Africa offers certain resources to commerce. They | descend a# suddenly and rapidly as possible, dazzling by Hiates—it might be in favor of slavery or not. He | Leeming ive of oar revilers., The Both betray ed, indent, are hidden, ’ke that diamond of the tory, which had to be | contrast and brilisnt combinations of conduct, as of dia- sumpion. The day may come, and wo do not | ground that the artiste ef the opera regard life upon the distant, when other navies will penetrate into | principle of Swedenborg’s doctrine of correspondenses, a Jameotations might have been very well for thr Indiane . : i vane bot Teertainly 21 not expect to Dear and see euch grief ay ~ sey ree 0 nation: pir temp on believed it to be the duty of every Ameri. | by the opponents of the fiand’ On the contrary, who will | sought for beneath the sea, throu dangers; | tinct notes in their profession. A prima donta who never fapd actions from the resisents bere inley suamenn the 9 os Of the stadeute, too of Whice | AD Citizen to support the constitution of the United States, | Undertake to estimate the injary, obloquy and infamy that | but their richness will amply recompenre the intelligent | lost her temper would be believed a spurious article, and - - 1 ‘en ‘ask you to re 2 He believed ine democratic principles and influence to be | Would be entailed upon the South by the achievement of | explorers. Thirty years have not ela since the dis. | & primo tenore who bad never disappotnted an audience Commerce of Lake Superior. 4. Resoly rc auti slavery. To prove this, he enys that all the States | the fraud which is meditated by bw ultra politicians? | covery of the properties of the nut, (arachide,) | would eoon find none to hear him. Operatic artiste will [Correspondence of the caseane | Press } sor hero that ever abolished slavery bad abolished it under ademo- What, too, would be the influence at the North of our | which grows on the Western Coast of Africa, and at pre- | bave their vagaries, in mpite of reason and regulation. " ‘Rene Oa, ae, 2 1887 Sasoved bate tobe thalie wneertty O80 t “~™ cratic administration, which is undeniably 60. He also breach of faith and wanton violation of pledges? | sent hondreds of French vessels arc freighted with it. | Some misunderstanding bas, for some time, existed be- s ST x y A and Ww by side with the Northern democracy we fought in | The Foglieh journal is therefore wrong in reserving to ite | tween the members of the Tialian troupe performing im out twenty five rail vessels bave ugh the | incompetent to discharge the cuties 0° his chair . | maintained that slavery now covered less territory, in pro- ~ ona me peanee, very few of them loaded go sep’ ther inornere, that we royty regard him as coniiea vo tuo portion to that embraced in the United States, tea ‘aia 1856 for the right of the people of the Terriiories to form | countrymen the monopoly of a navigation to which the | our city, and Signora Vertvali, and last Saturday eult wae have nearly all returned, bowover, heavily loaded favor or confidence of the people of Mississippi At the time the colonies entered into a compact for the pur. | their own organic institutions—our formal resolution de. | whole world may pretend. But taking tnt» consideration | brought befbre Esquire Chidsey, by Signor Perugini, the fron and copper. The whole number of vosseis, of al 6. Resolved, That the iev. F. A. P. Barnerd, I pore of protection against toreign foos; that at that time | Claring thi should be determined by the ‘expressed | the great maritime and gagamercial movement whish, one | director of the orchestra, against tho fair contralto, for scriptions, that have passe locks in both directions | President of the University of ‘Mississippi, so far there was bot one th ricenth part froe—Massachusctta | Will” of ‘actual residents.” We now endeavor to quibble | way or the other wil Produced in the seas of | recovery of fifty dollars, claimed for services ren lored im daring the month of Jane is kvowielgsor information extends, has ever sustained the | Delng the only free State at that time, And now, oat of | Ovt of our solemn pledges, and denounce a proposition to | Eastern Africa, of India) China, we can perfectly un- | the arrangement of music for her prima donnaship. ‘The total amount of iron ore Jemished reputation, whether aa a gentleman, a | thirty-one, there are sixteen free States allow the Terrilory the privilege of ‘expres. | derstand why England, Which already bas immense inte ‘The magistrate’s office was nearly filled with the mem- June is 5,766 tone; the total er, & profeasor of a president: and that Hie was alzo charged with eaying publicly that he would | me" their own “will = their own constitation We reete opgaged in these regions, should take positions and | bers of the troupe, nearly all of whom, including the oho and other ports in Jane, 1,700tons; the total amount | ceem him eminently qualified for the high position which | *¥Pport slavery, which they coulo not and did not prove. | hare fought @ great battle side by side with the | ‘material guarantees,” to use a word which is received | rus, were summoned a witnesses, and what litle space aie coal for ports abore, 1,200 tons, * be eccupies 80 wortbily } Jeetion came on, and he feeling it his duty, vote! te ue conetitutional men of the North for @ great democratic | in political languege. Not only does one conceive it; ho | was left vacant was Immediately occupied by curious ob- ok, lam, very reapecfully, your most ob 't. Buchanan. Le ne nn J as by the chief priests and | principle of right and justice, and we seek to «i admires the ragacity and Ormnees with which the Englich | servere, The opera troupe drew so well that we do not rougl ipped from Marquette in cf copper frm Ooto | Christian mi The propelier Mineral Rock, Captain I. Fraser, passetl uJ ~ ; . elders the Saviour was bi before Pilate’s bar, the prieciple and evade our pledges to execute it vernment seizes advantageous poritions and profita by | think the office bas been #0 crowded since its opening, gereneh eo canal July 1, bound down. Her load was as Brevet Major, Corpe chee’ 8 the chief pricste and Fdwin, was be brought bere ae fanfully, the fret moment an occasion arises for ite | J gd moment to lay hold ‘of them, One would be | and certainly not by such partios and claimants at law. From Minnesota mine, Ont 126 tons © r; from 7 : bd iid in judgment seat of Sparta and Alpine Free Will Baptist | ®/plication. Can the Northern constitutional democracy | inc! to think that, unceasingly bent over the map of There was the night-baired Leonora, who had for- Rectlind wine Gee te Canaan ook nee std hice sieea! Mime .. | cboroh. fad op against thelr adversaries in the face xf aush panic | Europe, it follows with never slumbering vigilance the | gotten her Manrico and his rival, the hateful Oonde qutue, Ootonagen, 7 pe be hen ¢ Cid mine, Ragle Tae New Dome or tar Carrrot.—This splendid He pleaded guilty to voting for Mr. Buchanan, and upon | Comduct on the part of their allies’ If wo repudiate a | march and the progress of British commerce. It provides | ¢i Luna, in the effort to ven} sulfation in the eat Tata sso pad eles Se nies adie | Monument of American genius is to be of cast iron that charge was expelled the chureb. J jvst, wite conservative principle of democracy by #0 | for all immediate wants, divines its future necessities, pro- | close aimorphere of the Magistrate's Court, Here river’ Ob tens on per, ton Amer’ Porat Lake giase, 124 feet in diameter at ite colomnar bace, and rising iene palpable a fraud and wanton a piece of folly as that pro. | pares shelter and resources for it, facilitates ile movo- | Gennaro thought not of the beautiful but wicked Sateen few Care. Fong tna; | Above the main butlding to a height of over 200 feet; the oh of Hape on the High Sens. powed by the extremista, we teach the constitutions’ de. | ments, widens the sphere of ite activity, proparos upon | Lncrezia, whowe fate soomed #0 interwoven with his ; bs to nT mae, Forme ' apes consisting of a magnificent lantern 17 feet in diameter, 4 : o mocratic conrersa iver of the North, that we are incapa- | tbe ocean yesting places where it may repair Me strength but rather of a place where he could sit at ease, The . and 62 feet bib, surmounted by ® bronze statue of the UNITED STATSS COMMISSIONER'S COUKT. ble of adbering to any national principle; that we are | under the hadow of the British fing and if delicate and eweet voiced Amina walked no f ie ia the mort copper thatever passed throngh the | Genius of Liberty. 1636 feet in height. The foundation of Before Jos. Brid pore igham, Ey vn worthy of any faith they may repose in our word and | another fight, which brings it to the extremitios of the | ber sleep, but stared wildly at the crowd, and by "it wesdente nen @ Contained 8,000 108. | the dome is to be the circular wali of the rotando, carried Jory 1S —The Onited States ve Geo. Comway —Tho de- Foner and we prontyaty orery man and at the | earth Jt is this eame foresight that brought war inte | as if her heart were singing “Ab non giunge’’ in atlent > 7 pare | Up 24 feet above its interior cornice, and surrounded above | sie wing i oof hs Atnetnn tet jorth who shall contend for our constitutional righta, We | Persia, the same wisdom which put an ond to the struggle | earnestness. Enrique stood near the magistrate, Dongs 4 T Rock's tonnage in 6 With the aber the roof of the main buildiag by an octagousl entablasare | f2dant, w' captain merican ship Switzerland, | orogtrate the democracy of the North; we realize Mr. | by treaty, very moderate, moreover, the true aim of | much more diligently to gain an ides at what was Loading she drow Il fect alt aud 103 feot front. ie og, | S2d balcony. From cast iron brackets embedded in this | is charged with the violation of a female passonger on the | Kelt’s prediction by installing the black re yubiisene in | which is to insure the stability of the populations which | sald than to catch the glance of his Maria di Rohan, ni eT diticaty on ber way deen’ gue Sk | circular wall are to rise acouble row of hollow cast iron | tact voyage of that vessel from Liverpool to this port. peesession of the federal government in 1860; reparste Russia from the Angio-Indian empire. It is thia | livious likewise of the slain Ricardo, Orsini had foo pe ~~) ki eon er may tone. Sve rua | columae to the helght of 27 fest Thie colounade 1s to be | Mo Vornks Of tat resee fromm bie the Union; and afer the vast and mighty mi name policy, continually awake to British interest, which | antidote to the poisoned Canty, and lived again in the eground , ou! | crowned by an entablstare of 7 feet. Above that a poles. us ts ve of the presecetriz:— bave bern done, we lay up far oureelves the consolation | {ite out fleets and embarks troops to bear to China civilize. | voluptuous person of Vestvall, who, though smiling and looking tli bait ber copper, losing two days time. She lefi the Sault | trade, with fancy attic, 44 feet bigh, and covtracting from Haggard, being duly aworn, r 5 1, t . depores and says that | of knowing thet we have done itall by a | Won and English merchan¢ire. amiable, frowned ever and anon w the irate * morsiag, Fate gi ye ne the BL. if ameter; cap of the dome, semi. | the is about the age of Z| years: that op or about the 14th | frana ope tive poopie of Kaneas, by wrtalang our fain The English jourpals remark, with a jest pride, that the | and mourtachoed Pervgini. os ow, v elipsoidal, and 67 feet in height, with oroamental windows | April jast depovent left Liverpool aa a steerage pascongor | with our political Irlende of ibe North, and by forfeiting | folicitode of the government is not only seconded but al- | The trini was amusing enoogh, with {ts interprotors and ee ‘At ite base. This is to be eurmounted by the iantern and | in the ship Sw#itreriand, a vessel belonging in whole or in | our honor befare the world, most always anticipated by commerce. Nothing, im fast, | broken English, ite pure Tuscan, ita gestures and recitative Trot mm a Pexwevivanta Toratar— The Pitts. | statve of Liberty. The dome is to be simply a continua- or citizens of the United States, for the And what a rbort sighted policy would It prove for the | Can equal the zeal of tho English commorcial nary. Its | mode of expression, ite dark eyed cantatrices =~. Dorgh Dispatch fornishes the following —A riot occurred | von of the rotundo, and ite whole iatertor will be visible at York; that on or avout the 16th of April South if ber ultra men were Wo succeed In achieving their | eplrit of adventure and of calculation, at the same time | plexed looking men, its arrangement of artists in at the theatre in Chambersburg on tho 4th, between a.com. | from the floor of the rotundo, Above the cornice of the | 1867, in and on board af said ship, oa the highweus, out object in Kansas’ | The principle of the Kenass-Nobraska | the certainty of Mts combisation and the energetic perve. | situations, ite complete, in a word, ‘opera in « magiatrate’e pany called the “Owls’’ and citizens of the place. The | rotundo, on the interior of the foundation wall of the dome, | the jurisdiction of any particular Siate, Ko., one George | act bas been claimed aaa Honthern principle. Certainly | verence it displays in the execution of them, are above | office appearance. Owls demanded admistion free of charge, which was re. | will apsear a continuout belt of sculpture, 890 fect in | Conway then and there being the matter and commander | the South sustained itm opporition to the perpetuation of | all what constitute ite strength and its preponderance. It The trint occupied more than two hours, and fused. ANer considerable Oghting, they made an attemp: | length, representing the bistory of America, fhe dome is | of eald ship, did then and there feloniourly and wi'h force | the Misrourl Compremine, which was the competing moa | i# by there qualitics it obtains empire, much mere than by | peared very intoroeting to the bat final to force the door, in which they succeeded, and rushed | to be ascended by epiral stairs between ite outer and inner | commit ar thie deponent and against the will and | pure urged againat it by the North. The South, ta deny. | building fortresses and casting cannons. Fortrosses can be | terminated in favor of Vestvall, who, highly dell Into the room, making for the stage, in order to grasp the | bell, or it» roof and celling. There will occur fequent | omsert of thir deponent ing row Wo the people of Kansas the right to pass apom | reduced; cannons can be silenced. A svocessful war fre. | with the result, kissed her white gloved hand to the ma- Abeatre performers. As they did ro the wildest scene of | Iandings or balconies, affording both external aad internal The prosecutrix also alleges that the Captain promised | (heir own oom*titotion, would destroy the work of her own | quently suffices to throw down and d forever works | gistrate, in token of her appreciation of American confusion occurred, and the Indies set up & tremendous | views. The prese:t ata ¢ of the work on this structare is | her marriages. hanée, and repndiate her own priveiple, upon no other | of ‘elence, laboriously com, by tho labor of a | and murmuring “Giorno fellce, giorno felice!” « ory of fear, rushing in all direotion for safety. The theatre | the ft¥ing of the cast-iron brackete in the foundation for The case was ret down for to day, but was postponed | pretext than the ehildieh, petulant one that ite execution | whole century. Bat what always subsists, what makes | proudly and hanghtily away. men bad gone out through & back door, finding that | the reception of the cast (ron columns — Washington Union, | until Friday next. jn thin case would enure to the benefit of the North. How | the imperishable force of a State, is those qualitios wo Perugipi twisted in moustache, and endeavored to be their “bird had fown,” the infuriated “Owls” were pre. | July 14. yp eee eggs then could #he expect the North, in aNer years, to Fointed oat, and whict the English poople possess in the | resigned, though « diavola hissed out of his lips. Sete vailed upon to leave the room. Another soeue of violence te = = Warprxses Euronation To Vinornta—It is | ibir principle when the people of the new #lave Maton gpa degree. looked calmly and stoteaily at the retiring crowd, Macoa- then occurred at the foot of the stairs, in which some of the Tre Crtzexs oF La Crosae, Wis., Bora | now stated on reliable authority that Mr. Lorriaux har se. | hall be formed out of Texas and the vast tropical regions ‘oe are by pe means of the occupation of the | ferri, who is said to ben devotee at Vostvail's shrine, Citizens and the “Owls” principally participated, and | pows Huteys or Itt Fare —Wowen Por wo Futonr asp | cured three thousand acres of good land, to be ovcupied | opening out beyond ber to the vaat Southwest, shall island ef Perim, slthough it may pase for a laxury of pre- zo after her form, and clasping hisa+- which the police meade unavailing efforis to prevent. | IsvcrRy.—There was an exciting time up at La Crosse on | by bis congregation, about to come to this country =aem | cot covstitutions sanctioning negro slavery, and Mdomand | caution against purely faaginay We fave ds. (gether, uttored, ‘Ah, mia Guilictta,”” in imitation: . After ineffectual efforte to quell the distarbance had been | the night of the Oth. The Demsorat, of that place, saye:— | bering rom hundred French Waldenser—in Mono. | admirsion into the Union’ Standiog upon ths great | scribed the susceptibility of the Englis} I that concerns contralto in mace by the town officers, ft was at last rorolved to call | For some monthe our city has been dir, by fifteon or gatia county, Virginia, within eight miler of Morgantown, | fundamental State a doctrine of the right of | India, In thet regard this po | and courageous na out a military company, which bad come inte town'from | twenty meblic prostitutes, associated with nearly as many | and only twenty miles from the Penosylvania line, at the | the prople of the to determine their own | tion ecems to be id of its shadow, But what we onry Gettysburg during the evening. By & prom™ ¢ weil | pimps and biacklegs. Oar citizens have been much trou- | low price of seventy five cents per acre. This geutioman | inetitetions, bow could the demand of the South for | Is the certainty in enterprises, the excellent discina0 of C\rected effort thie company #o~™ Gisbanded tho e-owd ; foe wenice, and inst night the indignation came toa | supposes the report of hie purchase will induce many | the admission of there States be inaisted upon, and her | mind, the conduct—wise and moderate at home, Ove was faially ‘njaged, bet © inegor Domber ware cut and | fons. Some two hundred men visited one of the dens, | thousands of French Protestants to seek new homes in | claim tothe votes of the national democracy to ald her in | adventarove abrosd—wi sopran> tba gasmat, oad clssed + ith S bee a) acl near Deoerm Smith's, set fire to the house, and after rom: | the aame or similar localities, loaving their own country sooerieg their admission be maintained, ther 90 grom a | Roglish people. Theii rouls tewas aware of woas $20 had + doring scene eeristance to save the furniture, they passed | where their dearest rights are always in danger, aod | breach of faith? This, if wore not more than men, | pr Sad ceveepane’ but, | doing —_— ones over to tho St Charles, some two miles distant, and, al- | where land commands « price of from $900 Yo 9600 per | wonld be their bitter retort : “ We aided you in establish) | above all, the Fnglish ho, yrivives. ‘The 9 Pomaear <vore © though the femates were preparing to leave, and the far Lacre. log this principle demanded by yourself; wo plighted our | first of these two coniltione Of procparity, lot ua try 6 their b whed, and\.um the rest niture put out of the house for the the mob ost ——______. faith with you thal we would mutually #ustain each other | quire the second. troupe i 6 Geemen, fire to the house and then burnt the Both houses | Exar Vierrma rw one Faminy.-We cut the | in engrafiing it upon the policy of the country; but, on the ‘The de. ¢!, 114 +5900 Vie mungisteate’s coert, agaia was are a heap of ashes. The mob woald have fired two more, | following from the obitoary announcement in the Montreal | firet occasion of ia application, you Fopadialed the prin. Lanos Ronpenr at i" Tho sci Of & | visible—thc Fr” , «ec hof the Italians was beard no more bot for being dispunded from it by the Mayor and marshal, | Gasdis of Wednesday inst:—Periahed, on the ateamer | ciple, you broke your faith, you forfeited your honor, you | Cuban family wae ent , between 6 | —the robes ./.conora and Amina no longor rustied im and by pl Hinge, Dumfries. | eruehed down our party af the North by your and 7 o'clock, while the family wore end GL,098 | the pasees. of leeal prosesere—ie, presiding gee that the inmates would leave town. Those | Wontreal, Jane 26, Brive Hail, Bridekirke i ‘Scotland led nie com. of the fourth house bad not left at last accounts, and the . | duet, and yon ‘rpowed ua to the mockery and derision of | in gold coin taken from the truss, and aa much more ie | arowe, and though the sweet notes of ; aged 42; also, Jane, his wife gaged 47; Wii my man % years old, $1 Vigilants were threatening to burn thelr bquae down, aged 22; Simon, Robert’ fo; Puan ormaries. jewelry. A valuable diamond dropped by the | echoed in the sanctuary, the sunbeams had glided from wu ‘woman 35 years old, Some of the women wore injured, FI ‘thelr daughter, aged $, iasry nua, 1h 1% bey South will not countenance this outrageous | robbers in their fight, No setae Trend ‘the Boor and the opera waa over