The New York Herald Newspaper, December 27, 1858, Page 3

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has been in. PERSONAL. NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1858. Court, On the death of Judge Oakicy he bocame by vir- | brated at Paris, Mr, Butler wasa student at INTERESTIN Hondurae, Nicarogua and Costa Rica, tue of his seniority Chief ie pp Ae Duer S30 is: jaw Mr. ‘Van Buren, the ex-President, and aftor- G FROM CHILE. vaded by Yunkees,and bas the sword of the exterminating + ~ ; “ | tice'a conservative whig. When tho baoquet was given | wards tis law partner, subsequently the of bis rere esac angel yet elevated over ber head. \t this momenta naval ULIETTE—YOURS OF Lin oy Ra tbo » L¥vavon | by the bar of this city to the Hungarians, ‘judge ‘Duer political successes and defeats. Mr. Butler was early Our Valparaiso Correspondence. force is Preparing, directed against Varaguay, in South | 2 Peceived. Please address at the St. Nicholas Hot! opposition to Kossuth. Ree, York State, and, wita VALPaRamo, (ct. 15, 1858. America, aiticulties in New Granada statutes. y - | bay ml eno 4 ACA F v. Eleazer Williams, known as the “Davy from | his claitas to being one of the Bourvon family, and the Levey Prev pron re . kg i a —— During the war of 1812 he protected the coast | identical missing to the throne of France, at Hogans- | was y General of the United States, and subse Prices y Grain—Scarcity of Specie—Exportations of upon the | >) rissing—a Ww WITH A © SINCE DEC. he revised ite 5 B : point of producing an outbreak, and the od states -M. ei to 12 Preaident Jackson Sr, Butler | Suicidal Policy of the Agriculturists—vntinued High possess, infact af not by righty the Isthinus of Panama, | oki, rmtberaiekig: "he asd ile ) hs ely; Fears of ce we republics of Peru, chile, &e., have also affairs pend defect in one eye; is tall, and wee dressed in black, ing in the Cabinet of Washington, which will be adjusted, } with» pan mentee, Any information be thankfully re- ter, or disappear from the from the Mississippi to Mobile with afew | burg, iu the St. Regis reservation, N, ¥., aiter a pro- | quently for a considerable period, United States Attorney il cl es e ic n Fanbosiae By ati nasa te a gon SE onthe | wacked iinees. tue feat public agitiuea of Mr. Wiliams? | for this district. In 1948 br, Dutier in ube move. | ld and Silver—Bhe Chilean Frese om the Political | Te by ate law of jsticn and oquty but by te sovereign isiressed meter, atos bathaun stFect. mouth of the ippi, he succeeded in diverting atten- | claims was iu 1851, mumerous went the | ment which put Mr. Van Buren in nomination as the can- | 7*0ubles of the Republice Will of the great republic, So that we are reduced to the = a tion from the United States brig Syren, of sixteen guns, | rounds of the , setting forth the mymery witch sur. cidate of the free soil on the Buffalo platform. Commercial prospects here are yery (ul! The euicidal | dire alternative of either servile submission or inevitable | SPECIAL NOTICES . Sie whch was hotly pursued, and ’ final: rounded his birth and the resemblance which he bore to | — 17.—Robert Owen, the distinguished socialist, at New- ] policy of grain and agricultural producers in,kvepiag up | “estruetion: we must either bow the head humbly to re A oaNTE MAN, AvOUT AAMLIOHING 2 TOU It Tondon for ean in y aaane i y r his efforts, In the winter of 1813 and 1814 be | the Bourbon family. Mr. Williams was at that timo amis. | town, Wales, aged 80 yours, Arkwright’s machinery | ryicog rorbids exportation. There aro no manufactures, ceive the tlageliation of a Ws excluuive, purpoae of Introducing Amer ndent nations, This is the throug! succeeded in driving away the British vessels Shelbourne | sionary of the Episcopal church at Green Bay, Wisconsin. | coming into use at the age of 18, Robert Owen became & seographieal map as indep i 4, % and Anaconda from the coast of Pensacola, where they | The first circumstance, however, which Legge f his oe rtner in a cotton mie whero oy mea, were employed. | and the consequent drain of specie for remittance to pay wae h. But this wath; ; a" erg! esr ge gd ‘ = atenteee for ‘ jencten, ate beet references io jog, and ‘were annoying American vessels. He was engaged in op- rominently before the public wae an article entil ie Was ous, rose from, one lucrative concern | for imports presses dai! id heavil the | Delieve #0, since it ism the nature of things. lieve 4 fred H. \ 5 Is posing ihe’ suproacts of the British feat transporting men Ehiuve Wea Dauphin year Us?” ” | to another till he became the head of the New Lanark ea mercantil it: bake wees aa meg ae va ip tog | £22 since civilization must preponderate over ignorance, FaPy yz Lermooally to D. SOUTH WIN areet, ‘and arms for the attack on New Orleans, and in a despe- Scxpay, 18,—Young Chief, fno pagan priest of the Sene- | tablishment. He wasa consummate man of business, In ‘cantile community. Exchange upon the Uni ates | labor over inertia, liberty over slavery. We believe go, | “*™ lt Mk baie b <3 Md rate conflict, lasting over two hours, against odds of nine to | ca Indians on the Cattaraugus Reservation, N. Y., aged 74 | ten years, while all the world was expecting his ruin | Tules at from 10 to 12 percent, silver coin commands Srom | since the lawof perfection, the law of progress, directs ACKMEN'S PROTECTIVE ASSOCIA TION.—THB the destiny of all existing things, and this law is for them mest regular, meosting: atthe aboin hameeiien wil bo | and not for us. Let us look ab ourselves boldly, let us | held at 17 Mercer street ‘on Monde? eventag, Daonnber 4], 98 of | learn to know ourselves, let us throw aside prejudice and | 8 o’clook. Ail members are respeetiully requese | to attend, ¢ that 8 ruining us, let us learn to sound | 44 tmportant business will be brought before the me ‘ing. one, performed wonders. In this oment he received ears, from his new fangled schemes, he bought out his partners | three to ‘i d even fi ail gold. sesvere wound. Ho wee engaged in o threo yours cruise |" 44.--Senor Josn Gregorio, Monagas, President of Vane. | at New, Lars tor £84,00, "His new partners oe to Sue Rar coms DoRRalra nik even. for stiplkee onthe Pacific coast’ in command of the Peacock, uader | zueia fron 1851 to 1864, died about this time. For years | realized in tour years more than £160,000 profit, and he | %® balf per cent is demanded, sucl is the svare Hull, in 1825, 1826 and 1827, during which he was the first | his word had been law, and he lived surrounded by every | bought them out for £114,000. These are facts which | change. Political economists have urged strenuously the | the ignorant cit Deforg tha ine representative of a civilized nation to establish a commer- | iuxury. The rigor of continement completely broke his | ought to be known. Those New Lanark mills were set up | imitation of the policy of the United States under those | !™partially our situation and acknowledge the trath— WM. KERRISON, Vice President. cial treaty with the Sandwich Islands, securing the pay- | rpirit, ond weakened by disappointment and ‘anxiety, he | when Owen was a boy, in 1784, by Arkwright, in con- heavily though it press upon our blind and impotent Joun L. Bawxert, Secretary. t 7 ‘ment of large sums due the citizens of the United States | could'not be roused those bis tahargy. junction with the benevolent David Dale, of GI , | ofcumetances, and the reduction of silver coin to a stan- his is the mode of curmg the evil; the probe - from the Society and other ‘South Sea Islands, He brought SEPTEMBER. whose daughter became Robert Owen's wife. In 181 he dard more conformable to the recent change in the rela- bh well the wound to know its profundity. 1 O. 8. M.-MEMBERS OF MERCANTILE LODGE NO. 1, to the Peruvian man of war Congress, and forced the de- po sn ay aad eathaas at tea think go aed id i wo nt Mo own methods with } tive value of the two precious metals; but the government Rater we then into thequieesien, poking picpelven IRE Sindh rca ae ee ae avant roams o8 jivery of American seamen, unlawfully detained on the ‘EpNESDAY, 1,—Ric ’ 5 8 work people; and his social and educational suc- 4 i are wer? A her formed of zeros, which represent no J Mo 5 » at 7 o'olowl, fe pela busi- ‘Admiral's ship, and enforced’a suspension of the blockade | book of Spain,” in his 62d year, at Heavitreo, Exe- | cess was to striking that many of the great ones of J ‘Slow to make the reform. Fach semi-monthly steamer | entity, uncounted in the preat industrial movement of the | Be BY order Ch ae os cates : 3 ef the port ofitiay, in Peru, in 1864 In thie yearhe per-| so, Eogiand. His literary reputation has ‘been based | the earth came fo hign to learn ble method. ta spite of hig | Dears with it from $100,000 to $160,000 ln silver coins that | cctedco Upea Ue aphere of Duman acquiromonta, which | M{AfONIC-< THR MEMBER OF UNITED. sTatHs a i- # e a yn ; i cl . Bu e: 9 Up! er 4 1) whic . 207, FP. , ML. are hereby sommoned eae on he raimparte ct Monterey toprevcaithoopera, | upon his remarkable knowledge of Spain and Spanish | went Nipm emporora, and Kings, end abeciute suateenae | of tho 1st took $124,000; the Lima, which sailed for Eu. | PANOOnD MMT Merest ‘share to tho grand workshop | mestattar Lnige focm Corkitblann Oud Feliomy Till on ig p ¥ to pe 5 pein Lode Mexico, Central America | Monday, 12o'clock Me, to pay the last peru, Bolivia, Chile, | spect to piher, John Conner. Members of sistor raraguay, ke., occupy an | Wdgesare invited toatend, By onder. a a ae tion of a secret treaty between Great Britain and Mexico,and | manners, art and literature. epite of his infidelity, prelates and their clergy, and all | TOP? via Rio Janeiro, on the 12th, took $217,000, an: to- in 1848-'49 and '50, when stationed off California, took the | "7 “Wm, Dorling, in Kngland. Thore are very few Eng- | ™Anuer of dissenting'Ieaders, inspected bis schools. This } morrow's steamer will take $100,000. ‘Tho remittance by Nberty of familituting the interests of the now settlers, by é +b ib ” be “ 4 ought to be easily conceivable when it is romembered that | the Lima was in ounces prinoipally, but the remainder of Ke) giving them United states coin for gold dust, on bis own | Hshmen who have not been on the road to Epsom, on the | Metternich was 4 pupil of Owen’s, and the Naps o* the exportation was in EF ona ‘an ell aia immense and fertile territory. There are not upon the Owen W. Gray, Secretary. responsibility. ‘ Derby day, and who have not been invited to buy a card | versment his patron, and Southey his eulogist. In 1 pease ms coin of all sizes. As th | globe countries more privile ried and rich prodne - - JUNE. of the racci—« Doria correct card.” Mr. Dorling had | Be formed a group of communities in America, having J amoznt of coinage iasuing from the Mint in the same pe | tions have fallen to their abare. Rach ove of them might | \PECHANIOS, READ THE ADVERTISEMENT OF THE : He biter " rehased the Harmony estate, consisting of a village ani | riod is © y bait, theed scomoa | Suilice for its own wants, since each one possesses in her ‘American Union Fair, under the hoad of Amusements, Torspay, 1.—George P. MoCulloch, a distinguished } for a very long series of years the management of the | o,vo0 acres of avi, from the’ Rappites, eho Wise dear bier Sleep apse tosignidcant, the scarcity becomes | Fico ineshaustible riches, which ask but. labor to open * ‘ citizen of New Jersey, in Morristown, aged 83. He waa } course and the races generdily, and was heldia the highest | grating westwards.” Duke Bernard, of Saxe Woimar, aap Srey seieanil their treasures and furnish Comforts and luxuries to man, | ()FFICROP THE NEW YORK GAS LIGHT COMPANY, born in Bombay. He was employed, during the first Co- | possinje respect, stayed there for a week or two, and, avaidst al! his respect } The political horizon is again clouded, and tho And what find we in this Eden, whieh should be flowing ecthincompamy” wil babe nay, cena ae he z , ROTO 2 and admiration for Mr, Owen, saw that it would not do. | centralizing tendencie: a ‘inisteation | With industry and happiness? ’ Misery, decadence, pros - Moeay Oe tice Metta olate of Napoleon, in various financial negotiations for | 46, Koy, Charles Marriott, B. D., of Oriel Cotlege, Ox- | The accuunt given by tho” Duko of Mr. Owen | cro owing sires pax gcd age siministestion | Tation’ People uf Gonth america, if ever the ehain of | Lepunr,Bex> "gan 12 to eles AB eo ae the East India Company, and came to New York im 1806. | fory, icngiand, one of the most able of the leaders in the | May ftand as a geveral description of tho philan- (Ok appt: dea 2 Mara Me Bag was slave fetters your inertarms, blame none bat your- | fust, until afver the election. By order. He was the projector of the Morris Canal. ari yemel ‘aictines — Diadcias dadediny: Uniet Baan] ae eee ae ee 1886, He was known as one of | ething jew than to renuvate the orld, toextirpate all | Proximate outbreak is looked upon as highly probable. 1 | perieetibility cannot remain without effect.’ If a people o aa the editors, with Dr Pusey and Mr. Newman, of the “Li- | ¢vil, to banish all punishments, to create like views and | eDelose you two articles from the Vaiparaiso Mereury—oue | outstrip you, itis necessary that that people absorb you Senator from Texas, in Washington, D..C. General Hen- | brary of the Fathers’? and the ++ Anglo-Catholic Library,” | like wants, and to guard against all conflicts and hog. | 2 editorial bearing upon this sulyect, the other @ weil | into herself, or pass ever you to attain that end of which this (Monday) evening, Dec, 27, at the Stuyvesant Instf- derson was born in Lincoln county, N. C., March 81, 1803, | 2¥d the author of several volumes of sermons and theo- | tilities.”” written article by « contributor, who certaimly takes a | you will be but one of the instruments of Providence. 659 Broadway. A biographical skeceh will be given, and levreceived a liberal education, and studied law. He jovical treatices, » E Isune Newton, founder of the People’s Line of | most impartial view of our relations with South America } People of South America, if you would appease the tem. | appropriate remarks made. Commence ut (jg o'clock. By > : Dred Scott, a negro, in St. Louis, Mo., at anad- | steamboats piying between New York and Albany, aged | im general and Chile in particular, endeavoring to rouse | pest, and exorcise the phantom which so affrights you, | Order of the commitiee, served with much effect in the Texan struggle. In 1836 } yanced age. He was rendered famous by his suit for | 63. Mr. Newton was the son of a soldier of the Revolution, his fellow countrymen to a generous emulation, in energy } there is no other meavs than to strive to assimmilate to | 7 - General Henderson went to Texas in advance of a com. | freedom. Tie was born on tho estate of the Blow family, | and was born in the town of Sehodiack, Rensselaer county, | aud euterprise, with thelr ‘sister repubiic of We North. | the United States, in being act ve and industrious as they. | GATLORS, DESTITUTE FAMILIES HELPED BY. A pany, and soon after was commiseioned by President Bur- in Virginia, Captain Peter Blow moved to Missouri, car’ | New York, on the 10th of January, 1794. When Robert | I prefer to give you opinions written by Chiloans them: | Know that the earth ss nota birthright, and that he who | ty gtreetm, Mus aereiperny bag ee jaage.end Pub ’ ei rying Dred with him. The negro, in 1834, came into | Fujton’s drt boat, named the Clermont, in honor of Chan- } S€lves to issuing my own. Any opinion of a citizen of the | abandons it loses all ttle te The only true and legiti- | Rey, 1), Stewart speaks o0 Monday evening. Music by the band net to return to the United States and recruitforthearmy. | the hancs of br. Emerson, a surgeon im the army, | cetior Livingston, mace her trial trip in August, 1807, Mr. | United States upon Chilean atlairs, poltuical or private, is | mate birthright is labor, and what ‘© you done to ac- | trom the North Carolina. Supper for 49 ceata, All hands are He travelled through North Carolina and Tennessee for that we one rie — in feos d a ue Hew, Newton was 18 zeore of og) pnd through Ife retained a reprine bed Riper ors ae bert anesthe abtalleriti- | quire it? men arg vothing. a possess | -tnvited to splice oa. Donations solicited. and subsequently to Fort Snelling, Northwe distinct recollection of the ridicule, astorighment and in- | cal, to a leaven of the spirit of dibusteriem, which is | boundless lands which you have not tilled, infinite produc r purpose, and large numbers volunteered, but, owing to the | qwrritory of that day. At the latter point, in 1836, be | credulity which attended the tnaugeration of steam nayi- | here Dallaved to pervade the Very.air of the entire Union, | tous which you ao Gal Cates, sak whens ‘ano et 10 LIQUOR DEALERS. —THE KINGS COUNTY wability of the Texan Commissioners then in the United hat ot: By Wwhoth be had Gi ‘child ay ‘oomrgy os Wa f 7 : y 4 2 Liquor Dealers Society will held 1 meeting on Mon- States to furnish the requisite funds for the transportation of mar darriet, by whom he bad the two children who | gation. He established the first ‘ine of towhoaze oa the Chile has undoubdtediy the most hopetul future of any | by the werd, Is it strange then that men should, in December 21, at 2 el xk, P. ‘at Tammaoy Hall, the troops, ouly one company was enabled to reach Texas, | gered in the suit, Eliza and Lizzie, and who still live. } Hodson, anc in 1896 bullt the steamboat Balloon, the trst | coubtry south of the Guif of Mexico, “There is a Hoeraiity | view of yout inertuess, say to You to morrow:—\ Leave r of York and 8, Brooklyo. Memoers are aes ‘or February of 1844 the Congress of the 7 | br. Emerson, in 1808, setuied in Missouri, where, some | of the river craft which have won the admiration of the | Of opinion in civi! and religious matters any ca | us these lands, which to you are useless; while in | requested to be punctual in attendance. tin ane os ‘appropriation to pay a minister “qr dozen years ago, he died, leaving the slaves in trust to | world. The North America, South America, Isaac New- | ted which, if a bioodiess revolution can be vdfer | your hands humanity loees, since she loses that which WM, HOWARD, Prosident, lant Washington wo veda concert With Mr, Van Zandt, |. John F. A. Sandford, the exceutor of his will, and the | ton, New World, lieudrick Hudson, &e,, followed, and gave | @M armed one, will pervade the masses; and 1 Chile be | they inight produce; we will cultivate them better, and 2 L. 6, D'HOMERGUE, Vice President Charge d’Aduires of Texas prepreg tire Sates in neyo. | defendent iv the famous Suit, Tt ie teu years aio since | ist to the exuFession “tloating places.” Mfr. Newton ‘but dlessed with peace for ten years longer, she wiliemn- | thus all will gain.” And this will happen, since, as we | _': C¥sitsoN, Secretary. tating a treaty with the American government for the an. | Dred brought putt for hie freedom in the vircult Uourt of | commenced bis career a8 master of a river woop, and was | Jate our own country in the possession of polit bave said, labor is only right to property. ft will happen, |) == pemctreete aa vob Bak ‘and requ: the nt w appoint St. Louis, asserting it on the ground of his owner having | entirely » self-made man. gious and civil liberty. ase Spanish America has net learned to produce any- LOST AND FOUND. poe sree com ree Pretan) 25 pus. | Yolubtarily taken tim, on the frat instance, to soil de- Cornelius V. Anderson, ex-Chicf Engineer of the New The following ammount of gold and silver coin, prin Ubing save fanaticiem and anarchy, Cast a retrospective A GOLD PATENT LEVER, OPEN FACE, wii Ta perf ee Antena stplbenst wy rane’ Re ccepied | {isred free by the ordinance of 1787; in the second place, | York Fire Department, cx-Megister of the city, au Alma- | Pally the latter, has been shipped vy the Pwciti glance upon each and every one o: the States whiea form et 8 OGLE aren CRN R a Cree eee pepe ray tase ne fata ery-a) ia Buvoy | 2 svilacquired by ealy with Louisiana, borth of 36 de- | house Governor, in New York aged 40 yeni iavigation Company's steamers from Valparaiso siace | this privileged contin What dnd you? A series of | iiherat reward will be paid for ic by F Brows nore, Extraordinary and Minister Pleni cence meg worn Ce cee ee free by the terms of the 93,—Admiral Edmund Lord Lyons, i N., at Arondel | January 1:— ambitions ¢hques of would be tyrants, without intelli Chatham street, od saree ad Cad Cubed Guna ty ten ae we etkthe | Missouri compromise. His claim was heid valid by the | Castle, Eng.,ayed 68 years. He entered the navy as @ gence or patriotism: of despots of a day—enathroned to- . A 1o.residing in, Weahinaiom Wn pengaintiiic n, taeeny with local court, but, upon appeal, it was denied by the 8a | volunteer ot the ‘rst class, in June, 1801, when he was By Steamer of ind them a sea of I O8T—ON SATURDAY, 25TH INST, COMING FROM prey eee for te nanexation of Texte. ‘Soon after | Preme Court of the State, which sent the cage back to the | but ten and a half years old. After ‘seeing some service | January 1 4 Convent of the Sacred Heart, Manbatianville, « his cabtocl-at Wedhingtootinn ieee of aaneat lower tribunal. into the Circuit and the | in the Mediterranean, Lyons returned to England in 1807. ae ee eee rae cane | eee © States, where, at the De- | In the meantime the bate of Trafalgar had beon tongot. Secte et the United Staten At the argent request of | CCMPer term of 1856, it was finally decided against Dred. | Towards the end of 1807 we find Edmund Lyons on board pong: ath ng lla ollie oc x Ry 21L.—Hon. Arthur P. Bagby, in Mobile, Alabama, in the | the Monmouth, 64, on his way to the Fast Indies, where see eens ie taeda then {| Poth year of his age. ‘Governor Bagby was a native of | he remained the nex: five years, aud where he attrained Hee nce nton Which framed the constitution ofvene | Vireini@, but removed to Alabama at an early age, where | the rapk of lieutenant. In the Ind:an seas he gained con- ee ea Sao rchatttocy to ber aatnission into tae | He studied and practsed law. “He was an able jurist and | siderable distinction, When the isiaud of Banda Nora SR eT ee eee ie chat | lesislator. He dlled the offices of Governor of Alabama, | was taken, in 1810, he obtained Lonoradle mention as Governor of the stare of Texas under the now régime | Umited States Senator, and United States Minister to the | smong the first to scale the caste of | Boly Be Peoted tothe office im Novenbor, 1848 tn | Russian Court with much ability. apa it was for bis share in this exploit ‘tuat he wane. ee ee Roveennes,, 2 Jueutenant General Henry Thomas, C. B., Colonel of the | was immeriately afterwards appointed flag-leutenant thropist's state of mind for seventy ‘years:—“He looks to | Minded of the people, and the prospect of seives; the word of God must be carried out, and human CL EVERITT, Socratary. — OBERT OWEN.—A PUBLIC MEUTING IN TESTIMONY ‘of reapect to this world renowned philenthropiat will be A a & Maratera, 112 7 Rio. Th Europe = carpet bag containing Ladies wearing apparel » ith. leo, involved | Cinpunt ot jewelry, kee The Onder will eonter a favur aod will D frightful anuce pn, since her | be liverally rewarded by leaving the same at 9° str oet, demoralizaion is of Central BARSTOW & VOrE, Awerica, filled with disventions and’ matnal rivalries. — - -———-—_-——- - New Granada, conynised, ready to precipitate herself into OST—ON CHRISTMAS MORNING, IN GOING FROM revolution, Bucador, in a state of frightful excitement, 4 Flatbush to Fuiton ferry, thence to Twent third stree! Veneztela. yesterday velivered from the tyranny of Sona. | New York: a package containing ~ black labo yell, pair of Ko gt to-day her bardly congtituvet government menaced | totheowner. The finder wil be rewarded’ and by ‘ne h What is our y seareely done with Vivanco | thanks of the owner by leaving it atthe Herald odice, for nfronted with Kebonique, The Ar- | J, A. H. out into hostilities among | —~ the spring of 1846, on the commencement of hostili Tw “ ; " - con H : entieth English regiment, He entered the «omy in 1798. | to Rear Adnural Drury. But his most important ser- bile, the classic country of OST—A GOLD WATCH AND CHAIN, ON FRIDAY Be ae Gases tate teres acne Hie aren oe te rg In 1618 be was distingniehed in the camp; of that year. | vies was the storining of Fort Marrack. An éxpedition tranguillity, compared with the normal anarchy of her sis: | 24) Might laat, either ins Fifth avenue omnibus ar bi > S p In commana be commenced the battle oi elle, iM. the | ban been planned for the conquest of Java, and Mr, Lyous: ters, is nevertheless seated at this moment upon a mine | A Suuable reward will be piven by leaving It requisition on Governor Londerson for four regiments of votunweers. In xccordauce with ibis requisition, the treops were speedily raised. The Legisiature passed a joint resolution (ia accordauce with Mr. Henderson's ex- presseu desire) loviting the Governor to take command in person of the Texan yoiunteers. The troops under bis command were enroiled in the service of the government for six monthe, and Gen. Henderson entered the army in eral, in whieh capacity 7 aterey im September of that year, and was one of the Commissioners appoiuted by Gen. Taylor on the part of the United States, to settle the terms of capitulatun with the Mexican Commissioners. ba which & single spark may spring. What, then, is the | Martin & Corey, 283 Greenwich. corner of Warren #° physical and moval s\tuation of the people we have enumerated, and who yossees such vast and fer. | 7. OSTOON CHRISTMAS Day. A KALLE FUR 104 OF tile territories? The logical consequence follows. 4 vietorine, in going from Brooklyn t New York over the from the antecedents we have mentioned, and thus | Wall sree ferry, up Wall to William. through Wilibum Ww fanaticism, supine norauce, followed by slavery, misery, the artiole fs valued at more than ile metual wortn. degradation, servilism. And ig it with these elements of | The tinder will be lly rewarded on leaving iat. ML decomposition and «iserder, whic precipitate us into | Warren Brothers &¢ ruin and chaos, that we would restram the powerful, | 22 —— compact, invading domination? Impossible. Gut where REWARDS. where is the germ of this slavishness ? It mfessed, iu ourselves. Itienot they who en- | 66) ReWARD.— course of which he had a horze killed under him. After while the preparations for this event were a year epent in Canada, where he was engoged ip the et incomplete, been appointed to o station ip operations at Lake Champlain, and the retreatfrom Platte- | the’ Sunda Strait, where he was to cruise and burg, Genera! Thomas returned to Europe in time to be | procure all the information he could regarding sebt at the captoreof Paris. ihe position and force of the enemy. It was while Prince Ghika, of Montenegro, killed, io Paris. He | thas engaged that he attacked at night, » pb more was return pg irom the drive in the Bois de Boo!ogne, when | than thirty tive men, Fort Marr: defended av it was by the horses of bis phwton took fright, and the Prince | fity-four puns, dy 180 soldiers, and by tho crews of two was flung head foremost, and expired voate, He took it with scarcely any lows, His reward 24.—James Adger, of Charleston, 8. C., inthe 8ist year | followed, when sbortly afterwards he returned home ‘a ill of bis age, in New York. Mr. Adger wos one of the mort | health. “He was promoted to the command of the Rinaldo, inent members of the mercantile commanity ta | (10,) m which vessel he formed one of the squadron leston. He was 9 native of Irelan which escorted Louis XVIII. to France and the a'lied CHILB POLITIC? —WAERE ALE WE GOIK NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS. IST, ON CHRISTMAS F i es in the storming of Monterey, rendered : ‘ videbietel ; ee -oing from King to tle bor his sersicea in the storming ot Monterey, rendered | "29, Forestal, te oldest police ingpedior in Liverpool, | sovereigua to Fhiiand. —aNbough ho obtained post rank | 2/=nSlated for the New Youk Henatp from tho Volparaiso | cain we, but we who have feweren our own armo— | Rot fil ff King 09h England, in that own, at the age of 67. He entorod the | in 1614, the c: ition of the war deprived him of ative Mercury, Oct. 6, 1358.) ourselves who wif not comprebend, the precize ant ue- | fre owmer by leaving it Non. 6 Bediord ssreck in 1847 voted him a sword. His command being dis ebarged from the service, he revurned to Texas, and in November, 1846, resumed the dates of the office of ern his gubernatorial career he retired once more t (he practice of the law, aud con- dm bis profession (eclining nomination for any ) unti! the death of Senator Rusk, when he conseated to accept the oifice rendered vacaut, and accordingly was ow ce force op its formation ia 1886, having | employment unul 1828, when he received tue com- When we see the a drag us y Acapta in the British army, and during | mand of the Bionde,’ in whieh he assisted at the | % Upright policy, an war was well known for his reck'ess | blockade of Navarino, and superintended the | “! persecution a y and fondness for dueling. baval expedition sent to co-operate with the French | Shiy™ —&, wes ¥ —tir. Landaiche, a veieran of the armies of the first | in the reduction of the Castle of Morea. mn | bert ements,‘ Whither bound? apoigon, in the parish of St.John we Bapust, ¢ 1825 bis ship was paid off, and Captain Lyons exchang- | — Th torday Wwanquil, bas begun 1> agi ang, aged 69 years. He came to New Orie: the naval for the diplometie profession. He was ap- | waves lately so clear and choad Guadalvipe in January, 1816. od Minister Pienipotentiary at the court of Athens, | lowering and overcast, and it aceds nota Veswelus or a | eurse randon the tranquil sea | cessary Inw e ts | toward the People of South America! know that the only barrier we can eet up, the only ne that may save ua, consiets in the iverty of our people, since they will thug attain en te its | lightonment, « iently activity and industry. If bas become | we would preserve intact our navionaiities we must raise ves to tbe level of that republic; we must respond Pm REWARD.—LOST, ON THE EVENING OF 220 the facts and occurrent *. ARD.-LOST. BETWEEN REV. HENRY WARD *s ebureh and the Fults im forey, Brook!yn, «ual inside with be ik. “ihe fin thanks of tb i itto the Hank Nassau streeta, nays ire oi Nover 4 : a = by doe elatire ge re tee oe FN i enbeum hich post he fied from 1836 until 1849. In 1849 he was | Columbus to foresee atempest. Yet novbing do ovr potl- | to the noiversal appeal by means of produetion; we must e) instant, at Bryani’s Minstrels,» large gold pen, with beronct was Surgeon fencral 10'Uue Force, ani Sargeon catia hii “ aypotted British Minister to the Swiss Confederation, | tee! pilots to avoid it; and blind, pr Jess in | legitimatize by means of labor th Fer eeihesenee” Gckeue Gr) mtenae aba ot ree ee Ee tenis, @ beunds oad bore ~ Texepay, 5.—Daron Ward, the Yorkshire graom, & position which he occupied unsli 1851, when be waa gout | ‘eir seif-suilleiency, they provoke t I spirit of } ritories. Without th requisite bt weg oe goa owe 4 oa ad tab Deoat. ., y wre, ’ played eo prominent a part at the Court of Parma, at | to Stockloim ina similar capacity. There be. remaised sore, Bet», trues to hyperk of meet the |” look upon wa with prond eontensy Wey: ub conve” Det Mae p. tf e pilin Sane » ah Yaka > ad etal wy years’ | Until, in November, 1863, war being then ‘taminent, he | Fecord of practical facts. The truth is, the country is | tify, because it is contrary to the spirit of tr Robert Brown, ope <a most a ne ee eee He left Yorkshire a boy, and after a four years’ | ie on cd second in command of the Mediterranean | nuirching—not at hazard, as is said, bot directly towards | but’ which, nev less, cannot otherwh ROWS RD —LOST. ON FRIDAY, 2TH INSTANT, A snecessiul career on the turf at Vienna as jockey, fleet, Upon the duties of this command he revoln that foqmictade | Without this requisite, North Ame: Hi consider usa gray mare, about 1S hands high; bad woollen camo employed by the then reigning Deke of L He | the experience of a diplomatis: who had enjo has ome chrouig, ant wrthy of possessing & et oud head sial. Auy person returnin; reving ry Dreast; that | degencrate race, incapable, un rites, nor the | h , Will recen abova {will take possession of our ter (9 Leonard wun portunities of studying the Greek and Turk Tr the Imposing wttitncd ag well as that of a tailor who was perfectly acqualut ¢ d'etat, whose emp with the seas an wi a6 10 act. He it was who op. | #8 the rest of South Amy 4 strain tho evil or avert the imminence of th neath Mawar ta! subsequentiy at the Unt | Was at Locea promoted from the stevie to be valet to hs versity of Edinburg, where ue completed his medical stud- | Royal Highness, This service he perfermed up to 1%: y Ohvie, as well suili¢ient to re Jes in 1795, andi in the same year aecompanied a regimeat ca ae “ a a . ia necesen a n the Capacity of kasign and Assistant Surgeon, |; 4»°Ut that period he was made Master cf the Horse. gh ) eauneuahen Gl tuth is, that while the masses pirate witli the prlacarnmsis by Roarnpthei ning Lage ed. 4 to feelacd, on Si Joxeph tata’ recommendations and | Eventually be became Minister of the Tiouechold and ‘ ne; So eepeeaeed Ss eT ocean, ieehintink pilewis Genie $02 } e evil, fit which We sbruld tmperdalty itrve By cted by (he more than go! loa promise which the then | sinister of Final hich office be he his engerness, he left but eix Inches be. | Se!ves. pt Me Luann 2 H}, for which We sheuld tmpartially invest our be tindes wil Fe corrected Gy lls more them polien prameiee waidh “a nee, whiel Lis ship aud the ground below it.” Not | ‘mpenous rulers, Wf the hope of a regeneration o Well then, with the independence at 117 Fifth aves’ RECS pIOT Od Te 008 ot Net ae ee ie ieot | abdidited im 1068. . a8 Oh ouly in this matter of the travsyort of the trope, but also | Principles and of @ peaceful triumph Ww ebarw . ' embarked a3 waturalist in tue expedition under Captain | agent of Avsiria during the revolution, igen We tte men velecsi colmnanes te Tord Raglan ishly of revoluin, wary uc need pre SIV) BEWARD.—Los7, 4 ob* gave the most vi b! oe ti A 'y had pon oy Ve nr ro s Funders for the survey of tue australian coast. From wis | trampled be returued to Varma as Prime Minister, and Te.” bgt eerpcey is! They gecond igbor latter | Reesdwoy Gnd fbeanpecn sirees er Thesis o podertoek, soe expedition he returned to England in 1005, bringing WAU | negotiated the abdication of Charies IL, and placed the | $4—M. Boway (do Ia Meurthe), in Paris. Hie name ix J them. and ine ne another, | taining ever $70 on the People's Bank of this sity. he above which, wert ; é Youthful Charles IIT. on the throne, who was arsuariaated | OD!¥ bisterical beckuse he happewud to be Vice President | ite thelt terror and veal rocitten A. nese ne = tn at bates sy . the administration of Sie Kobert Peel a peusion of £200 | before his own palace in 1854, AS eon ae Charles II the republ wince, the second person to the THE LECTURE SEASON. i Per AnuLmD, ip recognition of bis distinguished merits. | 10 | came to the throne the then Raron Ward was sont to Ger sidates for the t of the republic, and the highest their ow, y pit one : " : Faas be wes elected one of the ‘ight foreign argocintes o¢ | chme to the throne te then Baron, Ward wag sonst to or hey political scale, asstsning dletatortal po Saiyan nl thowe wich might | PREY, THEO. be COVLER WILL LACTURRAN T 1 imseif into an al been the " (de la Menrthe, who’ had the title of & support of thie truth A mrt ot Vienna. This post fie held up | one, the son of @ member of the Counci’ of 500, who ‘al end. When the | coupt) wt the of bis royal patron's trag Wiliiamsvurgh, © the Academy of Sciences of tho Institute of France. ta I the benefit erety awarded the Copley Weidne slay evenk Herasen aires to the Un luring ® series Of years on | Hresent I sumed Sate wuthority Ward | became a minister under the First Empire, He waa’ born g tae prompt ings ¢ Us Dot seek exampies ‘Wetmenbs the subject of vegetable ee and in 1849 be | roriped trom pubhe lite tural parsuite | at Naney i 1797. His father le bien a large fortune. | & personal vengeance, orders them flogged by the bunds xic sevk 0, 9 became President of the Linn pen ES in the Acstrian domiuons. Without \tional | He was called to the bar in Paris in 1820, but never prac- the public executioner! Another wdente banisies | country most enlighten et __Jb—-Ary Schatee, a colourated Fo ge = foundation he contrived to write and speak German, | (sed, and was never beard of as public man ti) after | from b's feat in the Council Chamber a merabver of the people of this repablic which we up a & model years. Schaller be born in We0U, and studied in the | French and alan, and conducted the affairs of Stato witth | 1890. Then hit fortune recommended him for a field offi- | mumicipality for abuses in the liberty of debate during | to her sisters? A mast, un us of ite dignity, with J EV. J. 1. HARRIS WILL Holiand. He removes to Par ted 7 crhorg ve everness cer’s commission in the National Guard; he beeame a de- | the evtsions of that holy. Another Intendente awaits the | out energy, inteliige jndusery, Whiel has not known York Uni ity, ou Washi even. chek et Paes Geiee. Benes ene “Can im Jay, im Bedford, Westchester county, New | puty for Lamevilio, under Louis Philippe, and for the | Most solemn celebration of the country to oifer a | how to be free, because it bas evgr been under the pa in il Fiat io Heaven and Rene Sees: Seoce con ter teten,” “the Gent] at us born im New York on the 16th of June, | Vorges after the revolution of February, 1848, and fought | Pub! affront to the municipality of Ins province, | pilage of au ignorant and proud ariftocrary—of an aristo eee “ Comforting the Weary -y ~4 gp 4 ; a, ace of bes | Me was ap eminent lawyer. Mr. Jay waa appoint: | in treets of Paris at the bead of his legion in the 4: entenvoring to deny them their rank of precedence in an ) cracy which has never comprehended the interests of the | a —= = megnen, fas eee fair specimen of BE | ed first Judge of the county of Westchester, an’ be was | of June. In the Chambers he frequently supported pro- etal % same Iptendente (ater) deaee to | pation, or if thas ecomprouenced, ® eo much the more POLITICAL, ronan ine ino oc Ubiand’s ‘well _kuowy | continued upon the bench by successive Governors, of op- | porals Jor the recait of the Bonaparte faraily, and this was | the same bod, right of opposing his will in tatters | criminal, since it has abused ite power, to the dete EMOCKATIO KEPUMLICAN GENERAL IT. —_ meogem te toed aa dete Hoa ponite politire, until 1843. Gen. Jackson, while President, | hie title to the favor of the President of the Repuviic, who | ‘ecting the ym an’ rights of their conetitveata, and | ment of ita country. Observe the’ humble att | [SMC sing Hath bee Bt 16k a onothal moctlon ne Seta ae i eee of ean ahs PINE | oppcinted Lan to am impertant Lesdian commiasioners'ip, | put hi name at the head of the three candidates which be | CoMsummates the alienation of property belonging, adt to | tude of our masse, nd say if there le not write | the Democratic kepubiienn Geveral commiting thie “ity aod over the Dead Body ‘titary man | Wut the office was declined, Judge Jay wus tho last of the | had the right to propose. The Assembly chose him, in the federal but the cty coffers” Another Intondente ar. | ten upon the eountenances the ebaracters which | county of New York whl be helt at Tammany Hall oo Tues- Penkain G, Came, tee a ee et te children ot Chef Justice Jay—his brother, Poter Augus- | order to coneiliate the President. find Louie Napoleon | rests the officers of 8 militia company for simple refusal | constitute the slave. Observe the National Guard | day evening, the 29th inst. at 134 0 look. of Mexico, at San et Lt aged pad tur, having died in 1844, and Lis two sisters in 1856. died, the government of France would bave devolved | © tarp out, imprisons them in solitary contleement, re- | and see if there be pet there aa aristecrate preponde- pa uae FOWLRR. Chairman pro tom. Hie death was lamented by al oe ee ei cy | _ 2i-—Felix Foresti an Rtatlan exile, the patriotic co-xuftorer | wpon M. Boulay (ve ta Meurthe leases, again arrests and tanishes them; ani not comtent | rance. +20 into the heart of the republic, we | Sewrri De Vanvekumrons, ¢SreeNlen, Many of bis bitterest political AA = ge a with Sylvie Pellico to the dungeons of Austria, aud who 26 —Foster , inventor of raised letters for the use | With so signal a dispiay of authorhy arrests the friends who | its delds, and you Will becouvinced of ite feudal condition, sees 5 active supporter of the Zaloga Capmet. received from the President of the United States the ap- | of the blind, in “cima, Als dared to accompany the banished to the portofembarka | of the abject misery of the majority, of the lamentable WATCHES, JEWELRY, & aULY. pointment of Covgul to Genoa, died at that port about this £8.—Madame Barrot, at the age of ninety.three yeare, | Hom For So eo esemery and gronnd!ess euspyctons, citizens iy Of the people, And we repeat, is A = these de. « . . =" yall a Ter | dat in Pare. She was the widow of the M. Barrot who voted | ate arrested and place worn out elements, foes to all order, that # T M. UNGER’S, 512 WAY. UP STATES, Pumer, £~-Vincmes oe prec re a iene | i-—<Madame 14a Pioiffer, the female traveller, in Vien- | in the Convention ban'shing Louis XVI. instead of behead. | 10 12: inquietade read aboad and thus oppenition tw the progressive and entor- | AL Diamom LB Lal ladyship was the youngest of the five daughters of King | na. she wos perhaps the most wonderful woman of the | i hb podlic security ia attacked in nidet of periect peace, of the race whose domination we fear? Im w he, William IV., by Mra. Jordan; born in November, 1803, | age, having not only visited the contwents of Europe, Jobn M. Davis, United States Army, Allogha- J 4nd during the existence of ec ted law. The cousum Felieg off by retnl| at wholesale ‘prices. To buy real bar and marricd in 1830 Viscount Falkland. Lady Fuikland | Africa ond Asia, but America and the Polynesia; she nty, Pa., at the advanced age of eighty sevey | mation of al! these acts, their aoprohation-—explicit in Proceeding ferther, obeorve our political pobey. ee i Fre} ees, O13 Hroadway, up stairs, op- traversed over 150.000 miles by water and 18 by iand. He was born tp Franklin county, some caset, silent in othere—the litte heed given to them | is ity Per 4 0 oo - was possessed of considerable Iiterary talent. M me I'feuler was bora at Vienna, in 1797. Whee abe sone tn the army trom Presidents Jedereon, Madi by the executive, and the cynical recklessness of their plete have we discussed in our electoral rtrug gies? ®. T ANY Set KIFICK.—J, MACDUPS, 996 Baku VL OWAY, Don Valentine Gomez Farias, ex-lresident of Mexico, in | be: mayo b anffic pot ge she set off on her first pil Monroe. AS id officer be served his the souipgaanenret avery oa vd ae ae What ideas hi : * aes “and Telepen, in profit to Is selling 4 _ watches from 818 award " . been rimage to Jerusalem and the Holy Land. She returned | country for fourteen In the year 1807 be passed | heart of ever jot—of every one who lowes truly the ation. in the halisof Congress? What the prospect Gord hunting levera trom Manic any, aged TY years. Ginor Furies bed iat | or pablished her Srst work, eatitled “The Travels of & Lh Titsburg wih a company for the Soathwest, | peace of the coumtry and the pr aqnered ander | a1, Migenciee of the yurtiee which fight for tbe beld ; magistrate of the Mexican republic four times, under con- | Vienna Lody to the Lloly Land.” Uneated in her thirst | which descended the Obio on keel bouts, He served for | its ehade. Let not thore in of power? piastorin which bas been offered to titutional rule, and served for terms amounting im the | for travel, abe next visited the extreme north of Larope, | seven years wader command of Geveral Andrew Jackson, | thore who call themselves the people ie the cout + but we have only aggregate to one year one movth aad eleven days. He fecland, Norway, Sweden and Denmark. She now carried Indian ware tn Florida he distingyished himself, | The channel we thread is intricate the magnetic vir- | limited ourselves to ds iat0 | siceve buttuns, sliver cohe baskets, ures, a sets, rs, ‘Was a favoriie with the Mexican democracy, and was by into execution a project of making a voyage arovn! the projally so at the bartle of the Horse Shor, He tue ot their peedtie has departe!. The route we tollow play individuals, ql object of our opposition as well & per cent tae ee la them regarded as the father and founder of tucir party. world, This she accomplished during the years 1846 and | was afterwards at the battic of New Orleans, as a coptain | leads to anarchy and revolution. ae of ovr aspirations bas been fixed only in persona, ruclea of Jewelry for presenta, {1 Major Ceneral Jobn Anthony Quitman, U.S A., | 188. She left Viewns May 1, 1846, and arrived at Rio | in the army, and was one of General Jackson's aide. tere | Since tho attempt of Mira in Copiapo ecti! the arrest of | What proves this eouduel? That jwivate interest prevails pure member of Congress trom Mississippi, at his residence, ro Sept. 18 of the same year. After trave) he uneertook a most dangerous duty—that of obtaining a | citizens made in Conception, from January to Septem ver, r ; that we listen to ue vol ve that of seltiah Corner ot Walker, up stairs. Re eippi. He was born at Rhinebeck, New b the Brazile, Ida went round Cape forn, trav pry of am ition for the Amertcan army—whieh be | 1898, @ solemn ana 2 aecueation Lot Deen written *, that the yoo! of the country, liber ) are Gume- W PER ChNE SAVED BY York, Sept. 1, 1799. His rst stadies were proseouted at gh Chile, vwited Otaheite, set sail tor China, and thon | euccessfully accomplished t the existing » ration, ant tne charge bas | rove but vain % behind? whose screen are hidden the . . the seminary in Cooperstown, and be alterwards passed | Went to India. Thence she went up the Tigris, to view the DRCEMRAR. laid by the very ones who should be those ty afer’ | instincts of @ mean an! cowardly ambition, JAMORDS AND JEWELY to the college at Mowat Airy; near Philadelphia, Aboot | Mterestng ruing of Babylon and Nineveh, then wandered ‘Tenepar, 2—Benjamio Marshall well known Sew | credit. This accusation aye that of peace be broken, They tell ue, perbay*, that our institutions are @ PER CEST LES? THAN OO8T the close of the year 1820 he left Mount Airy for Pits. | through Khoordistan and Portia, passed the Caucasus, Pees ae een renee © Wee Sanam oy if public order be violated, those in power—ihe guardans | liberal. It ie true. The principles df demoeracy ~ burg, whore be wok a fatboat down the Obio river. ite | and travelled throngh the south of Russia, thence to Con: | York merchant, at Troy, et the age of 76 years. Mr. | of the law—are the prin: pal, if not the only guilty; that | stamped upon a charter to which has been given & t» ser, oh ot at om ied at Chiltionthe, 5 State of Obio. He contined nople, and through Greece, home, 1851 sho sail- | Marshall was one of the early proprietors of the firs: line ey have fatally compromised the tranquillity of the | name of copetitution, but all this is but a boy ee caution the study of the law,’and in 1821 was admitted to the | et frem London for the Cape of Goo! ag oy took chip | oe packets established between this city and Liverpool country, and opened a de door to civil war. There is | words written ina book, whieh practice belies mabite at #0 per cent oan than pee bar. Having obtaindd his object, he determined to sock | for Singapore, to visit the islands of the Ind'an archipela $08 s -s POO, T vet tine tO retrace our stops, 10 app tho tempest | oor habits and customs bave ret 1 utterly nol o> Prescata for the bolstage, will do well to call usem a new scone of life, and embarked again upoa a flatboat after this she went to Sarawak, in Kernen, thonce | 6—Right Rev. Henry Ustick (mderdonk, 1. whieh all soe, none worthily cndeavor to avoid. | you, culous parody, cruel sarcasm, with which riteeit prot to descend the Mixsiesippi. Landing at Natchoa, whieh meh the country of the Dayaks to the Dutch postes. | Bishop of the Protestant Epiecopal church for the @ Let thoee im power retrocede in thelr thougiitions career. | people have been fooled the detriment of the im t 680 Bir ay, ‘was then one of the widest of the frontier towns, be © ip the interior an the weet of the island. After | of Pennsylvania, in Philadeiphia. He was in the ~ | Let the outburst of pol nical poestona, anebained by the | terests, 1 will not eay of the nation, ice this i mans ‘wo doors Abowe Amity street, menced the practiceot his profession. He became a leat iting the Moluecas, she went tw California, and thence | teth year of bis Bishop Onderdonk was a native of | #¢t® Of Certain provincia! officiaie, be appeased. Let tem © artecracy, which hag not com = = = jng jurist anacmineut judge. He marched wits a yoluuteor | bone. she was 61 years old. the eity of New York, Ie the year 1837 Pr. Onderdonk | Telesse themselves from the serious respoum bility watch | not Ih What progress consists CLOTHING, &C. force tuto Teta ih 186 to aid the revolutioniats. In 18t6 | Thomae 0, Larkin, in San Franci¢eo, California, aget 56 | wns elected ax nesistant to the Right Rev. William White, gn oF ee rene T #4 OENTRE STRERT—WANTED, $0000 Woartt war was deciared between the United States and Metco. Howas born tn Charlestown, Mass. Septemver 10, | then Lishap of Peuuaylvania. | Dr. Onder douk wae eonee a : cf new aud left 04 chothing, for ths Weonrn mormon Major Quitman tendered his services to the goverament, The ancestors were from Great Britain. From 183 erated bishop in Christ's church, Philadetptia, on Thurs npr t tempor: mn Gentle will receive fifty ent more than Ub ry and was appointed one of the six brigadier generals to | to 1846 Larkin war engaged fo commerce at Monterey. | day, the ubth of October, in the year 1827, and inbored in | accomplice ia there posed weien, Oe. of mua lols, by calliug at the store, oF command the volunteer ih ouce plied nimeelf | From that point he carried on trade with the Sandwich | tbe '} piscopate up to the 21st of October, 1844, on which | *lelmed ic the current of hatred wh ; addressing (LIO8. DB. CON HOY. 44 Centre street. rows and inashovt time joined General Taplor, wno | Islands, Mazation and Acapulco, Tn 1844 he was anpeint- | day he was superseded from office, for alleged violation | it ndevtly provoked. To wish 10 says heap up ovr misery, to aglomerate our rags, and mal a - was then advancing “pon Monterey. Uy torocd marches ed United States Consol for California, Me was the first | of the robne, after duc investigation. The ex bishop and ineiple of authority, is, im many cases, to become the | more manifest our poverty and our ¢ r. T THE CLOTHING KTORK OF WM. WALSH, NO. 3% apd leaving behind a large portion of Lis baggage, Geom Consul appointed :n this country. Mr. | lus friends did not permit the case to reet; and t was so | ‘0! of tyranay. not thas that we should Begin, if we hope to pla Centre street, wanted—s large quantity of gentlemen's Quitman succeeded in joing thé army with his’ division nown from his connection w: Call. | succerefully agitated to a rehearing of the accusations Wo neither exaggerate nor speak falsely; we do not fam | pier to the Americans of the North, We ost know and | east off clothing. Fifty per cont moore ill be pak in rouly while the orders were being given for the attack of that | fornia gold mines. During his residence in Monterey a4 | and defence that the ban of suspension was removed from assions—unfortunately they are alrealy too highiy ex. | reform ourselves: the evti is in ourselves alone, aud we Fie Wee Cone ne y adiressing city; General Taylor amigned him at once a position, and | United States Consui, he was a regular correspondent of | Dr. Ondertonk im the month of October, 186. to induce ue to play the part of agitators. We de I ells ad = on the following morning Quitman was the first to enter | the New Yous Haratp. When gold was first discovered Rowland P. Allen, at Alton, Ill. He was the eon of mmce evil; we prociaim it bh mopling eNom A MabeR arty OF CAST OFF CLOTHING WANT. that city, under a very heavy fire of tho enemy. Ho was | in Caliormia he was there, and gave us a minute and ex hemial Allen, who was the rst male child born where | #sk the pete who are « ea ed.—The highest price given, and cash paid in onrrent also the to enter Mex. General Quitman was art secount of it. MMs letters, pabliehed in the Hemaun, | the eny of Bridgeport, Conn., now stands, Mr. Allen age for @ potley weer, abler, more coneuintory sud more | they were mistaken, rio Ly Rye a vod clothing esas. of can ob- Jooked upon throughout the country as the lealer of tuat | gave the first reliable information to the world of the Ca- | was the nephew of Allen, and a soldier of the war | Pairiotir. ts true light, and if we by in Our truths, it a re con on oF sending adtrene to progressive school known as the ‘flibusters,” and he, | !fornia gold mines. Tn 1883 Mr. Larkin was married oa | of 1812. For the vest, let cach one save bis own reaponribitity as | is beeauge we wish before all th the good of oar | ¢AMES ', 481 Pearl street. more than any other man, embodied the American spirit board a verve! then on the coast of Oulifornia, under the &.—Captain C. DP. Ladiow, of the steamship Ariel; killed | ¥e—e" Public wricrr, as independent men, Firangers ‘0 | country. “The gall of our words is the iraest proof of our | — OPHING WANTED — es “7 of the nation. American flag, by Joba C. Jones, the United States Consal | at sea in a violent storm. Ai political machination—make it a duty to place our own ded ond profound loyalty to her welfare C OTHtN 9 WANTED.—THE SUBSCRIBER WI 1 PA 26 -Ueneral Don Francisco F. Pinto, one of the veterans | of the Sandwich Islands, who happene! to toach on the (Mn safety , peaking the truth, bitter though \t be, t those = . coinines, $t and upwarda, Also, Kit gloves, ribbona, Ae; of the independence of Chile, SA. ‘Tis ciuzen bad fivied | Comt. Sirs, Larkin, of Masauchusot, was the fiest lady who will get listen, Be it wot forgotten thas the country, Caltfornta Markets. atlowsen'e clothing and furamere, Legis bineses bo by the moat distinguished posts in the military and magiste | from the United States who settied in California. The ‘The Arrams or Lawnence, Stone & Co--Yes | aiarmed, is yetesking “Whither go we—where do you Say Fraxcieeo, Wednesday evening, Nov. 24, 185¢.— Sire. EB. if required. A note by post will be punctually at- Malcarcers, owing (9 ine patriotiem and high mort. In | Children of the marringe were the frat United Gtatas eiti. | terdey teeuimony was taken before Judge propose to lead ns? Fiour—Sales at 68 60 0 $10 60. Grain—-Sales of 175 bags | tended io. B18 eventh. avetus, between ‘Nacteenth and he acted as Kavoy of Chile in Hucnos Ayroa | Zevs on the paternal and maternal side who were born in | Supreme Court, in chambers, the eq THM UNITED STATES AND SOUTH AMBRICA of chowe Wheat at $289, light sales of barley at $120 a | Twentieth streets, New York. - “three years aftorwards, to fill the sam | (hat country. Mr. Larkin continued his fuancial opera- George Peabody et. al. vs, Lawrence, Stone (Translated for the New Yorx Hexarp, from the Valpa- | $1 26. Potatoes—ales at & We. per bag. Provi ADINS AND GENTLEMEN HAVING ANY CAST OFF port in London, wot the news of the defeat suifored by | tons in California until hie demise, Corporation) ; and the raise Mercury, October 6.) sione—Saies of 260 packages civar pork and 7 bhis. extes | TAP ae oazs a4 Fre’ Chilean nema at Raucagua tade him fetara t» | #.—Geveral Sir William Reid, K. 0. B., in London. He | x#. the corporation viet of the firm of Lawrence, | We have recenuiy sevtl the press. of Santiago call public | clear bacon, on private terme; 996 firking butter in lots | AA Clune range tous he eat at ‘America, Ifo took part in the campaign undertaken by | chtered the Rnglish srmy in 1008, sad was engaged dering Stone & C0. The sot forth that they advanced t0 | attention to the importance of the influence of North | sito private. Groceries—Sales of 175 bois, erushed su Tiarria, 166 Seventh avenue, between Twenueth tad Twenge the Argentine army, unvier the command of General Bei | te inet four years of the war in the Peninenia, under the | Semue! Lawrevce in London, the sum of cor a America. This fact nas decided us as lovers of our coun- | 12%¢ ; 160 mats choiee No. 1 at L2e., 50 oe do. 11%e. | bret sueete. grane the Spanish army of Upper Pera. The ex | Deke of Wellingtom. At the conclusion of the peace he | nile him to pay for woot which he had and | try to pen the following lines: ¢ B00 bags Rio coffee, 18¢.; 60,000 Ibs. do., do., 150 kits | ——— = raion being aoeeneatal, he tetured to bs country | Ferved om the const of America under Genoral Lambert, | tha! he agreed te hold the woo! in trust ae for | ‘yur first duty ie to be impartial and not to decetve oar | No.1 mackerel, 600 mats China rice, 616 haif bols. dried Pihare the Difcctor O'Hwgins, associated him to the cam | “til the termination of war here, and rejoined the Duke | this sdvance. The wool went to the tills, am the defend: | seives im regard to vcr true position. It is necessary that | apples, in lote, 60) boxes Hill's soap, 26 cages Ave of wan ny . goign of Peru in 1822 ana ‘g23. On hia return to Chile he ] of Wellington again in Belginm in 1815, In 1848 he direct. | ents aliege pny Beg mye! the wool of Lawrence, | pr: judice eh ald not bind ns, nor variety destroy, hiding MPs tobacco—all_on private terins. Liquors 700 cs. A NEW Syeovouare. ‘wae appointed Minister of the Interior and of Foreign | e the engineer officers and sappers and miners at the while, on the ot 2 , the plaintifis claum that he was | irom us the precipice. The question which now pre- | Banoroft’s citer sold at $4; 100 dozen Dunoan’s ale, $3 75, 4.6, combination “ : ‘Ailaira. ‘Doing Vice President of the republic, he was en ireat Fxbibition in London. He rendered ecionce great | Only an agent of the milis in the transaction, and that they | scnin iteolf ie of high importance, since i: implicates no- | 100 bbls. low proof whiskey, private és, tard | Mnles a: gy Gd to the Pregidency ch aceunnt of General Frcir'a resig | Service «n his work on the storms of the West Indies. respontible for the trust aseumest by him. The thing less thom the Iife or death of our nationalities, the | suid on private ter Fae Soe Ape eee Ee Shan pation in 1827, and in 1000 be was eeeetes SSE. NOVEMBER. ron hao ern, “ine Sa tuo | = : poermapnianehay nev e-Seti an ee Nore CARNE M1.—Alexanier Doonan, a marine in the Un' 108 reat American neequently,, study IMPROVED BILLIARD TABLES AND service, on board ot the trigate Daataapys, oh Gases, | Weesmoas, 2<-Giumh Vhlentine Rtwheny, Antvee this question, to sound the Procure of ts abyses | ~~~ ~ IP , —— Japan.’ He wae beried on the sbore next day, Six Ja | Minister to Rassia, im Paris. The deceased was an aulic “ bee ty allow gerveives pI awallow: so wae BpRac zee ch Fexcive Saran na, 4 EY Y8an's COMBINATION CUSHIONS, patene, who professed Christianity, (oilowod his revaains | couneitior of Vienna. It was he who, after the taking of | eniteat iaw. Rufus Choate and R. R. Curtis appeared as | ., ‘espotent ai, patventenshe bagreteceemeehe cavern: | westle, excailent swzeters, mocking aut ouher fancy binds. | PAPENTED Pa Ris Nov Ne, Sok ST Wo the grave. pits Sebastopol, was charged by Anstria to carry tothe Emperor | counsel for the piaintifie: and C. 8 Goocrich ant W. RP. | lig na, The Lutter Staves abword, litle By litte, tag. | ''T SMe aE AO Masnn aureet . . remot, te Bf,» tune eae. | seam Se mr treme bmn pe | Sewn SSSA Soe Sows | Sieh, carers te Gens cane | TLPRARRR moran sean eG | em pegs eae Ratner c ie at Spain. oe, diem . has arthmore, ‘a elyhia, & pair of , sale miat and cook, in England anes of the treaty of Parts, Fhe Count was thecemtas A Fraser Riven Miver Rercrxen —Ono of the | airendy lost Texaa ani California, ant the remander of 1 “Auply (Capt. LIDBEFTBE, Cars od. We L'a PHELA Thies 7 Aexpay, f.—HHon, Jobn Duse, Chiet Fate of the Supe. | Cunt Nemwelvwde, | Minnewota ermigrante to Fraser river x. osoms din | her yorsewione, Hate ivi) war, gnawed by fana- | Rulon & Som, Phiisdelphin, SL es ror Court of New York, Staten Istand, Judge Duet wae Srxpay, 7.—Stanley Lees Giffard, Eeq., LLD., known t | couraged and tarned back when near the moans, travel. J Uelm and mwery, oon fall inte thé arms ofthe | oo ons — : — RESTAURANTS. al ¢ nd . | Mine bome on a dog cled. It is ap oxk board, qhouteeron feet P Union. The beantful nt of Coba in the Antifies, whieh: 7. a LE Ol, horn in tine £6, avd caeno Of af old Knglish family, | BREN statesmen, mon of letters and the pablie, ne hay. | [ve meme ons lM ster, ft ee Oe Dome smmands the great MEDICAL, ICKLED OVSTARG POR S=W YEARS —A PRIME Mie fo was Colonel Wiitiam Duct, and hie mothor, | ‘Te etercieed for cOnsiderably more than «quarter of exer emootbly abd turned npward at thet y Da WATION, 2 BROOME STREET, epUORD BL00K price oun be found at LIASY'S, No, 6 Fine street, near fn daughter of Lord sttling, foin | Ce8NtrY the ofiee of eitor of the Lonton Standard, asa | dogs two wol auld ame Black Indlan—iog a we Biel on an x “ tel i nge ane barnoes shen ~ o a Te ~ Tuer commenced the practice of the law some fity yours | KFrab AUPPOrt to Kvangeticnt religion in the Chraroh of | 5°, O tnoets mile Blanks Nal arise of lipnrtanle te PURUEY OVNTRRS FoR THR HOLIDAYS —PRnsows i : ¥ | J)RM LARMONT, 22 MeRoeR STREET, CORNER oF wishin, will fa ivancement of Protestanti«m. pemican, wore the return outfit of (ne Wave r, of the New York bar, acele- alone and im fine heait)) Ceatrat America, hen, Orange county, in this State, fe thiscity @ the general Jwige of thy Saperior ” ner Judge Doer wae elected Asoo D Vr Nicholas Hotel, New York. (iti Oynera preap and sito any of the we ay at w ice pe pM, MM Ly) P.M. Suodays by appointment, ihe shortest potive, at the ‘House, 83 Browdwey.

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