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4 “ NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1858. NEW YORK HERALD. | rei ee see ve ; Pork was ieee bucyert; braced mess at $17 42RES GORDON BENNETT, 8 $1712, ard pages ap ghcgatbarege oo was after wards beid at $15, Sugars were quiet, apd sales conflaed to 200.0 280 bhds. Cubs at steady prices. Caffvo was firmy the cargo of Rio per Elim, comprising 5,400 bags, was sold at p.t., and 200 do. were sold at 103¢¢ @ Llc. Freigbts were inactive, and engagements quite limited, and rates more or Ices nomizal. tion from the two rivers render the probability of pestilerce visiting us very smuil indeed ; snd with proper attention to cleanliness, both on the part of public officers aud individuals, we need entertain very little fear on that soore. Lest year, when the yellow fever drifted from Staten Island to the districts around Bay Ridge and New Utrecht, and assumed for a time an alarming aspect there, this city was free from it. Though a few odd cases occurred, it did not spread. But it is quite clear that the Staten Island people wil] have to exercise more caution in their communication with Quarantine and the Rage tray tet re een them with themes for censure ; of the heat aod Rurepeac clamor and confusion of our political straggirs ; oa NRE be Mivided te. option tn regard << deaet teed Geet. pny el ne the laying of the | cerated feeling of nationality which eo forward- a we a 4 be pagel hy 0” | ly displays itself on every public occasion, they Pa ere n no boofl + | must perceive how the best material, political » Provessions or speeches, MAD’ | 454 moral interests of our race are best main- hold that the British people are not aroused to tained on & republican soil, and how the seeds © lively consideration of the great deed scoom- of many a forgotten principle of right sud plished; while in the United'States, in a singl | instice have here taken root and fractified, after cay, every intelligent community was not only | \ontaries of mummy torpidity. They wil! ia erenher the aay but was thrown pe understand, too, that expansion is the power by 1 shi jacies at " announcement. © | which freedom advances, and by which our k, ever, that John Bull has thus far | 0:9) engine is worked ; while contraction, con- ‘The Havana suger Market. Sovran Wasr Pass, Movrn or Tux Missiasirri, Aug. 21, abe. f The steamship Cabawba, from New York and Ha- vana, has just arrived. At the latter port sugars were firm and active, numbers 11 to 12 of the Dutch standard being quoted at from 64 to 64 rials; whites 7 to 8 rials. The stook on hand is 140,000 boxes, Exchange on London 15 per cent. premium; on New York 3 per cent. premium; and on New Or- leans 4} per cent. premium. Fve at St. Jcho, Now Brunswitok. Sr. Joun, N.B., Aug, «1, 1e68, Lawrence's furniture factory in this place was to’ JONRNS WCOD—Maxmors Sacesp Concerts, at 2% | Spanish Reply to the Bishop of Oxford—How Oy aun GY o'Oro0k, PLB to Step the Cuban Slave Trade. AMUSEMENTS TO MOBBOW BVENTRG. We publich elsewhere an article from the STBLO'S GQaRUEN, Broadway—Son00. rox Boanoar— Havana Diario dela Marina, in reply to the ac- Paowsnaps Conczat BOWAEY THEATRE Aowerr—Tux Tirrees-Rup | CUsAtions made by the Bishop of Oxford, on the Geoun—Joux Bois a9 Buoraas Jonaraas. floor of ParMament against Spain, for her per- | Sone very well. He has certainly shown C00: | aensation and compression have been the mo- | inf bi they may be, even at this late | tally destroyed by fire this morning. Partial! atuortar Bmzee. aim Laow Rox: | sistent toleration of the slave trade. In view | *iderable pooket enthasiaem, for he bas ra0 UP | tors of European goreianiesta pe of the ‘Senn, alenty ‘ailicted with po Tai ve .* BARSUW'S AMERICAN MUSEUM, Brostway—aner. | °% the *tvict censorship exercised over the press the valne of the telegraph shares from one 0} We therefore look for a radical change of | this dreadful scourge. Navigation on ibe Canal, mn REL Srecteenturoron's Tusa oF aston asr | in Cubs, and wat no article of any kind oan be | Wo hundred per cent in less than two days, thought in the minds of the people ef Europe nin Lrrrox Fars, August 21, 1868. mare a published there without the signature of an offi- | “2d Go one can say we have dono that yet. towards this country—a conviction that we are | _ TH# Inssvo1s Camparan—Hot Work FOR THE | Navigation is not suspended; boats are moving oops sor.Diye. @ ast 68 Breatway—Brmoruux | cer of the government to each sheet of the It ie, bowever, with but a dim Night we can as | | 4, them, and sympathise with them in their Doa Davs—We publish elsowhere in these | through the canal, which is all right. columns a batch of newspaper extracts from our yet explore the future consequences abroad of life and labors; that they will appreciate what hl - yi Tilinois exchanges, on the Douglas and anti- the new electric pathway of human thought, i ennibilating time and distance. Though Europe p Fd My pc edger ny Roce on se Douglas campaign in that State. These extracts bas been slowin perceiving what it leads to, | 40 world, and that we are coming closer and | *bow that Mr. Douglas bas been fairly cornered she will unquestionably be greatly governed closer to them, taking an interest in their affuirs | [POD “popular sovereignty,” and that that hereatter in ber conduct and opinions by its in- | 14 asking them to participate in our own, Toombe bill will, almost to a dead certainty, be fluence. The effects upon the various classes of | nis is a new pagein the world’s history. It is the tomb of the “Little Giant.” He confesses which her populations are composed will, of electrotyped and made visible to mankind. that be did report that bill of 1856, which course, be somewhat. differegt. A spontaneous i ir naa. Ing provided for a State constitution for unity of appreciation cannot be expected from Tur Crry Exxctions ry Decamsrn—Panties | Kansas witbout providing for its sub- them, as has been displayed by ue. wy THE Fieup—Contest ror THE Spoms.—Io | mission to the people. The bill pnesed It must not be forgotten that the rulers and | every attempt to unravel the confused web of | the Senate with the aid of the vote of magnates of the Old World cee, and have long } ovr party politics, the fact must not be over- | Mr. Douglas; and bad it passed the House, seen, in the working of our political system, | looked that there are two distinct systems of | where would have been that precious bantling dangerous innovation upon their own—a de- | party machinery at work in this city. The one | of popular sovereignty? Bat that was in 1856, monstration of the folly of their privileges, | looks solely to obtaining coatrol of the national | and it was the subsequent Fremont thunder titles, rank-—for the developement of national | patronege in the various departments of the | that brought the “Little Giant” down. The greatnees and proeperity; and who regard our | Custom House, Post Office, Navy Yard, United | record, however, stands out in bold relief successful vindication of self-governmeat as | States Mershal’s office, and so forth. The other | against him, and he cannot escape it. Oh, how tull of ultimate danger to themselves, It has | directs all its energies to, and finds the main | much wiser it would have been to have followed, no doubt been a part of the policy of the lead- | springs of, its action in the coutrol of the mu- | instead of attempting to dragoon and drag ing statesmen of Europe to disparage the con- | vicipal treasury. Here is a placer of the richest | down, the administration! dition of the people of the United States, to | yield, and those who go prospecting after it can Upon another subject, the leading Illinois criticise and obstruct the policy of our govern- | well afford to pass by the mere surface scrapings | anti-Douglas democratic organ has opened a ment, to foster in various ways every internal | of the general government, and leave them to | fire against Mr. Douglas which will be apt to difference and dissension that bade fair to break | small rogues and politicians who are ready to | damage him. We refer to that grand Illinois up our institutions or our Union, and to dispate | eell themeelves for yearly eslaries, ranging from | Central Railroad job—the beginning of all that and embarrass our simplest and fairest claims. | $500 to $2,000 a year. Upon this the wire | vast system of land jobbery and land robbery We can imagine, then, that this new bond be- | workers of city politics look down with a con. | which has since swelled into such a volume of tween two great nations speaking the same lao- | tempt they do not care to disguise. They goin | lobby corruptions. And we are not yet out of guage, and speaking it freely, too, bodes them | for higher stakes. Give them the centro] | August, and this Illinois campaign will last till no good. We cannot expect the prees or the | of the city purse, in the persons of the Mayor, | November! A gloomy prospect, indeed, for people where these men bear sway to enlarge | Comptroller and Common Council, and they do | the “Little Giant.” Who could have thought much, as yet, on the advantages of the At-| Dot care a straw whether Schell and Cobb are | that such would be the ending of his Kansas- lantic telegraph. at loggerheads through the whole quadrennial | Nebraska bill? The stateemen and diplomatists of Europe, | term, end whether good fighting democrats are batman pms whose interests are bound up in those of se successful in getting this office in the Custom THE LATEST NEWS. INTERESTING FROM WASHINGTON. manuscript, th is published article may be looked Maeno} ‘incomes uo Sraumsa cmesormraDRIwiOn upon as the accepted reply of the govern- —— York, Sunday, August 22, 1554. ment there to the acousations so often made =——————————————————— | ogainet it, of conniving at the slave trade. ‘The News. : For this reason its statements ave worthy of Sho Zeheh Cometiinn of Shp Comemace Oonn more notice than they would be considered the celebration of laying the cable across t! - | merely as the pair ad reed to hae ym 4 emanations of an iron bound and the President inited P . eee ae occiga ministers at Washington, | _ Th¢ Writer claims that Spain has loyally ful- the Governors of States and the Cabinet officers, to | fled her treatice and her international obliga- be present at the approaching celebration and par- tions relative to the slave trade; that she has take in the festivities of New York. The other } done eo with even greater efforts than the con- Dusiness transacted was of minor importance. tracting Powers had a right to claim; that by The New York Chamber of Commerce met yes- | treaty she is only obliged to watch her coasts terday and passed resolutions expressive of the } and prevent landings; that the great extent of gratification felt by the merchants at the successful | these present an insurmountable obstacle to the laying of the Atlantic telegraph cable. A commit: | prevention of the importation of negroes; that tee was appointed to procure suitable testimonials to the hes dismissed th t offic be presented to Captain Hudson and the officers of ne me Sa a a OED ., Geeee the Niagara. Captain Preedy, of the Agamemnon, wherever a landing has been effected; is to be similarly complimented. that though the act is specially probibited by + The steamer Hermann, which was to have sailed | the law of 1845, troops have been specially de- rom this port for Fraser river yesterday afternoon, | tailed to search the plantations and count their vas detained, in consequence of the non-completian | gapge; and that neither Spain nor any other riher repairs. She will sail at four o’olock on | nation has ever had the power to cut up a con- fonday afternoon. There was much disappoint: | traband trade by the roots, Afler developing ent among the passengers on account of the deten- | these points in a etyle of involution that is pe- zion. culiar to many modern Spanish writers, espe- The steamship Prince Albert sailed for Galwa; ih yesterday, with 246 tina Seances Peyviale Ach cially when they are trying to make a good ‘A demonstration was got up on the occasion of her | °®8¢ out of a bad one, the writer flings back departure by several Irish and American citizens. A | 80me pretty severe hits at England and her phi- steamer escorted her down the bay as faras the | lanthropy. He accuses her of having firet Highlands, haviog a band of music on board, and | given the great impulse to the slave trade in firing 200 guns, which were returned by the Prince | Cuba, and that for a long time the Eaglish en- Albert. Several other vessels also saluted her by | deavored to obtain the exclusive right to supply firing guns and otherwise as she passed along, and | Cuba with negroes; and that now, while she among them was the Sp nish frigate Barrenguela ‘The captain of the Prince Albert expressed himself | psi argos poe is bog tpia ted aM confident of reaching Galway in less than nine days. | yeOenrag “8 & sub- ‘A collation was given on board the Prince Albert | *titute for slave labor. opposite Staten Island Areport of the proceedings | _ Such is the gist of the argument made by the may be found in another column. | Spanish authorities in Cuba in defence of their Among the religious intelligence, given elsewhere, | connivance at the slave trade. It would be a Death of a Bank Preetdent. Loursvinie, Ky., August 21, 1858. M.T. Scott, President of the Northern Bank ef Kentucky, died at Lexington last night. Arrival of the Whaler Juaior and her Muti- neers, Bosron, Augnst 21, 1868. The whale ship Junior arrived at New Bedford last evening, having on board as close prisoners, eight of the mutineers who murdered Captain Archibald Mellen and the second mate of that ship. The Junior, under a new Captain (Gardner), and other officers, sailed from Sydney for New Bedford on tho 25th of April. Captain Mellen was shot with a whale gun. — Bos ot at 21, 1868. TON, , 1858. The ship lator, Cay “ Newtoabs from Mo- bile for Cadiz arrived here leaking hat five feet of water in her hold. badly, having Markets. ened STOCK BOARD. LADELPHA, Angust 21, 1866, Stocks steady. Poonsy!vauia sta e Fives 807%; Read- ing Railroad, 243;; Morris Cuval, 4344; Lovg Isiand Rafl- road, 125,; Penueylvania Ra iroad, 423. Bartimons, Av; 21, 1858. Flour—Obio, $5 95; Oty Mills, $5 26035 60 Wheat— Red, $1 20a $1 23; white, $1 26881 40. Comm steady: white, 740. a 800 ; yeliow, 850.8880 Whiskey dull and nominal at 2c. a26%4c. Provisions steady. PHrLapRLvHta, August 21, 1856. Flour steady: sales of new at $4 26. Wheat quiet: white $1 30 a $1 40, red $1 20. $1 83. Corn quiet. Pre- visions dull, Whiskey dull: 28 a 29. Burra.o, augast 21—123¢ P. M. Flour—Demand fair; lic! supply restricts sales: sales 600 bbis at $5 50 8 $5 6234 for good to ohoioe extra Indiana, Ohio, and Capaman, and $6 75 « $6 for double extra do ‘beat firm; good demend: sales 16,000 fair demand; market firm: sales of 16,000 busnels sound at 550 Rye nominal at 70c. Oats Srmly held et 49¢. a ©. Whiskey steady: anles of 100 bois. at 26c. Camal freigbts dull: four, 36¢.; wheat, 93¢c.; corn, 830. to Now York. Receipts by take..6,9:3 bbls. flour, 67,905 bushels wheat, 62,336 bushes dynasties they sustain, entertain also a distrust- | House, or that one in the Post Office. Sach ful feeling, which must affect their opinions and | pickings out of the public crib are to them their conduct in relation to the telegraph. | mere picayune affairs, But with Street Com- They see the coming and inevitable preponde- | missioners, who will certify to any sort of frau- Departure of the BNTHUSIASTIC DEMONSTRATION—FIRING OF FL@LD PTRORS IN THY BaY—THR GALWAY STRAMSHIP 64- LUTED BY VESSELS OF ALL NATIONS—OOLLATION, Our Special Washington Despatch. may be found an account of a monster camp mect- | very good one if it were founded upon facts, | "ance of political power westward taking its | dulent bill presented, and with Comptrollers so Wasninerox, August 21, 1858 SPRECHRS, TOASTS AND MRBKRIMENT—THE, PARE- ing held at Portchester last week, at which “ Awful | which, however, does not happen to be the case, | ¥8Y- They have, till quite recently, ignored | stupid as to be bamboozled by every rogue and} Attorney General Black left town this afternoon ous acbaeenal tab saiisinie cidahisaimnaaiite in for Somerset county , Pa., where his family are spend ing the summer months, for two or three weeks re- creation. Daring his absence the business of his office will be conducted by Mr. McCalmut, his as- sistant. Mr. J.B. Henry, Private Secretary to the Presi- dent, also left today, to spend a few weeks in the vicinity of Lake George. Advices from on board the sloop-of-war Dale to July 20, at Porto Grando, Coast of Africa, have been received. The Dale is the vessel which was recently afflicted with so many cases of African fever among the crew, and shs has been at the Canary Islands recruiting. She now reports all well. Purser Nixon is transferred to the Vincennes, which goes to Madeira. The flag sbip Cumberland is at Porto Prayo awaiting the mail from the Dale. The latter will await the arrival of the storeship for provisions, of which there are none at the storehouse. The Bainbridge, ordered on the Paraguay expedition, and the Marion, are both on this country. Their world has been Europe | scoundrel, and with pliable aldermen and council- and the dependencies of Europe. A family | mento give out fat contract jobs, what rich hauls compact, a boundary on the Rhine or the | they can make out of the eight or ten millions Danube, the settlement of a duchy, or | a year, which our city pays for being the worst the marriage of a princess, has been work | governed municipality in the civilized world! enbugh for these hereditary statesmen and their | They are well aware that, with political friends most astute cabinet ministers. These men, stiff | at court, they can get an opportunity of having in the lace and principles of antiquity, do not | 8 grab at the public treasure, and of eo enrich- care about enlarging their diplomatic field be- | ing themeelves in the course of a year or two as yond the sphere of their precedents or their | to be able to retire from the business with power of control. It is a plain spoken, hard brown stone palaces up town, and the title to a handed and unceremonious customer they have | score or £0 of submerged lots along the river now to desi with. To them it isa wondrous if| front. These are the spoils they go in for, leav- not an appalling sight to behold a new and| ing the small fry politicians, as we said, to be- active nation covering a continent with towns | siege the Custom House and Post Office with and cities like magio; with a large and intelli- | demands for official positions. gent population brave and ambitious; a navy Thus these two distinct systems of political that disputes the empire of the seas, and a na-| machinery work; and though the aim of each tional army of millions rather eager than other-| is somewhat different, they necessarily co-ope- Gardner,” the converted pugilist, was present, ac- | Jt is notorious that Spain has not fulfilled her tively engaged in exhorting the people to “turn ' treaties on this subject, except in appearance; pap tai dent sends us the copy | (2 When the treaties have been forwarded to a eegacerer °PY the officers in Cubs for their observance, pri- of a somewhat important historical document, , being « ietter written thirty-four years since by vate instructions have been sent with them Quartermaster General Jesup to the present Secre- , © @ contrary purport. This custom of tary of War, then a member of the House of Repre- | Spain has not been confined to the slave trade, sentatives, containing his views and suggestions for . but is usual with that Power in all circum- the military defence of Oregon and Washington stances. Her obligation goes much further bcs it 4 as well oe the eT per score than merely watching her shores and _prevent- Indians. In view of prominent whic! ing the in; egroes te ‘these regions play in the history of the present time, = * dover achat oe jr taphoence on account of the hostility of the warlike Indians A thereof snd of the gold discoveries there and on ber coasts does not present an insurmountable Fraser river, we publish this interesting historical Obstacle to the suppression of the trade. The document—historical because it was the subject of | Slave Jandings take place in the most populous interpellstions between our government and that of parts of the island. Negroes cannot be landed Great Britain at the time. It is well deserving of elsewhere without making such preparations for covside ration at present. . feeding them and conveying them to a market According to the report of the City Inspector as must attract the attention of the authorities, way yesterday morning, wes complete,triamph, as woll ‘a the occasion of a most interesting scdne. At 8 o'clock ‘a the forenoon she left her pier in the North river and anchored in the stream opposite to it, where she re- mained mdored till the time of sailing arrived. In the meantime, a steamer at Peck slip, chartered by several Trish and American citizens for the ocoasion, was ready te start at half past ten o’clock, having on board a band ef music and a large number of people interested in the wel- fare of Ireiand. She was gaily decked with fags ‘aa sbe steamed round to the North river, apd landed at the foot of Chambers stroet,where two brass Geld pieces— 9 pounders—were taken on board. She then headed ai. rectly for where the Galway steamehip was auchorea, and on nearing her,at 11}¢ o’clock, fired twenty-one guns, which were instantly returned from the deck of the Prince Albert, which was thronged by a muititade of passengers. ‘When the guns were fired from both vessels, the smaller steamer came alorgside the Prince A'bert, and a series of cheers burst forth from both vessels, and fran pesling the river till they were heard and Soy cee Seenged ‘ts piers of the North river to bebold the there were 695 deaths in the city daring the past who waich every unusual movement with great | Wise to try its strength; a confederacy of States | rate to some extent. Nevertheless, the ques- | the Coast. i @ week, a decrease of 7as compared with the mor calousy, fearing it is some preparation for re | TOwing larger every year and stronger every | tors after the national spoils care very little | | ‘The Union of to-day contains the proclamation of a ee fonrmoder gn) onenpants of see tality of the week previous, and 62 less than oc- hour, animated by a life and energy unknown | whether the party of municipal jobbers lose or | the President giving effect to the commercial treaty | commander; . Kelly and Capt. were with Siam, negotiated by Townsend Harris, Esq., in 1856. It is said that the course of Mejor Cooper, in rais- bellion. The dismissal of officers who have urred du: the corresponding week in last r. a cay bah as al incidental on , Covered the landings of negroes has been sel- season, and the victims are principally children of dom practised, and then only as a blind and to in the Old World; the home of the greatest and | win, and vice versa; let the latter but have the most useful inventions and discoveries of the | control of the city purse, and the national ad- tender years. In this respect, however, a gratifying — Sfford ground for professions of sincerity, The | 8° a we gp emt ee Ap aan may fall into cay hands, for sught | Chickasaw and Chootaw troope, with which to | sscwtien Seams Gh nee ieee ae eee eens improvement is observable. Of the total number | detail of troops for the purpose of searching | tbe best friend of its cause and the best pro- ‘This ba very fair analysis of the two sets of proceed against the Camanches, is not approved by pay Fond advance of her as much as possible before ‘of deaths last_week 475 were of ten years of plantations bas been mere ostentatious exhi- moter of its interests. ideas that vt rl litical the Interior Department, as there is no appropria- given and returaed te the uma seamen teed ares ie age and under, while during the week previous they | bitions of zeal; and the assertion that no other | We are too near Europe already for the com- | 12e8s rh , wv es bers Po Pat | tion out of which their expenses can be paid. Here Tier, and the cheering, was again texeo up and renewed amounted to 527. The following table shows the government has been able to cut up this illicit | fort and tranquillity of its ralers and its states. ties, whether democratic, republican or Ameri- | i, 4 chance for another Indian war debt. someones tend, Tena is tebe Oe number of deaths during the past two weeks among trade by the roots is utterly devoid of founda- | men. The telegraph qill not increase their en- | C®® The conventions which are to nominate | The Secretary of the Interior has addressed a sce o'clock—Afty ‘minutes after the other steamer. Re adults and children, distinguishing the sexes:— tion. Every nation bas done it except Spain, | Joyment of their hereditary power. But there | Candidates for State officers meet at Syracuse | communication for the establishment of a new mili; | Sod three asinmes afterwards che was wal arerges ak Woo exciag Avg. U...088 76” aot” “arr “Gu We believe that it fs possible, and even easy, | 184 class—the class of the governed, the middle | 0” the = and a _ ~~ mp — wy ne ‘be Hisar Apr ed bed corte el Py yy a ye eS Weekencing Avg 21.....81 06 258 263698 for the government of Spain to stop the slave | Class between the aristocracy and the beggars | 824 98 there are to ee Sa nor thern frontiers of Bexasand the indian reser | Spanish on the mizzen mast, As fen minutes past oac hee Among the principal causes of deaca were sue cx | f thei try, th fl delegates present, the extent of union that | vation west of Arkansas from the Camanches. This | head was turned down tpe stream, then sho fired « un, ' ve “© | trade in Cuba, if it were go inclined. Thegreat | of their country, the producing, working, exists in that party may be easily estimated, ia the post asked for by Col. Rector, the Indian | $24 ‘along for the Narrows, which she reached in poi a Wigtomimg-——. | msjority of the people of Cuba are opposed | thinking and scting class in these forcign | “ht "oe leverdemain sort of arrangement | Agent for that country, and as its establishment | "in tue meaatiwe the escorting steamer. was overtaken Diseases August 4 Auguet 21, to the continued importation of negroes from | Countries—who submit from generation to gene- will be eubsequentl wep with in re- | T0Uld supersede the necessity of posts at Fort Bel- On coming within mile or more of her, she com Coesesni 42 Africa, because they see in it great political | tation to governments in which they have ne a sag is i ci a only that | *28P aud Camp Cooper, it will probably be done. ys run fortn, by ihe. Price’ Albert, Tat responded 12 evils for the future. The constant supply of | direct interest or influence; who through the = A Page: a. May! tlh 9h rv Acting Commissioner of the General Land Office, | dea of war” in’ triondahip wore Kept booming, inces %4 black barbarians tends to give a numerical pre- | dim and intercepted light by which they have | Mere a © | Wilson, has issued instructions restoring to pre- | and until sho arrived ai uareoune. Hore several ree: $, _ ponderance to the negro race, which the Cubans | 887ed at the experiment of agreat confederated field. Thus, in addition to the democrats, re- | emption the Florida lands which were withdrawn sole, fred calates of three guns to the Prince we | 13 | wish to avoid, but Spain wishes to stimulate, | Tepublic and popular sovereignty, will hail an | Publicans and Americans, we will have the re- | under the railway grant] until the allotment of the "GL the shige tnd stmersere Si sachet “cirped” 4 Pt iy nearly steamers at anchor ‘dipped n : pas event which conveys the pulsations of th form party, which succeeded last December in | railway sections had been made. their colors as noble vessel dashed a a 4 peerage gee renege aun ege heels ideiinliegeier to Pa he electing Daniel F, Tiemann Mayor of this city; | The Chickusaw and Choctaw agents report that | M0 seventesn knots an hour. Ab Fort Haaaton nus Mori $1 ua cae te Geant’ bee ae pain hove 5 and we will also have a new and more powerful | the United States surveying party had completed on | epirtad escort. The mpall steamer wos, soos’ along. ite, Soariot forer.. 4 4 in Spain, with the unfulfilled hope that they And to ali the c! we have mentioned, as prone f the oth i the 27th ultimo the determination of the ninety. | 84 ber company traasforred egain to the Prince bert, There were also 4 deaths of apoplexy, 4 of cholera | would be admitted to seats, one of the chief | £00R as they can realize the fact, the Iay- | Party bsg A other corrupt organiza- where of @ collation fully characteristic of i | ’ tions—that is, the taxpayers’ party. If this or- | ighth meridian of west longitude. The proper | irish When jastioe had peen done to the coi- morbua, 11 of congestion of the brain, 6 of con | points of their instructions was, to endeavor to | ing of the Atlantic cable will be like monument had been erected and certified to by the | ‘ation and the ) & scene of mirth and gestion of the lungs, é of typhoid fever, 9 of disease the awaki from « | ganization be faithfully and energetically man- ° | enjoyment followed could scarcely cour C aatens. at A 2 induce the government to stop the African awakening ® long and stupid it will be able to 4 some 50,000 | Chickasaw and Choctaw Commissioners. ‘The snr’ | in any other place or on } yl osm it reautreir ton ant is SAT ade 1 he govorament wou ent | Sam, Emme ere of Wea i | vl td thas cot alr nominees o os | entender car moCamnctey | RA Saas Se ara ae 4 ya . * | the proper laws, and show a disposition to fufil our servant, of local util- but there were plenty of fresh trails. The settlers | fran enter, ‘of Sos drowned, tating? miclet, 21808 | hoon is. good fulth, the people of Cuba would | ity, and abrosd the stipendinry and the | We hope there will be no flagging or Party | west of Fort Arbuckle bad moved ato the fort fr | Me Laver aod ie gt ot toe taleny ove wore te | voluntarily see that they w ed. Not a | Serf of governments It has now become a | dodging or underhand trickery abou! : — Mead lhe enthosiaatic néuee Wich aluaded trees t4 ae ec is claniation of the dimes, | voluntarily owe that they were obeyed. Not a | ® . ay duis of in | Payers’ party, and that none but the most com-| Mr. Hall, the present incumbent, is to be | dtemes, mingled with the mone of Use thea: sed are loca and the number of deaths in cach class of disease, Slave © pe landed but the government | Chain, crossing ocean “ bers ut rh Guttathe eid | wesill the Seenliies Wl dase eid te tak security and safety, and overleaping the bar- | Peteut and honest men will receive ite endorse- | retained at the Post office at Whitehall, N. Y. | Many incites that wok piece wane eheae ene oe | . a ment to the people. That being #0, there is | There has been quite a harmonizing time here | rouse to jollifcation the Staten Ialanders, they Disrases. Angus 4. August. tion, and every illicitly imported negro would | Tiers which divide the world. However the the New York politicians du wore twice two miles The toasts came nox. Oap- Bones, joint, ke 4 4 have felt towards some amall chance left of getting the govern- | among ew poli ring the last | Tit Waters away. Train and perves wi be arrested, without any need of odious and | men of Europe may have felt towards us, they few days. It is even said that the Trojans returned | Max Sere Proposed the health of Joba Orrell Lover, Generative organs 18 | tyrannical searches by armed troops. Sostrong | have now a great fact before them, and consider- ment mpi elty out of the hans of rogues, | ern metiched with the explanations of the | thea ropoeed as, 8 se sant, Ord olan oo Young pan % isthe popalar will in this direction, that the | ing the relations borne to it by Franklin, Morse | T#Mane and nincompoope, to be filed at | President as to his appoint@ent policy. ‘The firm- | doeun steamers nov ana forerer, tht oretmeat wae re 3 Iw would be executed without any effort on | snd Field, an American fact, at the contempla- | |, Tbe mou lmPortan ee thet of Comp, | Bet of the Executive has doubtless had a magical | oeived wih tires dee tire cheers and ger, flowed the part of the authorities to enforce its obe- | tion of which they may well pause to take w a in Deoem! of Comp- | effect, and one cannot help wishing it had been | PZaq Tmufickis, Day, and % Yankoo Deodie’ from tno Gience. But Spain bas political reasons for | breath. The despotiams of the Old World are big z th — “ Gc ae shown as strongly from the beginning of his term. | President of tee. Unset Satie sad Geom Visterio= permitting the slave trade. She looks to a war | now fastened to the car of liberty by an invisi- a, a frauds by which | The Cas-Herran and Cus+Yrisnrri treaties are by “The Star Banner and" od fave tae | ble but an enduring chain; and their | We have been #0 atrociously victimized of late | still under consideration, as also are the appoint- | Queen.” Ool. Kelly proposed the health of apt. Waters of races to perpetuate her hold upon the island, e ; subjec| ‘and the success of the Iria and the wishes to augment the number of her | millions, when they begin to understand the | C4 be prevented. It will not do for the incum- | ments to the Havana and Jondou consulates and the Barto thaerng enced, which ulnae’ ad fin | savage allies. miracle of its power will look on with amase- | beat to be merely honest; he mast be keen, in- | mimion to Paraguay; but none of them are def | fm, Joesph renenty ,propumed the heat in tha We must therefore accept her plea of ina- | ment. We imagine we can hear them asking penne ewe S eaaaes Sh <n ro -_ peo as to the spunhav atau pia venees ap- obtain the gr ote scipaion, wee waned oa router | bility to enforce her own laws and international | each other—“ Who and what is this nation in be ee tth then h plicants, but as they are all surmise I will not | in fray. This tonst, was responded” to’ by three the West, once #0 distant, from which we now | *!most knavery with efficiency than honesty trouble your readers with them. orl cae Bm yy ape ey 633 | Obligations; and she must stand up to the conse- hear at every hour of the day and night, and from | Without it. The knave will chest for himself, | “senators Fitch, of Indiana, and Rice, of Minno- : all The nativity table gives 5 quences of this inability. When a government sharper on ag LT) iq Bates, 60 of Ireland, 27 of Germany, 12 of Ragland, | cannot comply with {ts obligations to the | Which our rulers, statesmen and merchant ee en Cs nee ee ee fa Was pened by ibe Trinoe afbert, though 5 of Scotland, 2 of France, 3 of Prussia, 2 of British | family of nations, it must give way to those | Princes are compelled to hear? Who are these Susbendieed tun benlbodsien fool will be | tain them for a short time. the wan stern, inde mame rch, and the Trinon America, 1 each of Poland, Belgium, Switzerland, | who can and willoarry out requirements of | men who are circling their continent with rail- int on yelde, Let TUE GENERAL NEWSPAPER DmPATCH, fired by each of the eames at taey were of each ‘and West Indies, and 1 unknown. the common weal. Tho people of Cuba are | waye, have united the Atlantic and Pacific ed oe wo Pa baat Wasiixorow, August 21, 1858. | foretarn ws tir ous veel, which was now towed nearly Ws the alarming sccounte received of the willing and desirous of suppresting the slave | oceane, and subdued an isthmus which has w les a és ate the comp- The President, after consideration, has confirmed | 8 far as the Highlands. The scene at the final separs- Coe ee tree at Charleston, 8: C. the | trade, and they long for a severance of the po- | obstructed the commerce of Europe for cen: | *ollership of the city. the appointment of Mr. Fonda, as Postmaster at | Honsras affeoting. 4 cheer for ‘Finy‘ie er iat Giaiiid teh den eee oy = od Iticnl thrall “which binds them to Spain. | tulet—whowe navies throng the see—whore | ‘Tux Yatiow Favtn—Thero seems iittle | Ty, the worth aotk 11a stat: having already | fests £4 Sr cesassing tebe Yossde wore lneets b infected port. . | volunteer armies bivonac in the EH gpg “ale 100 per annum, in which | salute Jots have been notified, and vessels arriving from | Whether they ercot an independent govern ¢ Halls of the | doubt that a few sporadic cases of yellow fever there fe no likelihood of his being disturbed. ‘The pd AT et LK Montezumae, and whose States multiply with | have occurred outside of the Quarantine limits their snecesses, and are stretching over a con- | op Staten Island, owing to the carelessness of tinent? Who are these philosophers, states- | the victims themselves, either in bathing in too men, patriote, merchants and operatives, who | close propinquity to the hospital grounds, or have combined their exertions in harmony, and | otherwise coming in contact unnecersarily with worked out this great problem of self govern- | the contagion. But while cases of this charac- ment with successful gability’” Those are | tor are always liable to occur as long as will be required to observe the rules and | ment, or come into the American Union as a governing such cases. sovereign State, they are equally capable of an ane wh Saekeuee — about 1,600 | complying with the obligations of good neigh- closing ge. for mid- | borhood. Spain has expended revenues in the <ag ents, Deae wus 6 spenshtive mevemeat 10 | ccestion of fortifications and constrection of public works, which must remain in the island and are requisite to its defence. For these sho President declined ‘ rescind the former order. Patrick Grattan, appointed Postmaster at West Troy, hax also been confirmed, and his commission ordered to be issued. The order for the appointment of Mr, Bool as Postmaster st Whitehall, has been rescinded; and Atherton Hall, the present incumbent, is retained. | | : i li i tos Owing to will be more than amply compensated in the | inquiries which will agitate Europe to its very | Quarantine is located in the heart of a popu- hua thaalagtic Passengers wore landed without & single acct. be ta tee eames anon p apn sum of one hundred mfllions of dollars, which | centre, as the Atlantic telegraph begins its | tons neighborhood, thero is very little danger rpm linet A mop 1858, Steers took out ‘Ste ne a = a cna {6 ail casen. What one (would doom ana | Cuba will agree to pay her for a treaty of inde- benign labors, and the world shall find ont that | of the epidemic taking hold on the community Per U. 8. Bxpress to Booneville, Ang. 21. ‘were cabin passengers, togethor hy RF re) | extra, another would represent sa stand. | pendence, or we will pay for one admitting | humanity is unity, and that everywhere we are | or «pending among them, even in Staten | TW companies of the Second Infantry arrived here Personal Intelligence. ; the ewes of | Cuba into this Union. Her inability to comply Inland ; and certainly none at all of its eproad. | Yesterday from Fort Soott, and will be forwarded | song ihe passengers by the steamship Arago, which immediately to Fort Randall. Sherman's battery march overland to Minnesota forthwith. A train is organizing in the Quartermaster’s department at Fort Leavenworth to proceed to Fort Smith, Arkansas, to form part of Ligut. Beal's expedition. one. In epite of the repngnance of foreign nations ing in New York. hie city is very differently to deal with us as a first class Power ; in spite of our unpolished manaere, which offend My circumstenced now from what It was when the of our domestic institutions, whith grieve | yellow fever desolated it before. The perfect others; of our domestic feuds, which system of sewerage and the thorough ventila- ij with her international obligations must ue ally lead the other nations to enforce upon her seceptance an arrangement so advantageous and £0 consonant with the interests of all. i ri ay ah