The New York Herald Newspaper, October 30, 1858, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE NEW YORK HERALD. PRICE TWO WHOLE NO. 8092. MORNING EDITION-SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1858, OREN Dozaars ari yl in the way of imports. | he has businces,or i+ + ublic officer, is permitted to enter THE L that policy he pointed to the fact that, whereas at b INTERESTING FROM JAPAN. Lorn oro Meet dtd Todustry, eave | inside of the Ouato.n di, use gate, cud whenaver cue of our POLITICAL CAMPAIGN prepreg etl Forty ahah naan sesidacetn the lacquered sud porosiain ware; and one good size’ New | boats reaches the |... ng hundreds of the people arc to eb Ntnias mo hencad slave States and but one free State, there | wore Senator Seward, Our Hokodadi Correspondence, York clipper ship conld carry allin one load that all the | be seen outside of ih te for the purpose of seeing us as | The Contest In the Ninth Congressional Dis. | now reventeen free States to fifwen slave States be ance He algo pomted to the fact of slavery having been abol ishew in the State of New York under the administration of a democratic Governor, Tompkins, and that it was alio abolished in Pennsylvania under democratic rule, and that it was prohibited in California—a State lying South of the imaginary line where it might have existed—under like rast 4 three ports we have visited contain. A two hundred ton | weland. If one of u. ppens to stopa few moments in ono trict—De: th at Hawonanr, Japan, Augast 22,1858. | 58° Wonia probably lay hero ® year before sho could | of the streets or in of the shops, we are at once aitr- — remy Beery in = tad Arrival of the United States Seamer Mississippi af | On” up with a freight. For a depot for our steam: | rounded by adoz i: more of Japanese, who closely ox- ‘onkers—Speech o in Van n—KRe~ Hakodadi—Chavacter of the Harbor—Arregan of Jt- | ships, both naval and commercial, and whale ship; | amine the butto: on our clothes and tho figure of the ply to Senator Seward’s Rochester Speech, ‘ és , to recruit, they are no doubt valuable to us, One great dif- | eagle, which they «c m to admire very much; they will ‘A meet held | e ) 3 Hancse Officials—Deseription of the Governor's Palace— | tony ve that tho Japanese ao not want Wo purchase from | also examine th ality of our blue’ clothes (for white meeting was beld last evening in Gestys Hall, Yon are The Brutal and Bloody Manifesto of THE NEW ISSUE FOR 1860, Proposed Total Destruction of th> Scuth- Unwillingness of the Japanese Trade—Morals of (he | ys: all they crave is the money. They will sell all they | are not wanted if it is August), and try to pull open | Kers, for the purpose of responding to the nomination of | qemocratic rule, Mr. Seward, in speaking of the subject ; cles Hakedadi mB Visit 9.0 Tapaners Cannon Foundry— | have, but will not bay. i a the seams to unr» and how they Ms put together. Our } the Hon. Gouverneur Kemble as a representative of the | of slavery, had used these words:— ern States and their Institutions, és cl roe i Mr. Rice, tho consul, has a very pleasant residence on | boots, shoes ant caps also attract their attention. The inth C istrict. i Shall I tell you what this collisia cana? Th ho think , The Marriage Law in Japan—Schoo Processions in Ha- | 440 Taal aves, ‘a short disiance jos the Governor’s pa- | shoes that the women of Japan wear are very odd, consist- % maqrensionsl district. Netwithetenting: he an hie necidontal, unneotsary, tne work of lnvereaked oF fh: &o., de, de. “al, mistake the case ween opposiag and ited States mime and 4 iding aa. and rice out LOniaianis, wil ultimately be tille rand Charleston and Orleans become marta for legitimate merchanaine alone, oF else the rye felds and wheat tields of Massachusetts and New York must again be surrendered by their (armers to slave oul ture and to the production of slaves, and Boston and New York become once more markets for Wade in the bodies and souls of m This is like Governor Seward. Governor Seward never did undertake anything in which he expected to sucesed. (Laughter.) Anti-rent was a good cry for him, because it could have no practical result. Anti Masonry was the same. Internal improvement was the same, Agitation is his trade. He is one of those people that most have a grievance, and when the grievance is healed their occu pation is atan end. He is represented by John B. Haskin. Mr. Haskin is the nominee of the Republican Convention. He stands as the exponent of Mr. Seward’s* policy. He stands asa member in full communion of the party of which Mr. Seward is the head, or else he stands in a pos! tion where he is not dealing fairly with those who nave tendered him the nomination. Un the other hand, you have Mr. Kemble, living in this distric Mr. Haskin was born, largely identified with the bi ® and with the interests of the district, having represented you on two previous occasions, honored not only throughout the district, but throughout the State and throughout the Union, for his trict integrity, high gentlemanly feeling, untyergally known hospitality and’ kindness and benevo: lence. Am I tw supp at in such a contest the people of Westchester can hesitate as to what is their true course? Isthere not something in this attempt now, when the whole controversy in regard to slavery has been, at all events, transferred to a distant Territory—now when the subject is removed from the haila of Congress— when the State of New York especially has coased to be agitated on the subject—when our accustomed feelings of kindness towards our Southern brethren, growing out of a personal association and joint interest, depending the one ‘on the other, have been restored—is it not wrong, I say, to re-light the fires of a sectional strife, to propose now to set at hazard all those great commercial interests de- pending on the union of the Btates, to arouse these feel ings of jealousy, this discord, thia bad blood—and for what? For the mere Quixotic purpose of engaging in a crusade in favor of an abstraction, and planting William H. Seward in the Presidential chair. 1 never shall be Dy ' natical agitators, and therefore ephem: altogether, Itis an irrepressible contin enduring forces, and it means that th nar eduher ext hodadi— Visit to a Cemetery—Navab Amusements, de. | lace, weil surrounded with handsome shrubbery and forest | ing of a piece of wood the length of the foot, on the top isa | fvorableness of the weather, the hall was woll filled , ‘The 6th of August found us at auchor in this splendid | trees, with a well of water beg cheapo) ak one as any eran " passes yon the big toe and best Reap heys Tar barrels were burned, and guna fired, and skyrockets ice water can be made. His house has been thrown open | then on to theankle. On the bottom is secured ateachend@ | diecharged, and all harbor, after a pleasant run of three days from Simoda. | f° The"D.S of our officers, and he has taken care that our | piece of wood about two inches wide, which ralece the siscmarann, Ans te hee socompanimenta of tho po ‘The weather being rather hazy, we did nob enjoy tho | men, white ou shore, slyil be kindly treated by the iata | Women that much higher from the ground. Those worn peg paign were brought out on the occasion, Pteasure of having a view of Foogee. We found the cur- | bitants. Mst of the ege Se ae and prone city : by Se, man sp pale out of Bw sre, and rest flat The meeting was organized by the appointment of the rocky and barren, but that which is ueed for cultivation upon the ground, and are secured in same manner to | Hon, Wa. W. Woodward chai rent running with us at tho rato ofsix knots per hour, | Ty‘) excellent soiland loam, and neatly cultivated. ‘Th | te fect as thoad of the women. A large majority of the = ties al ah elreoen, ancl We oMtiah ‘whieh goes to prove the existence of a continuous current nese manufacture their own flour out of wheat an | poorer class of the males during the summer months go | 2" ice presidents and secretaries. em the coast of Japan, similar in character, and running % which ates, being thoroughly ground, is ‘oage br cae tate oF sec, meses oihing, buta pai On motion of Dr, SkinnER a committee of five was ap- ‘ , : ther. Bread of no kind is to be had at auy price. Fowl: | strip of cloth around their'loins, In the winter mot ted to pr " the same dinG@Pions, as the Gulf Stream on our own cost. | Ein he had atmfteen centseach, and eggs fora cent. Thena | they protect themselves from the severity of tuo weathor | PNA 1 Trepare resolutions to be Laoag shea €n entering the Straits of Sanger we found the land quit» } tives live on rice, string beans, radishes and fish, whic, | with thick heavy stuffed deer and other skins, The floors | Mectivs. Dr. Skinner was appointed chairman of such : , , remarkable: that on the island of Yero bold ani | they cook tig toca ways. oe yoaee phystole of the re ypan eigen ages sane Wesessen! aii bag committee, ‘ ‘i "4 has stuck up his shingle near the Consul’s residence. | da, are all covered with thick straw carpeting. ore is The resoluti jeh e1 sharply defined. In th’ vicinity schools of whales wer’ | Prom appearance I should judge that it did not take him | not much furniture in them excepting that which is abso- a a xis a ght pon igs oe Diowing in all dire ong, As we neared the Straits } long to make his charges for his morning cals. His nam | lutely required for cooking purposes, and as rice conati- | Sdopted, pledged the support of the democracy of the we found the temperature differing a good doa | Js Bates, and ho is from Ashiield, Mass., and very muc | (utes their principal food, not man, articles are, used in district to Mr. Gouvernour Kemble, Judge Parker, and the ~ ofa gentieman, No doubt, after these’ people leave o | that line. This carpeting answers for the bed and chairs, | whole democratic State an Sin from what wo had left at Nangasaki or Simo | some of their prejudices, hé will havea good practice and | for the Japanese all mt cross-legged on the floor, like the WOT sed yin bear, qunegs — @, and all seemed delighted and improved by | reaparich reward for the privation he has to undergo, | Asiatics. r. Jo % BUREN, on being presented to the meet iwhaling the beautiful breeze that swept over us, The bay | He is quite Pe young man and in excellent oT . All hands have been fo gtry to © on share. std bs ing, was greeted with three cheers and a tiger. He said ji i = morals of the peopie are in rather a low state, if one can | remain over night, and y speak well of the goo. ere assembled here on a night e1 ef Hakodadi is spacious and majestic in its sweep, and | 4. aiowod to judge from the manner in which they enjoy | treatment received ‘at the hands of the Japanese; and I patel cca RRO sehr fair weather for facility of entrance and security for anchorage it can- | the luxury of bathing. They have numerous lug must say that, during my long life ina man-of-war I | Soldiers might well be supposed to stay at home. But the ‘not be surpassed by any othor in any part of the world, | heuses, in ft males and females, young aad old, all | oever pad a ship's aoe mo and return to their hy oven democratic party had seen darker nights. It gave him bathe together in a perfect state of nudity while crowds of | in 80 good and well ordered @ manner as our men have ‘eatest pleasure to be present with the a on For our purpose it is worth a hundred such narrow con. | spectators. stand around to witness the sport. Modesty | dono in this and ail the ports they have had liberty in. | cuyifn, “fie shared with: em ia thar wmsty aaa twacted harbors as that of Simoda, It will make a grand | seems to be an accomplishment that the ladies of Japan | They are a credit to themselves and to the navy of tho | this Congressional district an expression should be given and safe retreat for our whale ships (a number of | have not yet learned. Ladies of rank and women of the | United States. We shall lie here until the arrival | to the popular zentiments, so that those who were unfaith- h already been here this season) to recruit and | !oWest character, married and single, gentlemen and | of the Commodore, which will be about the first of | fui to their trust might receive their condemnation, Thay WEE Fare already ) 0 recruit avd | joggers, bathe together, apparently as usconcerned at the | uext month, when we expect to proceed again | wore aware that the polity of the demeeene re nee reGt, procure wood, water, &c., and thereby avoid the | moral effect of the sceue as if they were enjoying the | the coast of China. Our time is pleasantly o0- | gard to internal improvements was what might be called Song run from these seas to the Sandwich Islands; and it | sports of a picnic party. Houses of @ certain character | cupied with target practice, boat exerciser, general quar- “pr you-go policy. That policy resulted in the com: th ‘ . | appear to be agovernment monopoly, for those disposed | ters, excursions, fishing, hunting and surveying, and the of the Hrie canal in 1825. : Will aleo make 08 good a coal depot as Nangasaki, es- | TT0i ‘them have to procure a ticket, backed by aus. | health of ail hands has’ improved very much.” "This will ~_ typower roms toiean. During ner tens Gap nae pecially for the line of steamers that ere long will ply | tom House official. reach you by the way of San Francisco, in a Hamburg brig er paid or provided to be paid for the completion fy Detween San Francisco and Shanghae. The view from the | | During the past season over forty American whalers | which arrived here a few days ago, bound to that port | ¢enal ithe Erie canal omaterneet a cant etion of the: 1 = reminded me very much of the | Bve put into port to recruit aud refit ship. By the | We have had no news from the United States for four | on the plan of devoting the surplus receipts to that work. ship, as I glanced around, ry way, Consul Rice has already held a court, under the new | months, and are anxiously waiting for the mails by the | At that time the democrats went out of power, and Gov. famous Gibraltar rock and bay. treaty, and there are now confined in the cages two | Powhatan, when we hope to find tiles of the Heratp. Seward came into office; and I desire to call your attention ‘The town contains between four and five thousand | whalemen who have been tried before bim and sen- Yesterday forenoon we had a grand race of all the | to what the Governor sald had been the financial conduct ‘The number of inhabitants on the isiand is esti: | “BCed as follows:—One, a native of Philadelphia, for | boats attached to the ship. The signal boat was stationed | of the democracy in the State, He said history furnishes Bouses. stealing rum eee) to one year’s hard labor; the other, | one mile from the vessel, and the bouts had to start from no paratie! to the financial achievements of this State. It sur- mated to be about twenty-five thousand, The most | a native of New York city, named Waters, for as- | the ship and pull around it back to the ship, which was | rendered its share inthe national domain and relinquished prominent objects ef interest are the temples, | Saulting a prostitute with a knife, to one and a half | done in about twelve minutes by all the boats, our third } for the general welfare all the revenue of its foreign com- 3 year’s imprisonment and hard labor. There are two | cutter, Harry Ramsdale coxswain, coming im victorious @ | merce, equal generally to two-thirds of the entire expendi. one or two of which are between two and i D ge y ‘pend! or three distilleries in the city for the manufacture | few seconds abead of the other six boats. Inthe after- | ture of the federal government. It has, nevertheless threo hundred feet square, the roofs of which | of saki, of which there are two kinds—the stroag | noon they all had a grand sailing match, the first launch | eustained the expense of its own administration—founded are covered over with tile. Tho streets are quite wide, | and the sweet. We paid a visit toa foundry, whero the | being the tlag boat, with the pennant tlying in her bows. | and endowed a broad system of education. It has in- pro et lel with the water; they are rolled with Japanese cast their guns. Here we found two very large | You will perceive that we are endeavoring to pass the | ereased four-fifths the wealth of its citizens, and relieved are found in all par their motiv oluntary labor o ty, by whomsoev beyond a period of five hundred wh reign lieve, whatever may be the decision of other communi. | imbecility and anarchy which no! freomen, Speech of William H. Seward, delivered at Rochester, Monduy, Oct. 25, 1855, Frivow Crrizevs—The unmistokeable outbreaks of zeal which occur all around me show that you are earnest men— and such @ manam I. Lotus, theretore, at least for a time, pars by all secondary and collateral questions, whe: ther of a persona! or of a general nature, and consider the main subject of the present canvass.’ The democratic party—or, to speak more accurately, the party whic wears that attractive Dame—is in possession of the federal government, The republicans propose to dislodge that party and dismiss it from its high trust, ject, then, is whether the democratic party deserves wo retain the contidence of the American people. ing to prove it unworthy, I think that [ am not actuated by prejudices against that party, or by prepossessions in favor of its adversary; for I have learned, by some expe. rience, that virtue and patriotiam, vice and selfistmess, , and that they differ less in than in the policies they pursue, re which exhibits, in full operation, two radi- ‘ent political systems—the one resting on the basis of servile or siave labor; the other on the basia The laborers who nsiaved are all negroes, or persons more or lesa purely of African derivation. But (his is only accidental. The principle of the system is, that labor, in every socie- performed, is necessarily unintellec- tual, grovelling and base, and that the laborer, equally for his own good and for the welfare of the State, ought to be enslaved, The white laboring man, whether native or foreigner, is not enslaved only because he cannot, as yet, be reduced to bondage. You need not be told now that the slave system is the older of the two, and that once it ‘was universal. The emancipation of our own ancestora— Caucasians and Europeans, as they were—bardly dates The main sub- In attempt- Our coun. years. The great melio- ie all ration of human society which modern times exbibit, is mainly due to the substitution of the system of volut tary labor for the old one of servile. labor, which haa already taken place. Thié African slave system is one in its origin and its growth, bas been altogether fo- rom the habits of the races which colonized these States and established civilization here. It was introduced on this new continent as an engine of conquest, and for the establishment of monarchical power by the Portu- guese and the Spaniards, and was rapidly extended by them over all South America, Central America, Louisiana and Mexico. Its legitimate fruits are seen in the poverty, Portuguese brass cannon, partly completed. They were of about | time as agreeably as possible. them from direct taxation, and in addition to all this has | ties, that this old county of Westchester can for a moment | and Spanish America. The free labor system is of Ger- gravel, and are kept very clean, the cross streets being | eight inch bore. The workmen Were very civil to us, and phe carried forward a 'stupenous enterprise of J take part in any such controversy. You have a popula: | man ‘extraction, and & was esiablished {a cur ped by marrower, and closed with gateways of wood. The houses | showed us ail the various tools, and endeavored, as well improvement; all the while diminishing its debt, | tion distinguished throughout the State for patriotism and | e:igrants from Sweden, Holland, Germany, Great Britain are all of wood, one and two stories high, and are closely | “8 they could, to make us understand how they used CITY POLITICS. magnifying ‘its credit, and augmenting its re | for reepectability, Youhave a history rich inassocia. | and Ireland, We justly ascribe to its influence the Whey ali Near the marke of baving been. | seek ane Cae in urna) cata aan, ae bese we sources. ‘the treasury is full and needs no replenishment. | tons. Every bill of old Westchester has been lighted | strength, wealth, greatness, intelligence and. freedom packed together. y ing be found them using the same kind of tools our own curriers Gov. Seward took possession of this overtiowing trea- } With the fires of freedom, and every stream stained with | which the whole American people now enjoy. One of the a man; ; inted, bu i 5 NOMID iN aury, these augmented resources, iminished and sub- | the blood of a patriot in the dark period of the Revolution. | chief elements of the value of human life. is jomn i Built a great many years; a few of them are painted, but | Use, and dressing the hides in precisely the same manner. CITY NOMINATIONS. y,, the ted this di hed and the blood of a patriot in the dark period of the Revoluti hief eb of the value of hi Lift freed: im they are not #0 good looking as those in Nangasaki, tho | (ter Skins and other valuable furs are to be bad, but are | annexed we give a list of the nomination® as far as antlally paid debt; and immediately announced that the | (Applause) | And { would bo slow 12 beleve Yat You the purmuitof bappiuess. Tho slave system ia not only . * e cou! a debt of 1,000, that a ie) intolerant, ans juman towar round floors being all oocupied as stores or shops for busi- | In every little bay or nook which indents this extensive | made. Candidates whore names have been omitted | PU enteg would keep down tho interest. and eveninally passed either to establish the independence of } whom, only because: he is a laborer, it ‘one ieee ead mess, The roofs are covered with clapboards of two or — or bay are located Lage towns and villages, | would do well to notify us immediately, so that our sub- | extinguish such a debt. He started in the career of creai- | New York or the independence of New Jerse: chains and converts into merchandise, but searcely lees three inches in width, and are secured to their places by | Whi Present @ very pretty sight, and add much t0 } sequent lists may be perfect — ing that debt. He was Governor from 1838 to 1841, In | It was for the independence and consolidation of the U £0 to the freeman, to whom, only because he is a laborer ab eiiak tain. ties C i rf a my wager Nearly al junks in eniee these three and a half years he ran up the debt to $27,- | that the Revolution was fought. It is for its preserval from necessity, it denies facilities for employment, and ® large number le f which weig! is port have sails that are made out of duck, which . 000,000. He ran down the credit of the State go that the | that the kind feelings of the Revolution must be main. } whom it expels from the community because it cannot en fifteen or twenty pounds, These stones answer the pur- | 18 manufactured at Jeddo, and in fineness of quality ‘Dennen — five per cent stock sold at a discount of 2234 cents on the | tained. My word for it, that if this controversy, which | slave and convert him into merchandise also, It is ne pose of nails, and to the stranger present quite aridiculous | ‘fat exceeds our navy ne eciel og ob con ged John Kelly. dollar. The State could not pay ite creditors. ‘The oflcers J as been once past, and js now hushed, shail "be re- | cessarily improvident and ruinous, because, an a. general ht. Around and on top of many of these houses are Cc ty fossil gb COUNTY CLER: of the government were sbinning about Wall street to { Opened, no portion of the country will feel more deeply | truth, communities prosper and flourish, or droop and de- sight. Pp iy account. Copper iscovered, toa John Claney. borrow money to pay the public creditors. | the consequences that must follow than the county of | cline, in just the degree that they practice, or neglect to ‘barrels and tubs of water, ready in case of fire. The citi- | Small extent the Japanese work the mines. Tea and SUPERVISOR. The public works were stopped; and the last act | Westchester. ‘actice, the primary duties of justice and humanity. zens bave several little engines of their own invention, | °¢,aPpear to be the two most important articles raised Wm. C. Conner. aes of Governor Seward’s administration was to sign a law | _ Mr. Van Buren was followed by tho Hon. Govvrrverr | The freo labor system conforms to the Divine law of on Pe grce ses » | on the island, probably for the simple reason that when Nelson 3. Watervury. a stopping the public works, and laying a taxon the people | Keane, who made a brief address, which was well re equality, which is written in the bearts and consciences which are stationary. police, or ins, are very | aman marries a female among the vows he has to make ‘coRoxrns. to pay the interest of the debt. The democratic policy was | ceived. Mr. Kemble has written the following letter in | of men, and, therefore, is always and everywhere bene- mumerous; tarn which way you wili and you are gure to | me is, that he will take care of her for tife, aud that he Robert Gamble, to apply the surplus revenues of the canals tothe pro- | regard to the question of the admission of Kansas:— ficent. ‘The slave system is one of constant danger, die- come in contact with them. will find ber plenty of tea and rice. Francia O'Keefe, M.A. Van Lier, secution of the works upon them, and it is demonstrable Coup Sra, Oct. 25, 1853, | trust, suspicion and watchfainess. It debases those whose a ai ton one duseviied The marriage ceremony is very simple. When aman bs are, SSS that thee revenues alone would have beensufficient forthe | Treceived your note of the 2ist inst. only on Saturday even. | toil al ‘an produce wealth and resources for defence, As the ebip near we discover @ | makes up bis mind to take a certain lady he has to give . R. Jackman. . purpose; would have saved the State from debt, and per- | ing, Which will explain the delay in answering it. T reget to the lowest degree of which human nature is capable, to American flag flying on shore, which proved to be on the prem RR gang ml he be ggg Efe peoed ~_ pe — Republican. mitted the reduction of the tolls one-half. That policy, | {te more aet anate is Ae easeat cquewal what Tebouid | guard againet mutiny and insurrection, and this wastes premises of Mr. Rice, our Consul, who is a genuine Down- | Goman is forced to pladpe herselt tants pmeeenee the sin. W sitter }A03.Wittamson, A. Meakiey however, was departed from, and the consequence was {question pa to ‘me Rhowid ‘you be elected ts the Thirty Eee eae areas alah he emiaged, a. mattenal - if . J. » a le . Oaks re ‘ Hast Yauheo, ailing from Maine. His very aspect and | tnously towards her husband. This ls sot, Rowever, | 4 Icha W. Farmet, moment a tax of nearly $2,000,000 is levied on the peoplo | required by the English Vill, should present heraelf (or nal educates all alike, and by opening all the fields of indus- size are suilicient to impress these half savages. He ps po Bigg mo grote eed = — =. — T. J. Barr, Ind Famund Grifin, 0. W. Brennan. to pay the interest on the State debt and help to extin- sion to the Union, won! yon, without re trial employment and all the departments of authority to i q . . ¥ imiasion wit a conatl e etands six feetand weighs aver two hundred and twenty-five | Should the wife, however, do Bo and peek the company of giver Beane, EMy amon ay: care. Boy sy ade onan eee apa ag pemes li jution declaring her & | the unchecked and equal rivalry of all classes of men, at George o Brig’ George Briggs. finished by Governor Seward’s party, except. the credit of the State bavi Horace F. Clark, Horace F. Clark. (Laughter.) "thie question “he (Mr. Van Buren) regarded pounds, with handsome long black whiskers, and akeen, | other men, she is at once divorced from her husband and sharp =. He possesses a)) the qualifications to enable | otherwise punished. The crime of theft is severely pun- him w discharge the duties of his office to the satisfaction | ished—for the second offence it is visited with death, no wf his government. On several occasions the Governor of | matter how smal) the amount taken. Hakodadi, like all energies of the whole State. In the pton constitution, Dut because it was the simplest mode of setiing A vexed ques: once Recurer universal contentment, and bri highcet possible activity all the physical, moral and social States where the slave system prevails, the masters, directly or indirectly, secure into the ASSEMBLY. as of much more importance than the question of slavert all political power, and constitute a ruling aristocracy. In the place attempted to interfere with him, but has always | other parts of the world, has her street beggars. y Geo. ks Gastick, Gon. to. Gastus. in Kaneas. There P= epee a ral cue that it 4 = that was agitating the wae ey ‘and em| all | the States yaar the free labor uystem prevella, col got the worst of it. The Governor is reported to be a present quite ingular’ appearance. They wear a very I . bn * | time the Seward dynasty Sr enn 2 eee eee ee ae attne at the samme time, that | suffrage necessarily obtains, and the State ‘inevitably and despotic man, snd, a6 you will see, | large rimmed hat, a frock and white leggings, and carry Leste tenet. ected that ‘Tuesday would put an end to it. | Stare wha alone posncanod tha legal powee Unde iethe rise | becomes, sooner or later, a republic of democracy. Russia during our stay, to make the forepart of our | in their bands a small bell, which they ring as they come wis G. Hopps, is G. Hepp, yet, waid he, this Governor Yeward. has taken tho | of Cougreeseneraine ony to tre or rejectionof the | Yetmaintains slavery, and is adespotiem. Most of the othor but reeable. Shortly after our | in front of ahouse or shop. They then commence to Wea. A. , en A. 4 stump. The father of the $40,000,000 debt has himself | State with the constitution as pi to It. “uropean States have abolished slavery, and the in Capt. Nicholson sent him | murmur something until the woman of the establishment Dw. oh BW. oc ag proceeded to express his views to the public. Tha grea! Lec Le approved of the reception ot Kansas under the | system of free labor. It was the antagonistic political ten comes out and gives them a plece of cash, about the tenth }p.w. Pf of republicanism has been unveiled to his admirers | [iecmmncn coustituuon, I ecrtainly, would not reject her when | depcies of the two systems which the first was partof acent. They then ta Ss to the —— on , John J. Shaw. on the 26th of this month at Rochester; and what do der a free constitution; at the time T confess that, as a0 po ye when he predicted that Europe would witi avd proceed on to the next In this country ali See eee, Hees, suppore he eaye in regard to this system of finance? What | rig proposition, I r the ‘of Lew States bo. | mately be either all Cossack or all republican. Never did charities are bestowed by the females—the males never pene do you suppose he says in regard to these internal im- they have attained a population that would entide them to | human sagacity utter a more pr truth. The tw give anything. T. J. Roberts, T. J, Roberts. mente—in d to these taxes which are up | Sseatin the House of Representatives, to be in princl | systema are at once perceived to ‘Ind. prove: 3 poo bd pet Bu In ‘odudi the same regret has been express- Chas. 8. Rpencer, 8 . | Your substance my substance? Why nothing. > pwns rights of the tes nombre ot fe y are more than incongruous—they are bie Gd for the death of the lamented Perry as was Joseph Causing,’ Jos. one word. Not one allusion to the matter which concerns | 'R"4. Doourmux, Tarrytown, N. Y. . They never have permanently existed together im on evinced at Nangasaki and Simoda. The American people Joecph B. Pollock, Jas. G You or concerns me, or that can affect, for weal or for woe, mts pon sig = couatry, and they pever can. ft would beesor ap can feel proud to know thet the name of Perry will loug Daniel Willis, Daniel Willis, our position. But he makes a general assault upon the 8 emyty 4 made by Mr. Frank Gilley, Mr. | strate thik impossibility, from the Irreconemabie captres be a ne R. H. Shannon, n demecratic party—a general declaration of war on the Geregham, Dy. Gkinser, end ethers. between their great and characteriation. Bu th all the iy rance aud idolatry the people posses: George Toeratic organi 5 a aration that slavery ee — e experience of mankind conclusively established they are not without schools, “A gettleman informed B30 Chess in Kurope. y s that the city Is divided into school districts, which are sup- . a. , ported by @ tax amounting to about seventeen cents of our | 1¢_ ‘fag C. Rutherford, Bred. L. Reely, Pred, L, Rely. bolding, and in all the Territories, ery iy ‘h family. By the muniel : ind the treaty, and thos lay himself able to bs | the baal octhe ferniy. bend comporaitie and latte too MareeUus Kells, Marcellus Kells. CONCLUSION OF THE MATCH BETWEEN MORPHY AND HARKWITZ, MORPHY AKD STAUNTON, RTC. ‘The match between Morphy and Harrwitz has been re- to encourage and employ free Slavery, as I have already intimated, existed ever State in Burope. Pree isbor has supplaasedit everywher . except in Russia and Turkey. State neceanities, develope | jn modern times, are now obliging even thoee fy god tn abotanacg she wto colliaion with treo ‘at Jeddo. Governor's resi- ned by the fatter, on the plea of ill-health, the punished if he or she, as the case may be, neglect to send tion of his Excellency Governor Seward, toabolish slavery | signed by , plea , the score | as they are, we find them engaged dence is in the centre of the city, on the top of the | their children to sehool. I think this would work well in PREPARATIONS POR THE BLBOTION. in South Carolina and Georgia. (Marks of di <4 standing at close Morphy, 6; Harrwitz, 2; drawn,1, | In the United States, slavery came i - By = LR mad yore mad own a = Mth oad 30m of ‘The republican Central Committee and the American | Now, Lg pnd hase dg ange es globe With characteristic generosity Mr. Morphy accepted the | [aor at the ons "oe last century, and fell before it in 7 , located about a ugust the annual celebrat! schools . Committee both night aga ipet democratic el ought r a New England, New York, Ni dred feet from theroad, It is approached by a. wie On those days the children, with thelr parentennd frlends, | (rere! Cosmittee were both in seasion lnat night, eunlk- | SSS JD) Governor Seward, of having Leet ee senatns | resignation, Dut declined the stakes, 260 france. At the : ey ae vel of which are handsome | to the number of several thousand—the children all richly | ‘98 Preparations for the forthcoming election. Bille wore | in the extension of slavery. The democratic purty, a6 a | last dates Herr Anderrsen, the colebrated Prussian player, 1 but triumphed over it effectually, and excluded it irom tod yet undetermined, from Virgiuia, the Carolinas, and the even The slave States, with supposed to ce which daily be- , covered over with green grass. In the rear of | attired in red and other colored silks, with banners wi ordered to be printed and paid, and tickets to be distri. | party throughout the Union, never, uutil 1850,” took |. Georgia. Indeed, so incompatible are the t these are rows of pine, fir and other kinds of forest tree, | motwoes upon them, and several large Images of men, wo- | puted. ‘The republicans cially were extremely ac. | ay position on the subject ‘of slavery’ We | *** his way to Paris, to play the young American. | that every now Mtate ques erpeatend wenenem and near men, beasts, horses, &ec., and accompanied with drums and | tive, and seem very lent that victory will perch | in the free States were opposed to it. Vie says | The eminent German master, Heyderbrant, isalso in Paris | extending domain makes its first political guardhouse. fier, marched through the various streets, the little chil- | upon their banner next Tuesday. They are also cond. | the democratic party is the ally Of, the slave | by this time, and will have a joust with Mornby. of the one and an exclusion of the other, twoold Dutch dren making the air ring with their voices, , &e. | dent that they can lead the Know Ni State ticket in | power, and that it must be dislodged. ‘He says the demo- ‘The following letter will be read with interest — cost of civil war, Apne \- non, ona Ip the evening they again paraded the streets, one } this city at 6,000. Whatever may be the result of | cratic party ‘@ Wextricably committed to the designs of CayR pm 1A Reoence, Paras, Oct, 1858, out law, at the last election, forbade, within diameter. bearing a lantern of a much handsomer model than the | the present fight, it is very evident that the opposition in | the sla’ . He says that by continued Howard Staunton, Exq.—On my arrival in Buglaud their own limits, even the casting of votes a pointing Chinese, the whole of which lit up the city and this city are much more active than the 5 of patronage end threats of disunion they will keep ama- | mouths since, 1 renewed the challenge to you personally | ‘late for President of the United States iol yf ree 8 deautiful sight to those on board of the shipping in the | axgrusx Ixpurexvext Nowmxanoy.—Wm. E. Robinson | 207 favorable to these dex arte genate,and that | which the New Orleans Chess Club had given some months pf cig oregon penne lay dong dl hry ‘Sunday after 5 defeat, as ean, J two systems have existed i; friends to the shore, and landed on some fine stone steps one of my visite I visited the American burial | bas been nominated for the Assembly in the Eleventh die- fecure the ot [eg lod np en ge vel hy op dE different States, but ide by side, within the American. at the Custom Houss—the very steps, , which } piace, It is a neat tule spot, and if government would | trict, Twenticth ward. His oppogents are Noah R. Childs the absurdity of this Mr. | Subsequently, you the time should be post. | C808. This has because the Union is = confed- Golewnin descended from during ea ee appropriate a few hundred it could be made intoa | (dem.), James G. McAdam (rep.), and Joseph H. Pollock the admission of Mimme- poned until after the rmingham meeting, to which [ | ¢Tation of States. But, in another aspect, the United States ago, after having been confined in cages stocks } very ueat and appropriate cemetery. There are two | (Am.) conaidene are being brought ‘out of the democracy and | assented. (On the approach of the period you had fixed, | CBstitute only one nation. Increage of population, which for three years. Here we were met @ large | graves within the enclosare, which, from their — everywhere. It is one of the signs of the ; the republicans, and to the op) L addressed you a communication, requesting that the | '8 filling the States out to their very borders, together party of Custom House officials, who wel us with @ } ance, seem to have been covered over a time. s Sook runt biiecans to the admission of Oregon, He also necessary preliminaries might’ be temediatel with a new and extended network of railroad and other very polite bow. Passing up the yard and out of the Cus- geet flowers of various kinds are over them. To the City Election Canvaseers. commented on Mr. Seward’s position in regard to the settled, but you left London without replying to rd avenver, and an internal com: tom gate, we were met by hundreds of Japanese, | Jt being Sunday with un (for the Japanese have no Sabbath) decision, and observed that his Gone T went to Birmingham for the express purpose of asking | CO™M€S more intimate, is rapidly bringing the States into a young and old, anxious to cateh a Cone oh us. The | \t was a fit day to visit such a place. From there I pro- ‘The canvansers are particularly requested to fill up the jways to advocate something you to put a stop to further delay fixing a date for rf higher and more perfect social unity or consolidation. alarm was soon spread all over the town that there were } ceeded to the temple, near Mr. Rice's residence. After | blanks which aro left.at the polls of cach glection district | never could by possibility be obtained. In reply to Gov. opening of our match; but before the oportunity presented | Thus these antagonistic systems are continually coming Strangers in town, not, however, by the people, but by 1 witnessing the ceremony of worshipping am idol, T tok | a5 soon ax the votes are counted, and deliver them when | S¢™' Gemocratic party would, ima | ieeit you came to me, aud, in the prearuce af Lord Lyttic. | to closer contact, and collision results. Shall ici the |, of whieh the city in fall. seemed to scent | a jook into the smal! building in the yard which contains id 1 i} , Y, what this collision means? 1! ton, Mr. Avery and other gentlemen, you stated that your time was much occupied in editing & gow edition of Shakepere, and that you were under heavy bonds to your out ‘the moment we landed, and during our whole | One of these idols. It is made of wood and represents a | called for by the collectors for the Associated Press. By | slave trade, Mr. Buren pointed to the fact that a & | man of a very large stature; he is seated in an elegantchair, | 8 doing the vote of the city will appear the next morn- | Southern Convention had recently, by an overwhelming ich, as well as the image, is ornamented with gold and | ing in every daily paper in New York, majority, denounced the foreign slave traffic, and also to cidental, unnecessary, the w: agitators, and therefore ephe y who think that it is ac k of interested or fanatical ral, mistake the cage alto most awful barking. A , who could talk good h gether. It i an irrepressible conflict between oppor! Easlichy told es theh theo dogn easel © Mranger out the | silver; in front of this stands a sort of a table, on which —___—______. the fact that Mr. Orr's resolution, offered in the flouse of | Py hity'ens ‘and cand that iff woul romeoat to afarther | and enduring forces, ad it means that the Cuited States he landed. They are of a breed wolf and | stand | vases of flawers and plants, The building is about | The November Elections=[Ast of Candidates, | Representatives in December, 1856, declaring it inexpedi portponement until the first week in. November, you | must and will, sooner or later, become entirely a siave- half bulldog, and are worse looking than the cayotes of | fifteen feet square, well ornamented, and is approached by The following is a list of all the candidates in nomination | St revive the trafic in slaves, was adopted with only | Would, ina few days, communicate with me and fix the | Holding nation, or entirely a free labor nation, ither the California and Mexico. ten stone steps. After you ascend these steps you step on eflows ad bors of C ten votes against it; and that that same Mr. Orr was | ovact date. Thave not heard farther from you, either cotton and rice flelds of South Carolina and the eagar pian- Notwithstaading the warm reception the dogs gave us & platform; in front of you is a grated window through | for State members of Congress in the States, | siected the democratic Speaker of the next House of privately, by letter, or through the columns of the Jug. | ‘Uons of Louisiana will ultimately be tilled by free labor, we ki on oUF course, the people running out of | which you look at this wooden god. Here all the worship- except New York, where elections are to be held on Tues. | Reprerentatives. How preposterous, then, said he, in ndon News. and Charleston and New Orleans become marts for legitt- their to Took at ue ernie many of them | pers repair after the services in the temple are over, and | day next.— the face of those tacts, and’ in ihe taco’ of | "“'ttcment appeared in the chess department of that | Mate merchandise alone, or vise the rye fields and saluted nus with @ polite bow, and with an “ie, | futting their two hands together in front of their breasts NRW JERSEY. this batory, in the charge of Mr. Seward. | journal a few weeks since, that “Mr, Morphy had come | Wheat felis of Massachusetts and New York 0, you'"—in English, “How do you do.” At feet ed they repeat over some few words in a loud tone. This suunens ov conenass. After deseribing the democratic party in no flattering | to Europe unprovided with backers or seconds: the in. | 8 again be surrendered by their bey for sight seeing the children would take } gone, they then drop into a small opening in the —_ sen. terms, Gov Sewardsaid it had no poly Sateor fwteral.for | ference being Obvious that my want of funds was tho | ‘© slave culture and to the production of & look at u#, and then yell and take to their heels. We | window | some of cash. 1 noticed that | pit—t.. _.George'A Walker. John ¥’Ninon, rep. | finance or trade, manufacture or commerce, of education oF reason of our match not taking place. As you are the | ives, and Boston and New York become ‘were not watched nor followed by any spies, as on the | all the females did this carried in their hands John § internal improvement, or for the protection or even secu- | eqitor of that department of the Illustrated ‘News, | [0° More a market for trade in the bodies and souls of former visit of thie ship, but were Hanoy AP Be a bunch of flowers. I watched them a moment, and ove James Wi, Wall. John L. N. Stration, | rity of civil or religious liberty. ‘This man, ead Mr. Van | Ten hurt that « gentleman who had ‘always received me | ™e0. It is the failure to apprehend this great truth that ‘we pleased—to enter their various temples, first off } saw that they immediately went into the Ewe close bu J Ls eae : B. 1. | Buren, who has been arraigned before the public for his at his club, and ebowhere, with great Kindaess end come, | induces so many uns ful attempts at final compre- ‘our hoes, which is required of all who enter them. by. Prompted by curiosity, 1 followed . Arriving JR, Word ke, Ws nyt own financial policy and his own system of internal im- | tesy. should allow so prejudicial @ statement to be made | mite between the slave and free States, and it is the ex- Savor ba with aby weraker of lasts pisond ta Gitirens | Shinn ances, Seb E wuaeased & mest aftoting sight ¢ perenne : Fe alice staat cibmreite, we, he knows, of the | preference to me—one, too, which le bot strictly in accor. | ‘stence of this great fact that renders ail’ such pretended +, Se. hel mon as dl democrat pol . ye public and 1 sd comprom ine, en , vain and parts of the buildings, which appear to have plenty of wor- | asd descr aw polley up before the public and n- | dance with fact pr made blushingly asserts that the democratic party has no policy wun Governor,.......... William Jon. Bockinester fas this saying may appear to you, the living ps ag at opp npn OG Memiter of Gongrean Wiliam O Whvieley Willem hort, | 08 finance. Whore is the bank? Where is the Permit me to repeat what I have invariably declared in every chees community [have had the honor of entering, i i # i FF i ; Co ‘Startl fel citizens, it cd bo means an original or even a modern one, Our fare. or worshi; and around them. Asa were forty or fifty women dent Treasary, which be contended all the earlier fathers knew it to be true, and unanimously acted upon | means of defence tothe city and harbor, they have in sweeping the dirt off of the gravestones of MICHIOAN. days of bie life? No policy as to trade! Where te the Sean ur ant a [Gresees paoeeey ot when they framed the constitution of the United Sones” erected at the extreme of the city a stone a, their dear departed ones, while others were arriving with by ~~ — revenue tariff, whieh fey have advocated and which he | vancement, and that my earnest desire is never to play | TeY regarded the existence of the servile system in #0 mount) wf my of small calibre, and two made bunches of freeh flowers. I watched their movements, = Chas. FE. Stewart, an has always oppowed? Yt - tothe protection of for any stake but honor My friends tm New Orteans, many of the States with sorrow and shame, which they 5 in and of eight inch bore, with ent on Cay apprencand Se graven of their dear ones the: brany _ ee ©. Manro. E.R Pairheld. civil or religions liberty | n the whole history of | however, subscribed a certam sum, without any coun’ | oPenly confessed, and they looked upon the ‘collision be- Jocks similar to those used on our own guns, pattern of | knelt down in of them; then clasping their hands to. eats tors ‘ing. Nelson G, Isbetl. the democratic party, was there a more brilliamt act | tenance from me, and that sum has een ready for you to | tween them, which was then just revealing itself, and them given them when Commodore Perry was here; gether. and locking dirvetly upon the monument or grave . of Pub. Inst’n..David C.Jacobes. John M. Gregory. than the successful apd gallant amertion of the pria- | meet g considerable time past. since my arrival in Paris | Which We are Dow accustomed to deplore, with favor and but it be necessary to attack the place witha naval | stone in front of , they offered a yer in a loud = py TS al eel —,-s ciple of civil and religions liberty when a party was Ihave been assured by numerous gentlemen that the hope. They knew that either the one of the other eyetem force, this battery would not prevent an entrance into the | voice to their idole oe Se took old plants and | ONtiior General... John J Adam, Daniel L. Oase. formed for the purpose of putting it nr (Cheers) | value of thone stakes can be immediately increased to any | Must exclusively prevail. Unlike too many of those who, harbor, owing to the fact that the entrance if so wide that | dirt: depositing « bunch againet the stones, they Attorney Generai.J.G. Sutherland. J) ™M. Howard. Again, Governor Sewerd says that the democratic | amount: but, for myself personally, reputation is the only | ‘" Modern time, invoke their authority, they bad « ‘Versels could pase in without coming within range of the | bowed their heads nearly to the , then ] Board of Edueation. Andrew Y. Moore. ‘itter J. Baxter, party bar aiways been the of slavery, and har ex- incentive I recognise 3 choice between the two. ‘They preferred the system of guns of the fort. rose and left. [ discovered one woman, Dut. i." ‘ the Mexican ‘The matter of seconde cannot, certainly, offer any aif. } fee labor and they determined so to organize the govern~ ‘The two brass guna are of handsome workman | who was accompanied by a little child, performing the | Digt—1.......... A er, ma. eeert. bition of slavery | fonity. [had the pleasure of being first received in Lon. | Ment, and so to direct its activity, that that system should , and are kept very bright. This fort is garrisoned by | mame solemn ‘over & neat little granite mone 3 — beet, FT, W Rollogs. Ki Who of American® intr | Gon by the St. George's Chess Clad, of which you are ao | Surely and certainly ail. For this a eS and Simoda. | ment. | could not ber movements. Her Po Robert W. Davia. rewne Leach, abrogating the Mexicad law | jictinywiehed a member; and of those gentlemen T request | other, they based whole structure of government carry two swords, | eyes were fastened upon the mound of earth for » eR, bith their candi. | the honor ofappointing my seconds, to whom { give full } Broadly on the principle that all men are created same as their | few moments. when she uttered something which, boing ready to vote for | vcthority in petting all preliminaries. and, therefore, little dreaming that within the te lio . Leould not understand, while the little chil lation. But In conclusion, I beg leave to state that I have addressed poy of one hundred years their descendants woh head ot Sareuabank elas eee tom wets made fora a copy of this letter to reveral editors, being most desirous ir to be told by any orator, however Peres, Gat Ge name intelli | or brother was sieeyung ite sleep so near to its little Mr. Va | that our true position should no longer be misunderstood | utterance of as eee was merely & rhap- other places, | feet. Tt wae me back to the Mr. Seward's statement as to the | wy'the community at large. Again requesting you to fix | S4¥; Or by any Judge, however venerated, that it waa make free with | tomb which ones. After eho he Southern wing of the democratic party | tite date for commencing our match, Lhave the honor to | tended by mental reservations, which rendered it 1. ‘This, how. | had finwhed her devotions | approached her, and, pointing . Let ue, | rceain, sir, your very humble servant, hypocritical and false, By the ordinance of 1787 they Excellency th: | to the little child by her wide, and then to ihe grave, re: In J PAUL MORPHY. Heated all the national somal ast Zeb pelleted by look out over thems. marked that the litle plecaniny lay there (mean bad in the State of New a. slavery to free labor immediately, ‘and for- the gratification of seeing | ing her child). She at once understood me, Weed. And Naval Intelligence. ever, while by the new constitution and laws they invited ‘anles. There is now # large number of themi fi and, with «& mont affectionate, smile, (which Washd'roe alaveholder ‘Tre New Manork BARRACKS AT Tie Rrooxtre Navy | forei@n free labor from all lands under the sun, and inter. a are creel) OST aot laos te Loe A Ae yp RS mi we we @ were now | Yann —The work on the newly filled in ground for the | dicted the importation of African slave labor an Snes, ever © . reper Baticnd . 4 bowing siavehoid! now oven o them 0 - in all places, and under all circumstances: 4 i T Somaeien tong eae, st ) sues yen, ores i. _ it bes erred, te, thems = erection of a new marine barracks on Flushing avenue, | {2 all pi whateoe ver i i i Ha i red i PH Hrookiyn, de of the Navy Yaya enclosure, is progress. ie true that they necessarily and wisely modified the several States, af- 1 ing down to the centre of their bodien, self being always the leader of the opposition. How was " fooumetenses licy of freedom, by leaving it to ight of them would be enough to clear Broadway at once. | this costom of visiting the graves of deceased friends, and it with ‘Governor Walker? Governor Walker was sue wa es the cloavetion is done. i Lye ray Rected an they were by differing circumstances, to abolish should one of them Sarees © poms Gee wee Toe hair on performing devotions there, @ followed up recularly every tained during the whole continuance of bie oifice in Kan- | pijes for the foundation of the officers’ ‘quarters have been | Slavery in their own Way and at their own pleasure, in- their head—in fact, their js and every part of them | year by female relatives of deceased persons, until (he eas till he chose vol to resign. He was apheld | ariy Three sections of wall have been built on the «i of confiding that duty to Congress, and that that we could feo, was covered more ae less with gray | severe 70 Pete ene, mae eres om The by the President and by the democratic party. | robbie, to test the weight it will bear, which it was red to the slave States, while yet the sys- hair. The Island of Yero ie their home. They number Winters are pretty severe, and snow falls to a considera. But who denounced him from one end of the Union to the | {hought at frst would be inadequate for'a solid founda. | tem of slavery, a three-fifths representation of slaves in about thirty thousand. They are reported to be about | ble depth lies om the tia and surrounding other? The Seward men here, without stint. And with | pion There are, however, portions of the ground which half savage, and will not allow foreigners to come among | the city until Inte in June oF suamers are not respect (o Douglas? The ition to Dougias in Lilinais #@ | wii) require an itamense amount of Inbor in pile driving to them hot, the nights at all times of the year with the republican ‘The opporition to Dougiae solid bottom. Should these difficulties occur to any Position that the fathers All goods of provisions sold have to pase the | cool enough to lay under a blanket. 1 at also here is led by Mr. Mr. Weed and Mr. Greeley. extent, it Is proposed to change the location of the knew that the two systems could not endure Houre; for instance, 1 went into a store and formed that consumption i@ rarely known on the island. And yet they turn round and charge that she [mad baildings from the present order of construction—a mea- | Within the Union, and expected that within a short period some smoked salmon which amounted to forty cents To give you an idea their laws, T to that gent i comes from siaveholders. y. Mr. | sure which it is hoped will not have to be resarted to, ae | Slavery would disappear forever. Moreover, in order ere oe dare to touch my Mexican doll will relate a few pass Mr. Orr, Mr. , the demovratic | the preseat order of construction is thought to be better | that modifications might not altogether defeat but he took and begged me to follow him to t over re in ‘hmend and New Orleans, eupporte! Mr adapted to the original bracing of the ground, and will not | their grand design of a republic maintaining ani Custom House. Arriving there, a distance of nearly balf mite, the officer af customs received my aefler, gave we my balance and fish, the trader receiving the pay from that | down to —that is, what was left after paying export duty on | young Ind of about (een stoxl clase by old dried up salmon Chat from its looks wae emoked \ ‘eare before our government ever thought of sending the | good Kuglieh. when he picked it to as. Where is the Seward paper in the State of New York that ever ventures to say a word in his behalf? Andggt Gov. Seward arraigns the South and the slave ho! community a8 the men who pureued these indi Yiduale! Gey Seward says that the democratic part has been always the advocate of siarvery—bas been ways engaged in extending slavery and akiing the slave power. Tray that the democratic party, as « party of the nation, has had nothing to do with slavery, one way or —— — the other. K has stood ap for the constitational rights of wa Treatre Trovrr.—This | the South as well as of the North. It has lived by the i i i i z F carta’ the amount of space, Which would otherwise bave to be done. The foundations are to be walled to the sur. face ‘mmedintely. and the amount of cost paid out of the pru@ion for paleme whieh will 1¥ facilitate the rection of the buildings, when at the next Seerion of agrees (tie hoped that aenfMfcient sam will be appropriated to con! the work without interrup- {ion until its final completion Advices from Fong Kong to the 24th of August state that the sloop of war Germantown remained in the Canton might amend the Comstitution. It ¥5! nted Perry out bere. This is the way all trade with foreigners i. conducted. ven a few string beans, cucu hers and radishes have to pay that duty and be lead pene by an officer before leaving the shore. been eyeing longingly. At thie T vieved the bazaars, and could not discover anything | two swords, up and would not allow him to different from that whieh we saw at the other porte, al- | my amall gift, remarking at the same time, “if the cal i through the actio the federal government s g82 od company arrived in New Orleans on the 23d inst., on | constitutional bond: but so far as the subject of elavery | fiver at that date heir reapective though everything was higher in price. Teannot conceive | tosk W be should arrest him.”’ Thia te only one of the many | board the ablp Duden, from fiaere, “They: were tamer | iusucorned. it has fet tine people of every communnty | The United Maten steamer Deepatch, LiatenaOt Com. | muy. tih,tneit teepeetive w what way Capt. Foote, or any one elee, can think these } instances of tbe severity of Japaneve laws. No gne except | ately sent over the lake to avoid the yellow fever. to manage that matter for themselves, As the result of ‘ manding B. G. Parrott, was at Havana 18th inst, remains to t anly one word to guard againet mi . if these States are again to become universally slave. holding, Ido not pretend to say with what violations of the constitution that end shai! be accomplished. On the other hafid, while I do confidently believe and hope that My country will yet become a land of universal freedom, L do not expect that it will be made so otherwire than of the several States, co. iversal: equality, they provided two third? of the States with acting in strict confor. titntions. The strife and which gently diepoeedt persons babitwaily deprecate, 8 nothing more than the

Other pages from this issue: