The New York Herald Newspaper, July 9, 1858, Page 2

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cS = 3 R SI 3 , FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1658. ta ond were ’ &, gon of thy detlls'of tis nas. The Tact are | “AU ee eye ute gotourronk itorian: | ot the toore remarkable inven, "The Sonu Calves snes ome eetent | adie Sere fa roe , ‘ BNGLISH OO! DRSOLATE FOR WANTOF HANDS. the profite of | right is not established by law, it io at least ne~ ‘the of ourown ment | the voyage to Havanna im 150 4 5 be Coal, & veenel sit to the Wes! Coast of atx | Hob, coupled with tbe experics ot, Gr aus trom | gramie she lost 128 Ae OE. Wee {From the Times, June 24) ue ae a] Frmaane, he | commany Oaths be made amonget the nations Sin ‘tree laborers for our car Simon, witha view to, | Urea Ded falod, lod timn to regard: thie toaster with ihe | O€ 333, frPe,Babls lord instanced some oiber shige, tne | in reanous Sf Willem Wilberforce hive euassaded to the | i, sgcringe cher te fe 4 ay Hy a on the 2b 0! that place etrenuowe- | utmost Bear, hear.) With regard to the | names of which were not clearly heard.) It must be N tovselect for bit operations tat Treeide! beria he should like to eee his own account | remembered thas these were realy | See Oe, eB may, perhags, 00 8 a gunet Shove oll oibere, and ‘hey botk proceaded Mon: | Fd the Taoesti a to iow wher he atialtied | sent from Kong ul whieh toeares C4 fey ant deren el rhe fom Of the ailalf. The Preatdent af that a ge learning avipg sanctioned the embarcation ane bane Zs afraid a ——— ‘was | companions of William Wilperforce have worked them. S’det pow teers ter ‘ve wees whe | Seld teas malaria Mnthetacey ut he wasin- | gard to ing was quite irae, and thet these poor | selven.outot work. The oaiie which was once certo carry out Me ma czclusively in the | make a alteration nae; ~ aot, © » ee poor | tenance and of their lives bas territory of the Liberian Captain Simon hastened to | formed that the President of that republic condemned ‘Were got on. not by by Pay into the hands of the wn of 1,664 | the part only by kidnarping, objec nto on. ‘They 2 i ; | Broceoinge mow going on on the oe, Afr t rane Lt my te chanioally recall the fervid phrases of = bre were oe aut be Sing the ne or ike Preaek on ie, the Hogtas was ban On Oe ooo the ~~ EE that te iu ) ity years vies he : and in small branches of a0 tite oe ‘ & ade. Soe te) repression of the slave . Ge. the wuhjecs of out casigrasion, and on waics the Britah | capt cord hare 20 right to take ponseesion of 1k: Dut they were suben to pec of service, which, uader Giarksoa Beary on a0 te th nod mates Take pare mance, mm, az ‘their ows | that there i no salt wen tho two ase thera | on circumstances emigration, amount country, women wo th the effects: results. rece Me uate a | pam aes money Me mat Ee | i fri rear aeronceiepe| huiehaas mevmtiedeenmatione | Ba nats Gate GPa a care, under the superintendence of ian a iy ra pas. cross the oosan swell as af the the French; B held that their rising was «justifiable aot, and that pote thal a man én a strange country, cut off from inter- vate some Of the island; the ialand ia | wit ead seventy ous sigzucia ad alfendy "arived"in, the they took psseasion of tbe ap tbeY wero lawful pos. course with his own countrymen, could under sich circum ee et eet coutaee hon oe cchemnaes the Waste and jungle, but the labor’ market is kept so high | with Maccaseal Gai tteis aoroueeine teenies Suibe bao Apr, whe the capuin and, te, covery fottien o Miaoa iho" Frouch colors. ‘They were ac ace | son, tat the noble lord at the head of foreign firs, had Foal slave trade, when we ransomed and mancmities | Ther arg tome dnl to. fhoroupy tuted Wy th | aokaowledges lke este, Malmeary bas Se tieveciprent ii cranes = ewe ind de jure the posnossare of the ‘whioh they hed | turned his attention to the subject, and he was not | Subject. namuns Connie So ‘puta ur: morbid ‘melanthropy” that Obey Yrobably regard thi siae Simin kee is a sa eeetea es ee lg A a Sei siprwas | had been applied sUll various ‘remedies ‘haa’ beoa acs- iis of great aon» i ai hale an we Tho deer nor thal wf eae arte Sue is ‘eal mth ear te y = A could absolutely do, We may by persuasion and a the translation of our editorial ‘War sf Of Bis mon were ‘massscred by the | exis! Cop. | justified in rendering them the assistance es gested, which his boble friend bad under oonsideratin. ezample to influsuos others iy a | weight in the race of competitio. Itensbles the Ouban | Poss Feared, Courrier he = ee ae lear) Shut ay requ emuance col bar Ligne Sanne wom beget IR ccasoes waretives wre tiberent gut to pay bir’ prices for -A‘rioan slaves and bold out constudce by the folowing timers We have wens. they 3 conveyance 2680 | less y cargo. Thus the negro | lated that curious specimen of Yankee rhodomontade eee Be ‘saw the English ship they expressed their extreme | coolies to Cuba and the conveyance of them to our colo- ‘We can afford, therefore, to look a black man steadily undergoes the middie passage in order that ocortaln | the pogo BE gy capsized. delight. (Hear.) He ‘the would en- | nies. With to English colonies, he that the t he, like Hindoos & protected mcnopoly of the | one by one all the of deavor to farther 1 the face, and to tell him that he, us, & a creature —_ eesertions of that eee end come, wor to prooure on this subject from | « ‘Proved as satisfactory to the Git had | torn to live by labor. The resemblance of @ painted | labor market at Unwise in our genera. volume. Weshall not take that We ry the officers cn the coast and the consular 1» for | to the emigrants. ox ihe smile oh asi gatean we wey tion, we weight one scale while we <r want to say One word about the conclusion of that cous thortties cena sfeaaliines Crcemennon that Bic yon nem moyen borne ext by the Py tony tn ‘the eae tae one Spe thor indian ta Chuan who are kept from this wat bothece the United Brae ded Eaziandtb the brian comensnded by Serene eaepeanve wee Woudiy calted fer, (Gear, hear.) a emall of labor, and ba my » very Proportion of the enormities which | worid through spectacles that have a black man on either Rey , and we see how foolish have been the | war, says that just as France has come out of the Eastern ofe The Earl of Maxacxspury bat very clearly ase where ‘been mentioned turned out to have been committed, que It ign tradition to the latter and af faith to } “oings of our un) War fiat in Burope the United States wou'd come out the Tals? lnfornmation ¢od'tast of Gapiain Crot and’bo did not | test (otake, nd that was to abolah thie tra a oP me ps Pon dy omg Ry i ee slavery), i 2045's Yor grievances, dot mosis som | toe tenon : UP iin tes Gensel oe reee Sn for more. Poot meer Me by nip dagon ng con cur TT hy i a Bo ig paairts Eoet tbe colored raoes of mankind are, sui tothe quered in the ‘war the fret postsion in Werope, i f to Mr. [Paris (June 23) correspondence of London Times.] teams of eaforeing tne fuldiment of tena ng Ma into» npr Cg ee a ofthe torrid roma et Asiatics Na rece teboring’ tole: thas ene hes <3 veer in that contest thas A ‘unless the oor dione + bd . ° ® ©. @ | tinge 1886 the slave sade had Lae cir the law of | of'a black skin. “Wo acoopt tom 4s aclors necessary | freedom. Instead of “imlop the traneport of levor- | tore! influence which she has soquired by wer’ abeotaie jpaless th ‘The provincial papery co, are Aled with decamation es, ae ee eh wd nig Creed web to the cf the drama, and allow bem tomy -_ Be eee ee See ee eo oe Ls] ie Po pek goad ‘the p spor it was ca! to one-half of the whole num- ‘ ' ayes = fective. Do not create im; ‘and call them regula- and which sho bas attained. pints mal , shat ue: | ber of pt a the sland, td if the af of Whom ware Po sg gg a the Bishop of Oxtord '© | tions; do not regard with ‘the efforts of the oo- | such as Fre py fe pe turer fe leave the pa by ntaredy ‘The Courrier which seldom as- @, it would be impoasil i the rest in | po ‘and ball to enable them to pillage the Boors, we Eee elt amas ae of civilization, and she has returned from it with the wemnee. ; cends 80 high in fights of fancy saya It repels with inaig: slay on of the population of the Valted Slates | do not laugh, because it is a Wilberforce who says this. tn claret da00t Saent. agecelemaaeaiats we 508, | Mian heceenses al aes. pee nation, tothe truth, the assertion of Lord | were desirous to obtain of Cuba by peaceable | When he tolls us, as of shameful thing, that ‘something | “tious FRCS are seern cone Sinn Sane promened | _ A was. anche the em Xonar Benito sages, 60. sens omigrante, Grey, by Lord Clareadon, and even by Lord | ™eane If they could, any moans if they could not, | very ‘ppproaching to slaves in the form of labo: | !0 your soldiers, Tees ind than those im- | with such pleasure, would be « war of privateers in which faked the Imesbury., that the system of free ‘engagements tried tho object being to'carve three slave States out of Cads, | rors” may be found with colored skins, wo check the Oss, pee Se Oe an cet ace nie ae a | oe srocnutligwome.t nA Som Logarta dha vagg- ord sufliotent | yy the French government on Coast * obtain « decided Senate, where | rising reaponse as we recollect how useless it would be to Ceeding to India. with — I themee! their adversaries, Continued sianding towards Monrovia, where nothing uta slave trade. It adds, that such lsnguage } © fi'pe voled oF Ay a Hy Iwas tit ietonce a, Ln Cormeen oe Kiem tn’ competing with ihe Spaniards and Asravoans, | the properuce of their feeble, end peie sce " re iy shout o'clock atalgh, Taf t bocseles an amit when etored by stajonmios, wos | «TAHl7ing to fad that the condition of t3e colle ia the ee ee em, a sickly enlid and & | Who buy and sell and trafic in mankind; be ressouable Mexln, Cuba, 8. Donogo and Goutal America , contains: ‘passage: id not fear to proclaim it from ‘the English tribune. bad teen much ameliorated. pining wife, compel men to do to which no master’s enough to admit that # Chinaman or a Hindoo must be eee wi tong jul in the manner of the gen ‘Mr. Manuel Leiray Vive ‘Again, says the indignant Courrier, \‘we protest against The Kari of C.arespon said the papers would be ex- | yoice would force them. When Lord” Brougham Calls | Preteed by the same necessities to labor which coerce | tlemen of (aa highway the knights of the fog—but will these calumpies, Lora , Lord Malmesbury and ceedingly numerous, but be thought his noble friend the | upon us “absolutely and instantly to * the oarry- | Yourown white countrymen; and acknowledge that the | never be honorable nor glorious. After its successful ends and abaadoning the eig' - | Lord Clarendon might have left to tue bad ‘of London.” | Secretary for Affairs t.make @ selection. even of an African cannot be to luxuriate in a paradise | the United States would have a territory twice as conside: men’ He. moreover, fursished Captain Simon wilh & oer ig Press there were papers from 1863 which gould bi feg.de calened man Trem one mane. or bet be omens we | of "1 Fence tificate ‘that be was present at the time that bis cat on: “This check, After the humiliation poets anes ayy ee ‘our peace, for we recollect that it is Lord fae ire Ee gi dgges reggae yee My de wg al Benen erty le pops fo vegan yoo oe stg te er ony eee pore. timon went we de Prone | icon her ty the Undad Saioe coud nok fall 40 a. | Droduoed i would be acen what were tho stale of ings | hal mean apampemnamacee, sockrites than’ You fave t0 ine irik when they | tbey would weigh, in the soule im which fpartat aud ie Freced ts Ger'a protect newt the darters vt | Sata eat abe Teltnee’ os cota fiom Tard Pye En FE site ae not deaing now with tbe hg ig Senst colap-anusryenm-of Ganprpepenne’ down | crnentnenll ealy sucuepiroepiinna pees Rand, the captain ofthe Ritlope wrote | Metmeatarye apeech on tho 1h of June, ‘The writer | !abthe feelings or conduct of gi Joan Bowring, to Eo. Cae sa aaeeee oe Tuipts evident. We must | Kil (hese Dlack men with your dll j tindncts;or aor. | the globe, but having always reapected, the fen command. torte Xe Drotendiag to conalder Be om | a ernor of Hong Kong, had undergone some Te | these co'Bekish skip and ao Beil gubject t taxe part | Ace a great imperial interait to a false and maudlin senti- | ments, and principally that one which forbids theft, ax eloe the complicit Tt ts thus that a weak is of, and {t fs. mai what was now were , be had greatly chang- | in these atrocities. So far as we know, that duty has | ™e”. Mere vituperative declamation is an easy, a popu | well tonations as to individuals. vg he comply, | _ Tt e thus ata weak power is spoken o,and tsaminiser | 4 during inese four months, because, certainly” he had | 42, Sbeee atrocities far as, wo, know that duly bas | [arand a ussless ting: Instead of Unis, mon who would sy is tl ‘The insurnent emigrants falshed plundering the cargo | siateaman. | No more is required to exoi.e the American fl Genounoed all attompte to revive what he considered to | gued iereees Geman subject to all our Consuls, and { be useful to their kind should nelp usin council, and | The het Very Tosdstead of Monrovia, notwith- Dusters to again eitack Cubs. a this the moment for England pCO ed was the first fo denoente proclamations wore published threatening proceedings in Sontt.sid ye ance how that which must be doae waniis hoauets ur slabae plete pep oye ( coganeg thon permitted to ad Rete tee a I py Meagan ne. coled Sale Se So voluntary | Cxery.case. At this moment we believe there is not an may be well iy done. mites of Foreign Affaire, and remarks:— eg acne nets ook asthe armrest i oid ta rouse, aa 3 fled jaune reat; Toy therefore entirely put nop to we cued ere th heal yy ‘The Right of Search and the British Out- ‘a ated offended 2 aa does not try to up- real feeling which exista against her? And does sbe think |‘ gov | British ship ter it liable fisoa- sages, apger—| hich indignation, ‘another acoount which corroborates this state- | ibat she can deceive anybosy ‘by concealing ber piraical Feng tg Briton ee Oe | ie. Buty entirely ‘apart from this fartive. and logs [Prom the Muncheatiy Guardian, July 21.) by “Brush imsolence,”” bursta satiate iho "moet that the Liberian government | policy under the guise of falad ‘iiberaltty’ and Hottious g pg ed eam unless | traffic, there is a wholesome transport trade Wo admit tuat to an independent 4 Pas 2 belligerent provocations and the most direst re, allowed these men to escape. Iwas notin | “the Pays of 24th of June publishes certain extracts | tbe emigrants, they were not allowed to Innd, with “which no man would knowingly | interfere | 9.4 indignily of having its traders visited by foreigners | Challenges—in which, dually, an unanimous deaire to via- ‘was ment before, who is pot an enemy to his kind. The shores 7 ig! dicate naticnval honor, and to retaliste force by force, ts Theres atl ements bat enema eu | tem fn dommacineiingw gas Oul, Tue | sya ccsty Er Shit Be eh hin"St is | finns ance ttn tn conde | meee cuveon man's Breanne Saito | Rane eneri wer, sarang Reng steamer, which I will A 8, aco of population. In China the eastern seaboard wa aeayie. 18 | nas well understood the question when she sho — rations, fulf all the Tegel d internatioual require- | Secretary for Foreign Affairs to lay on the table the cor- mang pond, crowded cage the United had ‘sanction a wi we 80 great Rovat Man. Sreawer Ermorz, ments,” When the emigrants were on board, an inquiry, pn pany ty colt fe gong respecting the Ioan, cobey gn tet og ie ‘ght t aye they now condemn and fas sated A waa onthe lav rm ore or one ene fnew colores dimculties lorkoria, april 18, 1808 instituted by the President of the Liberian republic, Mr. | cooiles on fe was informed ofthe | existence. They become pirates all along the coast, rob. | tation of President Buzhanan that the British squadron | have arisen. There is 80 @ difference in the laa- ‘you ibst, according to your | Roberts—and which was known to be correct by Mr. | Siccities committed there, and he desired the Admiral on ‘was sent to those waters, there certainly can be no ground ied April 1d ai 11 F-A2. in | Newnbam, the Poglish Consol—staied that all the the sistion to vist the islands to ascertain whether the | Pei® 00 the inland waters, ad tev ee poeias to bea | for the complaints of British fnsolence and agetersion, | RuRse oF the two nations, waoh a contrast in thelr elitude, ine Cooll several of the crew of | were satisfied that the ship was excellent, thatthe ar- | reports which had reached ber Majesty's government ¥ * | Mr. intimates that in all probabiti' . | Seas one te-quite surprised te mest so mach eneegy. ously murdered by ths emigran's | raogements for the health and cleanlinoas of the occupants true, and he gare the Peruvian TR | Rey bree ita Learned hed Gey have the opportunity | Fa will be recalled from the Ir tolits old station on the | {217,cB 000 side and po much patience and resigestion om government to oppor! op: at unless they remedied the evils complained they emigrate. emigrate to California, they emi- African coast. It would save time and money to bring it England is wrong, 4: ML Apel! 1b—Arrived 64 Cape Mount, weat on properly conducted, ‘Tho, report of the ieutonant of tbe of our forces should Liberate the cooliee, This had its | grate to Australia, they emigrate to singepsre, and Pe- poy oes y a sananta Lamon a teaser ameeaneal Raed Rater byedbe reecttbrwrctrgmyent PAP AE My Gitta anon | tbe blleoy coun Mich ocurred bad am sine ong | pow cmfartvey comfurableandtnoy. (Heel ect | Iasda and whet opportune fo those, places do Qenemment ofthe ned Nar” Boore can be no | Ie‘ yer ncrniog tay renew they weet Sonrice a everend | not offer they listen to the tem ‘voices of the | maritime 80 long as any flag can gecure per- | send their most mea towards the traneat- 6 of the emsig gt eask bn panes mate aoe er erie Unit there | yidnarpers and go forth to Cuba and to the Fa Sb oe 9 to the vessel on which it is holsted. | japtic shores. Is bowever, after having reai the ser aforeanid stip in a Pipe at the eal y fire, same report states the com- | fed been an Attempt Made op te Te eal States | French possessions. From these Iatter places they iiaselt allows that where no violence is | srecches with which the Capitol of Washington has re- he pirates. The captain of the | mander of the vessel only merited praise for the manner | % Tret Samnay 2 aio jo ooolies carrying | never return, but from California and Australia thoro Committed, Rome inquiries of this kind may fairly be | sounded, ikat we bave been able to We all the eee of sacersl pee. in which the whole operation wae conducted. Toe Pays me —— coven: hy they: p shine mere ies & constant stream of Chinamen, who come back to buy ae py os << at ecene nations | merits of England on this occasion; it is but then that the npens So ntreuet freemen inha) : —— ms and send their sons to the examination halls. The | ome comprom! Ghecintely mecessary. Molcattcs'to"tst jie | fepubli ef Libera, and that all tabor engagements for | were inid onthe ible dey would go far to remove the | ‘Weat ada nande are, not 0 Popular becuase ney are | Be,tbo praca! dcullog nthe way off lagoutwigh | saleateam tare tees merle se on cen ena * é i EE eS HI if i = i de se ust is misrepresentations that now ied on the subject. Ss EAE, ch say ax | Ll racine nent ota Sse™ “™ | "Roar of rin hare on boo ie | Saw tbaaieaaraWke Gms tweens | Kemaeuenr arena gael wtm doped | MEME «5g ; my charge, rs which his pob'e frioa: & recovpaiseance amon; he removal. It is that England alone remains same journs a ey The Coolie Siave Trade. required. suddenly arrested by a fat firm to the principles wbich she has actes up to for | During altiscussion wich tay fiat ches pian in th steamer E:hiove. THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE BO3RS MAKING SLaves— | *B¢ Motion was then egreed to. good sterling vernacular, and not Caston Eng ish, “What | ball @ contury; and that, were it not for her ur. Huse of Lords on the slave trade, sevoral orators mae ‘M.—bieamed ahead, with the Kegina Coli in tow, for | GREAT LADOR FIGHT BBTWHEN SPAIN AND ENGLAND the devil he wanted there?’ The Geveral, being the pink ll mre and exertions, every other | show of pbilauthrop'c iadigtation, which might have nad eT ari ‘he anchor on board (starsourd) | A CHINESE COOLIE CANNOT Be FAEE IN CUBA— | The Negro Immigration Difticulty--Tte Emtcets | of courtesy stopped to parley, and the Chinaman, being premio’ oF ihe ‘ane? ace". 5 ‘tho Sup- | come pretext if it referred to the cruelties practised im chain of the starbosrd anchor ran out, which DUGRANTS ARR DELIGHTED WITH THE ENGLISH on the Anglo French Alliance, interrogated, auld that ho bed’ resided several yours in drawn, as it must de if po Coe nt he ade ty | tbe suppression of the Indian mutiny, but which was te- Sip up suddenly, carrging away te towing DPORtERS—YAMATR WAIGRANION PROM GMINA {From the London Times, June 23.) Australia, that be had come back witb a fortune aud had pay be ee eon y nape cy a in | tally misplaced when addreased to the im to the weer; sent chief oMeer snd several seamen ou board 0 | syorran. ‘ We cannot but (ancy that a Fremciman of deep feolings, | bought houtes in that suburb, and that he should hold the | Suotber. six months the trade would be again in full acti- | French colonies. There have not been: a far as wo are Mreiey og Regioe Coup amOR, STOP ED. of Lordn on the Zist of Jane, the Bishop | CUNYated istellec! and retentive memory, mus! almori | General responsible at law tn ‘the Queoa's Courta if he did pin LB ce Bonne Political economy is invoked in | aware, thousands of huvg, or blown from Hic. —hrenined abead us gonroria all eate with the | of Dane cor tertaes out Hat of Jane, (he Bichop | long at the present hour for the absolute ‘suppression of | any damage, to hie property. The travelled Osioa- | Da tcattorce - We are told thet “thoughtful mec are‘be. | Wemmentbe ct ques i those, os wiheseng ian, iad anchored her off Cape Messurado, wits | correspoaderce between the Colonial department aad the | Lemeperers in bie nattve,country. He must often think | Hors Tate little wrong in bis Eoglish law, bul that hap- | Piching to say we have been mistaken in tbis mattor, as | (Crmct {tial The ant . bee i al Apri Appointed Mr. Mackelvie my agent, and handed | SOVérnOY of Hovg Kong, aod between the Colonial de- | rack should have their will, and that the publication of | Snd not a small class in a class which is gradually ‘were mistaken about close beronghs end clove ‘s soldiery—ibat the ship Regina Covll cver to bia. Partment and the Foreign office, on the subject of emi- | potitical intelligence and discussion should cease . | elevating the intelligence of the people of Cnina above that | We confess that we fail to see the analogy. Jes are at presout F..0.1 Neen gET: Master of seamsbip Bthlope, ation from Hong Kong end from the Chinese empire to | ‘ther, than that what wa a uscful and noble instiiatioa | of their rulers—a class which it ls very much our {aterest one oe sere L , mutual benevolesce and good G0. L Naw sun, Bag dg teeninits, “tan eniee | eames aol ioe ate ee gy thould linger on cramped, fettered, threatened and de | to increase, To General Straubenzee’s Chinese acquaint- Se onmgal bse mee at Ase bone ben rete govervment. We have abolished slavery in them from a pri J.G.C,L. Newsuam, Hes Britannic Majesty's | reverend relate guid that no guilt would be groater whan | $n the'basest perpeeen, “The. terval comsee eaoyied OT | Stour middle closeen” Ho had shaken the p yr tat wich she entored with this Gountry. They Raw pen Pitora, of foldsh caleuion, We hve raised the formar ae} . , A ers, .. We have Pie maa ye comes wou vain nana | Seipnneeveni neato ane an | Sue heme ee aa catas | See Suaa Muara aeteta | praetor ian | Bn ape ah aN lee He. , Li in our seal tins | terete cn chan oer, aes | murat haw tment gee somegex | Rao ar cers Snare is Se | oe elas ay ham ad sites ph sa | Matuetnse a deta eae any more drawn ivto that atomixable trafll>. Ho was afraid | bn which’ the pepablic “coud ‘grounds com. | Butthat is Lot the fault of tke Ohiacee. ‘Tho kidnapping | # the trackers in slaves bribed highest, they have woo ~ they lakes Fa tial n te neighborhood of Natal we were i some danger | Chosen “boirg” ths aedtlouly mine fant | tage is more’ prodiable, and the Tegiimato trathe ts | te,dey.. Wo trust that England. in copjanction with the | fem. “Public relist ‘a’ organized. in-Our esloulen wah ‘mon) declared that sight of the Ri boers in that locality were gratually re enabtishing the én: | tea the vonol pon of same eutier om the Manitiersl tows. | losged wih wanscemsary obiciel forma. Any ave whoresde | nopee of thelr co im this tater, will doe try | Yost seuerenlty, Religion, ls propagated ia them wih ta- ; that i stitution of slavery, and we ina great degree | pale, who t ta 4 re co. | ri | to put an end to the frequent disagreements betwoen th eee a odeke. ieee ae make a better bargain r tee Ta He Me oa ‘eer 5 ry to pervert facts at his will, since his read- two countries, by forcing Spain to a © | rated, provisions are cheap, liberty is complete, and ba ol matte refused «rs Have ben Kept im darkness concerning them, and wo | cumnueain put an ond to this ac erly affects nove but the vicious or the laxy. |The coa- ee, crat | Stace whereas we sows the booretosupiy'them: | pM” n‘uatasen ot tesa ant tafe (Prem the tendon News, June 2. opereuree i he matures of rope i ay aon Pe TY selves at Se ae ae tee oe ae had | form of repression—one rather sulted, it would seem, to | na Pa a AER, Le i, infinitely preferable to that or ihe Irs famished, vege. The L a a mazzer tbat would be familiar fo the readers | cooduot of tao Preesh soveroieont in the featior ot the in the wbole efair isthe body of British ‘naval offcors 1a gaa roreed pe Pom mer Bh sng tor teal reason by Se"EA “Geamactven net shang. seough to lalertere | ties wee prowne’ ep eae ik Oar at Miia” | Regina Coli andthe debate tn a | Sas Sonate aguinas vo Reale Geek ke Sa cenends Led wehbe peoele Bo further. The and he was that unleas, oat vigilance was pf pe es Sy nr ee issue. It is elso to be caretalty remeus ~4 Satan Prphe ons anes tat waa ye who took ‘ \- suited to c. She will leara to She chip tate thar own hanes, Tiss e ae ay ns of troduciag slavery | napped on board a French ship off the coast of the Seolaterdarechamnaie erp anatamel and new | know hereclf, and she will discover that she at loast di 3a Spain, and be bad been misrepresente!, as if be had re Engiuh seemar, wes desired 0 toe French Cnapelts'es. | meric sentiment, of 5 tomer Of a story ts not Sofa nad eal nolutne of tha'kind. "All that ue hae | “Srane we recnptere of Ghia stip, which was in the hands eretiapseaanen Gon coment atone the and the htt i re a PCa ey pb - traveller who may bare boon syn tas’ coeur, iaternations! low the French captain having never low | legitimate infuence with sod be Gi Bes bellows | Wooe Ge” mapeh tna need to. eanl remote from the chief ports and {rom ‘centres of sight of his ship, having claimed her as his own,and ba. | that war would be necessary.’ When slavery was abo- ~ me a ll el aghation, will tell us by and by, we doubt not, that ing protested er seizure, if be had beed a regu. | lished it was thought necessary to edopt variove measures | (na cegrces clapped thelr bande. throw up (ei orm and citizens were any cad Tene" We tee cers inp Sibver and hha been Tull of sisves, 20 cae would have | forthe of suppiyiog the colosies ‘with free labor; | Stolen, ths’ Eepinh eapiaie and Mire Baverts weat ca Hearing of some stir or anciher—some cars tell wits one had a right to seize her. It is only just tothe French go Dut 1 was fon that thet id only safoly be done b: ‘ac. board, 1 Tater, >. aest on power or another ; and that, nine times in ten, ‘vernment that their view of this case should be known. companying every one of thoes measures with 08 9 pag wg neg bog he <corh ea teen “5 the affair subsides into a cetection ‘of vome defect oF Lg | — Pep Tate aystem of checks, to proven! We reintroduction of | wore nothing’elte than slaves, oblainod fu the usual way, sbese, or new neously, we net right a8 s00n as the story from the party laborers It was en- dy bargain with tho ebiefs, and kept fn durance on board, " arty . pity to talk of war so OD Cleon vanene : oe nara ag they might bave bees in any or American gir) -Ay-4 way. ble a fact, how. taken. It was atated the other bave tbe power a when Go wicheae ail thane, | eevee plndeed, the matter required, Bo special ex: ess We as nd tom’ ede war thaw eactane ten tonal wae boarded the manacles of these emigrants wore taken meastres were of the necessity that was felt to [iy aoe out as agnele, at ae by aoe dithoulties, and providiog for sew caaes on they od Es ban ta | exlat for pre ute. He was glad to say that, | wore op several of them, more than ope rolated the bis pang fA RM ene Bord emigration, “and © : ‘and thers had‘grows Op ia test co- | {oszoituacaera tok thoves ie mee bent rtan hi manmeauta poltiawant is Sepeateriog, ath to ovase Oe. to emigrate from were really free, og eotlea ee ent wae a oe tendignd 3 yoo gg, Co reputable ectepations connostes ony ag me . we arbor. ow “ Goanty | eertes ” the and ‘contented laborers: With 1 to the more | ladle they were voluntary emigranta le shown by the fact oT a 4 been on the const, who had been Drought down | received which bad given bim great uneasinew. A pro- | ihey Nexeatie ede aon lt impomitio te Cane country—perhaps to both countries-—will be the explana. by native slave traders and native princes, and who atver | clamation had been issued in 1864, from which li appear. | crecrcr‘sns ‘That the trailie wae the wave trate estes Vion thas our resort to the an American ‘8 process of Liberation were sold as slaves under the name | ed that slavery was then being introdused:and there wore | suother name, and with bypsertt wrhernghng of k ago believe, from | tion late: ‘piened vet the Costa Rican emi Ni of free emigrants. (Hear, hear.) If it wore said that | now reports coming over to thts country from which it ted by no reasonable ais ean Lick ies bee foagaten then i""."Mye otigioat | Bietes on the one hand, and M. Felix Deliy, ‘bona of there were po means of compulsion on board except by | would teem thatthe system which that proclamation was og away all cficial reserve, ot i ; till his plan by which that (Cuban) blockade wae instituted, he | M. Miliand & Oo., of Paris, on the other. To what atevast their lordabige ‘wore’ oummpalod to'trast ouly t otcial | bake had boon uscd towards there wit hat shows theme, iors rma. ‘Todd. the Hino of rin ually ty bonwept away by pestilence-and « for fear lest he should ras froe to comtens, vine odlopted at the suggestion of the | the French Government may hereafter tara this trane- 4 eo ae ee bee Aas fe edd a them. | dious of moderation in language, denonnced these iaiqul- | have to put up with the straitened conSement in a trans- Fayence atte =) ‘but neither this government, nor Seen, «week ee uences may ensue at come ‘counts, one from a gentleman holding coneular office tavaees Bat this Sonny vent (> tina a 8 Caton Sectmaies te me law Geloeed of eames ry seircia ats uhidonthropy run mad” Bares | objections sohons Dytertty Cay tt rar | » . those epgeged in the new trade and of the goverament | 1 not a okt run mad Barke Mer I may say, excellent authority for affirming that, se from private partis, who agp ‘with’ great par . “ia road, upies he ial system, the F oar, to domements thet ewe mate Reregs gress, Wo | stron ily J-=- be 4 4 8 waval, 01 Cy ® e French news. ed rope groan. Wo a Gomeety at — hat ‘ io ettnmane ton prac atch were cugried cn water the fag of s had been 10 discuss the subject of the bave men among ts who have hearts of wax and faces orwhes representative of a mercantile SS" net ans Mee wine “eran, Soa | Frat ernie tnee ses ta my tae eta pent | FEGacaeneah Semnerrenaierieatn | Routes Ua aege i ew ener etbet wr y's | Okun soe mp ae pe pty yh Pa RS See te teat eclenten | 2% Ftbe debate to thie Lords and the lang ange of the’ Se. | drunken Roman Emperor, o imprecated by « misanthrope | with Contdential ‘Instroctons givee te these official acoounta would be subject to correc- ater me possinte cenjnotiare of ctrcametaness 00 eata tary for Foreign Affairs could net, however, be conve | in a melodrama. ton— i era he hes to dv ton. in as the slave trade should agin be pon ua yt ey eletary ee era caves mumaees ence | 4 Dimeeit forward an having. any the point in We ought to beable to show the world that no gain, Bo vantes teed, aibtongh 0 socious man map wish,8 wine saan which raramanty bot tha bo Auld force vantage, no colonial convenisace should ever prevent cannot to leave none of them unperformed. We | #0Fe' great ‘and Coata Ricans if - = oer Pe aE sores erornmen rma, | few’ woe ow Pua arto na to | eeu nin De gee ee sea ey, tas etent > o procrastination. o—, but Sere mene of wena naan slaves to be | on the African coast resemble the slave teads, and pour: Precke of this teetropolia ‘witbout seeing obligations arise pra tone phn come ial on inquire what, in their o charactor Yet the citizens of ae Ps at of Sarcarce bade oleic proteome | SUS Ias colener sheeinbee Tatar | eases nee | a oe oe Sra net Genta erent a . France, it ap- bd ° bd —— “cn = pages Re wae —————— moved, in | pears, is (oo generous and self devoted ever to embark fa Perbaps we finish our walk by turning into Exeter Hall, odenenariel have reached a point which will serve | as the secret emissary of Louis XI. pins with the clear eeieke aaeiebiee ae 8 speech pick om ced & somewhat wide selection An inhuman speculation. Toe nation which all others look | where we hear that the Divine wrath is kindled against us —— ee een ~ Indies of Croye in that fair city. ‘Whether thore be aay t+] possession oan. = Papers would lay open what was, in many | to as a model is not likely to forfeit ite high position. All asm nation because we bave not converted the Ashantees | f spore cosets pate gph understanding between the French government and the pty yeapects, 0, very pele 7; but at the same time he | this e very well, but such vague boastings are no aaawer | to Christianity; oF Into the House of Lords, where we tid | gn American eucrenton; that both partice, te the nego. | Millead Compeny I cannot say—I am sesured there ls set; word with hed no wish to Bee back a thing. Be was glad that | to definite ‘and to facts, which, if not disproved, an eloquent, peer demonstrating that our fleets and our = scheme Perils and dificulties; and | but, so far as M. Bolly is concerned, I think [dm safe im body of men who, firvtcf Janvary, 1866, because on ibas day ibe Cnisese the ranean en beans, tae Bepaneue Wore cavitary | aaapieeey. forth and compel all the world to put | Pott Oey ecuatiy divected agamet the flare trade” The miber’ the Siaperer, bas been ; 1 re anwilil rs ' » . ral = counts? Feces 18 Ss mee. The right reverent | there’ Did they not sow their own ciate whan aor "The atten to diecharge one of the least imperative of tovinie acta considera for us is this—that what negotiations for the oynceesion py ah ay dyu ws phy 864, but he | ceclared that they were bought and dragged on board, or | these duties baa cost us more money and more pas baggened now BAG onary core come There may it was, no far back ae 1845, pro- remem! was act was in force. actans Wweneevonsty aad that they were glad when they Nish lives whole of the Crimean war. The too tA director, is resibic. but I have ag Ta mewsero en emi Feat agent wes extablicted ‘at | saw the Ethiope and Mr. Roberte? Was not their abandon. to fevers on the const of Af- — ‘The thing to be done, then as sow, te t> say the resident Paris of pl con ane roar open porta, whose | ment of the vessel and eacape into tbe eountry an sct of | rica would have manned « channel fleet; the money spent ae by By h- one oe ~~ et bad an audience of his Majesty: ca thaw bunds, and when they goren vesrd chip et South: | proper diowry were provided. ie Cine novle earl). wae | Coricrabeas Retest Guis tee seeesiny one nai ait | SEawacl tects, Bon tart aloes fate | two partion are cogsned in fo constieatin baw bun te right to atvert wm ampton or Liverpool did rise on the crew and kill | afraid however, thst the oy had nos Hovedcsstioke. Pa LY p—~ Wy A - 4 Sonet wun n have iecp wurde achieve a good in which they agree, thoy are whe are as ine thend af the oom , all atv 9 " them: Gon) He found “sah, tel Afric 4 thal | tory as might have been desired. Rut it should be re. | facts and opinions ia restrained, could Prompt a mau, ta | with France. been a iT success, and Pantene the world likely to go to war with pay, by them, that the whole pro- Se ‘Leon fee oF frend. and thatthe | pow hes there were two classes. of omig the face cf such events, to agsume such a tone. a general declaration whole world that our inter. | each other. ject will be abandoned unless they have the full co opera- pa. = K. lee lardwad ¢ te af | a es caglish colonies, But the Constttuttonnel, moreover, thinks Ot to attack | ference , and our motives entirely sel- The Tr the Rught of veh Pei hi sy pe ata eens than ‘rican A, 4 | a penne’ ——. this country in the style traditional with continental | fish. ourselves up in our virtue our Slave ore Search. resolved to do nothing alone; and the first object ts +, al erly capeenest, ©. ciweng feeting on wats | Raven } ee 0 = revereod prelate bad | writers—astyle which one would think was by this time | nations true that we have failed; it is | TRANSLATIONS FROM THE FRENCH PRESS FOR THE to have the neutrality of the canal maintained under tho eh Thought Bright teny teas | wih — x, ed thas — oe weil | pretty well worn out The executions in India, tho wrongs true that we have only aggravated the evil; it is true that NEW YORK MERALD. sreenmen of Trance, pant ene te Veer aT The tee cotirely concurred with Mtb aoble eudicarned frisadia | gard tovthe ceber class there wore still many serioas | cmancipation are troupes forward ie the orcs! wear aay | sooundaty eet uty 44 Urrsraues Yaase who 60 a6 Gon Oho oeaerees witn a Now York, COMESRY, ST las contin thinking they required farther information before | and ~K.... ~ nee rere still many a8 | emancipation, are brought f 'd in the usual weak and | secondary we bave puri it to the We are those do not doubt the bene | SS ed, to be null it thoy ood ore Doreen aad mean one exzing ees m, J was obyions thas oven ifthe Inw | backneyed manner, With r: to this part of the sub | neglect of others more practicable and more imperative. | and the honesty of tho sentiments in the same of whi ved in it were not fulfilled before the close of the br to cmune teat te a dpaomsacee | name one wos goaerelty case with rospsct | ject we would say afew is to M Renée and the im. | It seems to be true that we are about, in reckless despair eee ee er iereny abd ted cave dss bent tse Present month; and Ris with a view to seperti Te finely ret cr 1 nan commana of ate had bo authority ver theca when Cony Couche taatr ceo- | Sell te enuter wiles thoy %s mete rene uat| oat Fen thd fe ‘eaaia, J soun 4 trae, teat zones is all, even ta virtao ait, bia nok French engin, Mi Belly ot out for dy ig SY tr Mey | had vo satori r then when they Feached their des- | well to consiter what they vhemselvos are a a ‘and taken ‘and to dos we true that in all, in , in a fault, itie not | with the oad , that M. 4 -- * the boner of the ae bs A regan igh possoesions the oase was | wht is the moral position of the country which they think | in the tal a little good. In womo | lees true that the more ignoble pessioas shelter them- | New York, where he now is, and whence he will probe. ah bp proves that teens Lin oy to wound with their invectives. // they could only realise | remar' is pies, renereey ve tee Famed selves under the brightest virtues, bly proceed to London. As to the practicebility of the board the vousel by fair means and o¢ their own free will pT Re Fe Db aT gt hy M io ee | os TUhsee eaters enh the meee hentnny, ane the crane, | Fomnieal nobel ts may oF noth = end thet wen ealy diet we ~ om 1m Tt e Their | the rristing French system, and what, on the other band, my reference to Asiatic and African labor. Tho sub. | the slave with the utmost hostility, and the trade | political that may follow, 1! nothing _—— ty SG xs ae | Progee were from las. to 17s. per mouth; aad daring their | in the nt ion of Kogland as the home and de’ | ject is too important to be lef in the hands | ‘a, notwithstanding, still {a fall vigor, aad except some mis- | myself for the present with art ae = was coufirmed—if 18 appearet that thees wen were pth es ey cou! og y ey feces of all makes life desired among honorable and | of those who are fanatical on the subject of the blacks, and by hy et — | onto ie py S454 which are not without interest, = peak Chased. from African slave dealers, that they pur. eo q roy cthom. In British Guiana | right thinking men, they would, if not in shame, at | we wish to those observations by reference ton | who devote to it, of the countries for | something like confidence. t aw board by force, and that they were manacica con tenet | dears Sayin 1990" tare ws a ne anrogh Back oct | tote, na se eee a nee orm mee: | Bhcnd'in, the world, Alesandre, Duras, who apo Tee oenteet, ane gist stamines, seen that | Speak Cr perdioand Ge Lemepe So lat sgh for im the manner in ak Gaves were Sen" AL ss ere waa ts Ye} about | tence, coase from such tiades as are sometimes ad- land in the world, Alexandre Dumas, who upon this | all of and good have come to the M. de ee freated, then be adhered to the po 4 00 doll to thom; and £6,000 had been | dreaeed to us. For what we have done during a covarion has some Knowledge of ‘what he writes about, | painful conclusion that the absotute suppreasion of the | Alexandria, fe had only jast pn formerly expreseed, that there could be no ciream. | coolies, ‘who bed ep suned anon ere were about 350 | long national history we have recsived our re. | has described it so vividly the French people think of | slave trade will bea chimera as long aa there are coun- ns you Tony suppose, greaily con —* man wore more justified by the laws of | the same imme Obinese, ‘thon be uid, Proved weed Sprending meligesce, ineutationscopicd by the onal, cpen 8 email vale, voral which ® ast ® ba ¢ @ ‘fhe Paris Cometiiutionnel, in & correndondence from = * " e ox ¥ A Sas 45° roe A lives ot | to be the ts and the best laborers, But what | whole world, an immense fal empire’ peas oer | abel times Wave troubled the world iy working | After ail, the fnglish, whatever they may think | Constantinople of June 11, réports « fact, in reference to (gare toes real clroumatences, be ouil\ guid be rapiinsnane | bed with the cooties who Circling the globe, and the dominion ef Asia, have been | themselves out. The old race of slaves and their thorough- | about it, bave to abandon the idea that wo should love Uhe'peretng of te lho ns wae te vere epee. the Africans suocesded. Hear, hear. 4 to Toe returns were not v the fruits of our policy; and when M. Renée can sneer | bred black children and grandchild: ee Pee The French not more |, tant if true. Le ee oun ane bea td Sey requise’ farther lnfemantch on ike ectjente complete, was not di " to lay m away these great ree! we shall begin to ragard the Every cholera or smallpox epidemic sweeps to submit goverassent, came erecta fer ik Lassepe’ predest, feates ot cotraiton “no Dory rs | 2YSGiet in" Youre Tob tae mam se ess | Seon Bed ands Sts am carts | Sernweat mnt portance, monen | Bare ee ee cae Tee Dot fooling with his noble and conveyed on beard British shipe to ; the enmity of ithe foweed, friend lat tare’ were’ cireemserees ot | Sas0rt whee there bad died om the passage 230, or 10 | fore ane{anl ts Gtarocans te IM Beipeets oteroeee tion iben « popalation. They withdrawn. i om supicicn connected with the case. They coat, 7 Be io de | ee aasuml be Gayrasaes te the Bapuers grarnnad | oe Bae ‘M. Musaras, the Tarkish Am- nae Mean te aot ne (ar the (ne (EARS. 4 TROT | Per chut—certainly « very large percentage. Hat'in the | unica dt reprobate amd punishes them. conree | the offepring of ‘illegitimate passion, tinea’Maimesbrry that the Porte. a" } J, ume fears, 1847 67, 9,000 persons Were conveyed on board ever, may think proper to | white aristocracy with a hatred 2 — Eg tebe cuss "| 26a tpn to Cu, mado tee foot or | Ie, cu own perfecy ear." rtahaniurtoe | Set. Au) wil (i aR mamta back they hed Information from many | tah 4 come, ene mare par, Se Oe De, | 6a Saeen metas om 0 ne aatatanen to te wae, cleanly golly Ch A | the fainietry) Lard Vialmesb'ary re quarters—from merchants engared io | mortality; the 4 mest forbid ory i groud plied ‘the, i, | Ang wath Afrion, and from officers yt Fertns png Amertone being 9%, the Datch | crown, and, ea far as in them lies, indace the African was to decide his fate. ‘and that he had remarked ‘ste poaare tuner color of the contract Jor euppiytng free emigrants om | toese ee irene ng as) aad the riitier tt ea | Yeon the edvencee of the French speculators. | bostile pepmetiene ca eter Ae in presmnce | [as commentoetios from the Porte tb’, cayarasce thot ft deternal slave trade was clrried om im Africa, that wore | a Apt tte pL RS may be forbidden to inter. | For labor the planter most iret ae te. wesh chaps taps ae pier Wi sca tae Omen ao wore for the express purpose of primar itive By Ay It appeared, however, | fere, yet we trust land has sufficient infinence on | tion. A soarcity of labor is the normal given 4 iand. This of Lord y deen to some ‘Owing to want of entiation, | the ‘const to di . ‘rent of houses is times ‘the honors of the | Fog! —— ‘Acimesbary produced whe, ging through the of ‘Woeration | baa wator, and the like, but | aleo appeared that hg te at aimee oa mri ee Prova Eag?and, Deqause where hese tines foty. © greet curprige ot Constantinople, ‘und orders were at once

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