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———— tolerated,’ or words to that effect. Dr. Draper “Mr Coleman, you shall not lose your lectures. and 4 NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1860,-TRIPLE SHEET. rews of the sudden rise in the Bank of Fngland rate of THE WAR AMONG THE MEDICAL STUDENTS. discount to six per cent had not reached New York. anes ‘The Londoa Times says that comsiderable recovery in | yrxeitement at the Fourteenth Street Col- party during the recent cont ' plate copy of Marat's ‘Am! du Pouple’’ brought a larg» AQDITIONAL FROM EUROPE. | 1 coln’s el-etion would be a just provocation to | sum. M. Solar was unrivalled in the diligence with w! states. Ou the other, there is he collected the fugitive literature of the French revolu- ee Lio potmotem or Bis earnest desire tion, and many # pamphlet or broadside in his collection, i F E pas othe probably possesses as much statesmansbip , Which was worth nothing sixty years ago, is now eagerly | the New York stock market had taken place—the banks | j.ge—How Dr, Aylette and Hix Friends eee eee ont hie retl ameneneremeners ARRIVAL OF THE STEAMSHIP ETNA. fous. ince gout if seeeh ans amexren pe. | sought for, by the curigus, Reine, See Gotsiaur, |. Were ake cuconnting bile (rests, Revieg sgmeed to-we | Neer the Tremblonfipessbes ot the ited | srnitienast be, Aneta sracwiesst Ir. t : Carolina and corgia to go ‘all lengths, for the time, short ne he old Ciao g | tedt cach other by making common comne-with their Professor—He Demounces the Faculty ae Cpa Serwith ‘De cate ne ia ~neapmeenniamabe oF actual violence. AS ix often the case in Ireland, stock of bullion. The accounts of the rate of exchange und Calls Some of His Acousers to ‘h is being done and said by these lave. are confused. One despatch quotes it as low aa 103, not- Account~Scene at Professor Metealfe’s withstanding ail the efforts of the banks; another says Restunenl Fight Between the Ay- that the ronge was from 100 to 107, and another that letteites. and the -Alumni=Dr. Law. Dills were Still almost ungaleable, Tf the price at 100 was son Assaulted with o Club—The only for inferior descriptions, and 107 was the charge for Charleston College Will Not Receive the bankers’ drafts, then there would be no advantage on Seceders Without Cash—Telegraphs to the sbipment of gold from this country, except iu cases Richmond—Meet fthe Students Last sentiments of ay 4 a ~— of a = , 1" p or Fe" minds i their contemporaries, Three Hundred and Thirty 7 housand | {cites toners oasmo ar prosecutions for tres, | Sanat Er’sttraction.” Should s1.y one as the present Gay . om im w country whose law ie precisely the same as our | be cusped to form such a cc licetion for the benedt of Dollars in Gold Received. | con; Dut Mir, Huehanam has deemed it wieer to wait for | pesterity, be should certaint. ‘ak» oare to include in it | Yo read on the old original :ilow paper the monstrous some exereice of force, and has meantime reinforced the | the Mecrage of Governor Josep’ }. Brown to the Legisla- garrison. of all the Southern federal fortresses. Tho ad- | ture of Georgia—a document which the future historian <egiammamea Vantage of this course is, that it allows the struggle for | of the United States will hardly fail to qute as Wlustrating ss the hutenance of the Union to be waged exclusively im tho | tho hoight to which party madness reached at the time Views of the English Press OM fhe Sothern tates. ‘The North, satistied with its victory, | of the great Presidential olection of 1860. . iy ti in ment of fees, the students assuring Dr. Mott that had funds in drafts on Now York cit; “ | looks op passively while South Carolina (for that is her | We have already alluded to this preposterous composi- etl inks. : y ith Dr. American Crisis, chicet) ascertains to what extent her mutinous displays | sion, which in paris poctna more like ® burlesque of the | *REC pene wee Lest appre Budo! pss The cor | Night—Professor Draper Emthusiastical. | which they fad ds ad eet I. Apetiasae - will be seconded by her sister slave States. The opinion of | Southern political style than a serious State paper; but it | rectness of the statement that the Philadelphia banks ly Sustained, &c., d&e., Ke. rent funds im liew of # deposited by them. &., &e., &e. | the Atlantic eitias, as reported by the Times’ correspondent, | would be ® vain attempt to convey 4 notion of its. con- | jaye all stopped is open to great doubt. The suspension ‘The war ut the New York University, the particulars | Professor. Post. stated that, to the best of h | is that the bullk of the slavehoiders are either hostile or | tents except b Bisson like an abstract, which Wr | or yanks in the Southern States creates no surprise. The} of which have been so fully and exclusively chronicled | tion, students bad on several occas: i Kennedy, bel «Waite the South mak ie pais coe | RN Te eaten ema are The screw steamship Etoa, Captata Kennedy, belong: Je the Southerners are making up their minds whe- | as protentiously Jogical as a out owe acpi. sow York and Vhiladelyhia Steam- | ther there shall be peaco or eivil war, tho principal men | with a cinoipio obi, if carried intoaction, will involve ing to the Liverpoo’, led fi Liverpool at half-past | “™20n« the republicans are gradually letting their follow. } the Georgians wm war, not only with New England, but ship Company, which sailed from P Past | ors know What objects they intend to promote in office, | with the British empire and every Power in Europe. He ions they had received drafts ou banks in this city, and after collecting the funds they had deposited the same with Dr Aylette, and had received from him in return unowr- rent money, on which there was considerable discount, | ediect will be to mitigate the bullion crisis, a8 when a | i tis paper, seems destined to hold no very inconsider- stoppage has taken place there is no more struggle for a | ante place in the history of that deservedly popular insti. supply of specie, ‘The vital question will be as tothe | totion, Faeh succeeding day developes the ditfeulty ina eleven o'clock on the morning of the Sth, and from | besides that exelusion of slavery from the Territories, for | bases the morality of retaliation on the fact that the | ability of the New Orleans bankers, their total capital more interesting aspect; for, as evinced by the scenes baton wince aged werd thread lyse Guocastown on the 6th st, arrived here aatly yesterday | the sake of which the party was principally organived. | Northeruers are grossly dishonest in neglecting (0 cap- | heiny ucarly $9,000,000, with a uote cireulation of | nibived yesterday the troublo was very near asauming | Memoranda of the Faculty of the Medical Department of pat Sede 9 | Some of their projects are intoresting; but it must be re- | ture fugitive slaves, inasmuch as they inherit the fortunes morning, with tiles to the 5th inst, Her advices have | ojiected that, us both houses of pen ty are adverse to | made e Northern slave} dealers ta the old times, and boen anticipatedty the Bohemian, off Cape Race. | thom, there is no prospect of their carrying out immedi- | also themselves make money by manufacturing and sell- Etna brings the following specie list:— ately any of their schemes, except such 48 are entirely | ing cotton which is the produce of slave labor, This ar- I ¥ DoCordovadCof? 800 | within the provinee of executive authority. The chiel | gument is so conclusive in the eyes of the Governor that eb $2,000,000. 4 bloody and tragic denouement. The excitement ran 50 MEETING OF PARLIAMENT—THE REFORM BILI«. high yesterday, as to break out im open viotonce, which ‘The London Chronicle says it has reason to believe that | would have resulted in a more serious manner had it not no more Cabinet meetings will be held until about the mid- | jeep for the prudent forbearance of the friends of Dr. the University of ‘ork: — Mr. B. F. states that he has deposited big money with Dr. Aylette, and cannot get it refunded te him again to take ont his tickets, + cvslative measure which they promise to advocate i8 a | he devotes something like a column of our type to its il- Ward & Co ‘ Homestead bill: or, in other words, # bill conferring apor- | lustration. dle of January. It is understood that the question of Parlia- | Draper, who, it must be said, have conducted themselves oa garice. ee ; po tion othe pie lands a of the United Siateromevery head ‘overs Browns thers Ad that ina selling negroes sixiy mentary reform, with reference to the next session, bas | in petia 3 , yet oa , contrasting poms pe| pee erin Av wom | . Dunham—D. | of a household wi 10 apply ,on no condi- | years 7 herners coventiat 4 ” decorous, manner r strong: . Brown Bros. & Co....60,000 | Vrone whatever, except actual cultivation during aimited | reseion of them and their progeny forever. To preveat | not yet been under discussion in the Cabinet. Parlia- | yy with the rowdyish, bectoring and insulting demeanor | .-4> ve hon sul ake tis tickets, because = £66011 period. Among the various parties and sertions of parties | he slaveowners. therefore, frem introducing their | ment will, according to present arrangements, be sutn- | o¢ the blind professor's adherents, ery thes money. TOM ssa vspedsedsversessseee svwestersssccces HOLL | iehich the repulticans have abscrled, not the least imporian’ | slaves freety into the Northera States and carrying them | joned to meet for business on the Sth of February. ‘The report published in yesterday's Hamat», placing the was an iow between The Empress Eugenie visited her Majesty on the Ath | is the small band of ardent speculative politicians, confined | back again, is us great an invasion of Southern rights a8 008 ‘UTION IN SPAIN. it al . of the | Dr. Aylettoanda to whom Dr. Aylette had tat Windsor Castle. The Prince Consort received the | for the most part to New York, which has. imbibed a tinge of | if the Charleston or Savannah authorities were to seize & RELIGI PERSEC' y matter in a true light, and divesting it altogether money, and who had not been able to repay it, pa : io | Secialism from the rerotutionary literature of the. ean | Yankee trader’s stock of goods. It bas, of course, es- Yesterday afternoon a deputation respecting the perse- | political character which was sought to be fastened on it Th Nae tese tee of the fe erik sop my re! = da gy BO een a a one imancire mace | Cael te eet era eer rote teres thace | cation of Protestants in Spain waited upon Lord John | py Dr. Aylette’s friends, was the topie of general conver- | of Professors Mott, Draper and Bedford, Tas mn tates foft the station, and along the whole line of route, | allies the necessily of drawing aay the Am sses | equally to Ki 4 rathers were 4 Dr. , - eee pe matord. 1 was loudly cheered. Ou coming to the Castle, the | frum the hisiorical connection with the democrats by offering | traders: our fortunes have been increased by selling ne- | Russell at the Foreign Offlee. Five religious socteties } sation among the students of the college. Of course It | Cone things, upon hi on yer more by them sme tangible brite. The Homestead bill is the fruit of | groes to the American planters, and yet we perversel Queen, with the Prineoss Alice and Prince Alfred, at | jays advice. W is not surprising that the Southorners | and dishonestly Mectare that a Georgians geabiasan'ecsioe- tonded by the ladies aud gentlemen in waiting, received should have pointed at it in proof of the | ed servant becomes w free man directly he touches a. the entrance, and conducted her fin | radical and levelling | bias of the republican | British ground,JAccordinly, every right of retaliation which the Fmpreas at the ronsegt rcanbeidue, | ROUCYs. fir at evidently proposes to spend the | the Southern States have against Massachusetts they perial Majesty to the corridor, The Duke of Cambridge, | fund” which protects the yubkic obligations of the Union; | have also against Engiaod." Should, then, the Prince Louis of Hesse, Earl Granville, the Duke of | ‘and it may be called, without i "4 measure | mild wisdom of the Governor prevail,’ and a ‘South. were represented, including the Scottish Reformation | fajjed to meet the approval of the enemies of the faculty, Society, Lor Stratford De Redcliffe introduced the de- | put the students, as a body, endorsed it heartilyasatrue, putation. A memorandum was read showing the perse- | fai, and unvarnished statement of tho difficulty. cution to which persons in Spain who have renounced } phe Southern students do not approye Dr. Aylette’s Romanism and embraced the Protestant faith are at pre- | course, and are anxious to disclaim all connection with from st . om tale tease Dearing heavy discount, and such in payment, On occasion he ised that the like not occur agaim. After reading the above documents, the Chairman i an eloquent manner appealed to the students of the Col- lege to como to the rescue of their fuculty, and to em. dorge the course taken by their beloved and S re: prone » | of pre same as ‘the subsi- | ern confederacy be established on Brownite prin- | sent exposed. ‘Tho law of Spain was this, that the punish- | the meetings that have been held in his favor, They bo- c 3 Nowecagtte and Viscount Palmerston were present. The dea’ cl . : friend, Dr. Joho W. Draper. (Enthusiastic cheers.) im ca ol prov ament to wa- | ciples, we must expect to have some very perempto- | men: postacy, or worshipping contrary to the prin- | jieve the y to be of ivate character more conclusion, be ‘ould read cortain resol Empress remained to partake of Incheon with her Majes- | icy od the xpenditure of Pe Miasteia nadet ee tas oad la oak ree t for al y, 7 Ly lieve the difficulty to be of « private character merely, clusion, be said he w re tain ri lunge ciples of the church of Rome, should be eight years’ im- | wich which they have no right to interfere, and which prisonment, with bard labor. ought to be settled between Dr. Ayletto and the members It Was stated that many of the prisoners had been | or (he faculty. Moreover, they maintain that Professor which ought to be unanimonsly adopted by the The speaker then reed e long preamble, setting forth tee facts of the difficulty, and deuouncing the conduot of Dr. Aylette’s friends in the publication of matters whigk Northorn freesoilers. What inst them it may, there- We aro told that * pro- the Parisian | to be treated even as the r its being | measures are to be adopted y the men who lead the South, for its obvious | fore, be interesting to inquir: ‘econstruction al nd the Prinee and Princess of | asons, he If-past two | fire ts Leumiagen art Duc at about | distil o'clock, Shortly sa took leave of the | ¢ to bring into the unoceupied territo bably the records of no State or nation in Christendom we i ol orp. a _ > bamene % r 7 s case of two dis ony charges re : ertect v co Queen, and re to London, The Prince Consort ac- | 1h CrOWUS Of BettlOrs LOO Poor tO Posse: are ‘more blackened with the deep stain of disgrace | Uberated, but attention was drawn to the o Draper did not prefer any charges against his subordi. errr pene ae berteety private, concluding witta who were suifering imprisonment for the crime of being | j..4¢, Dr. Aylette; that in his capacity of Prosident of the Protestants. Lord J. Russell, while professing his ardent | facuity, aud with a watchful eye to the interests of the attachment to religious liberty, said he must reserve t0 | oyurini of the oellege, he merely propounited certaim in- himself to act in the way that seemed most discreet, | torrogatories, without giving auy opinion as to their trath ‘The feeling which bad been excited iv England might | oy ¢aisity, Dr, Aylette, (hey think, should have answered perhaps have more weight than any direct action be- | iege inquiries quietly and respectfully, and not in the tition of slive labor. | cavsed by a wilful violation of public faith” than those indirectly aimed at | of Massichusetts throagh its anti-slavery legislation. ” measus icely | “If our merchant goes there to tra nd carries with publican Presid slave as a body servant (whi he bas as much sded to humiliate right to do as ‘# cilizen of Massachusetts has to A, for example, gage with him when he travels through ites by inereas- laws of that State take from him his pro- Empress to Windsor station, Ou her re ito be in good health, but not pipealvede ‘That liso the evidence we have, we believe Prot. Draper was justi jn propounding the inquizy” contained iu bis letter to Dr. Ayletie. oe Resolved, That we heartily depiore the resignation of our distinguished and esteemed Prosident and Prof and earnestly request him to resume his position in tho University companied th turn the Empress apy Fouthern influene od spirits to receive the reeemmie Momitewr of the St inst. thus speaks of her Majesty's | WM , no far as they journey — We are informed from England that the journey of t At present the Ni ‘ty aid refuse to permit him to bring it with him when ~ ttoe—J w. “ “ eriaken with the sole view of improvi Judges equal in numbers; | hereturus to his heme.’ The infamy of such conduct | tween the government of England and the government of | oajic manner which he chao, On the second sober ieee. ier ee Taos rr Fei aon -a y ie teanunsia scot crete. Kaset eae # the Governor to seek a remedy, «na be fds Lin } Spain, and religious societies wore laboring suocsestully | thought, many of the Southern students who took sides | Atwood, New York; A. Hi. Sanders, Siasiasippl; “H. M. fajeaty to pres incognita, a real ovatio: an national law. “Ail writers on government sas a sad wn Soleo 1 ? : F fympatbet.e ma eo ibe c the court quicsce in the Justice. of reprisals when the cisiseas of | 32-Promoting mure enlightened and tolerant views with Dr. Aylette in the beginning now cepouse tae cause’ Tamey, Maryland: a ataet ow only tend to strengthen t business — thi one State are injured by the public acts of another. MISCELLANBOUR. of the faculty, from the conviction that they acted pre- | ¢yusiasm, and without a single dissentient voice, evem tions. They show in's ‘ It ie the duty of Georgia,, therefore, whenever sae | Good conduct medals are to be awarded in the Royal | cipitatcly, and that they were altogether in the wrong. | among the friends of Dr. Aylette, On motion, ¢ was j . Ha sags eter ae os » of thre * f five. i r e eseut his property, to demand prompt compensation, and J Marines ut the end of three years instead of five. It is said that not more than about twenty of the Southern | subsequently agreed that all present, should attach, thee Mr. Lincoln's | in dofuult i seouriug a Northern | perty the offending State or on wherever it Jton acensed this nd.” ‘The law of nations does not eontine the © instrument in the } injured State to the seizure of the public proverty of the so deeply resented the fa- | offending State. In short, Governor Brown recommends , which declared slavery | to the Legislature the passiag of alaw to empower the iow, that their anxtety (0 Governor to “seize such amount of the money or proper- et stable institutions of | U ty of such offending or faithless State whieh may be le, i not very astonishing. found within the mits of this State as may be amply samiied aaah cable, 1s found that the | last of the measures which they pledge themselyi suflicient fully to indemnify” —the Governor is through- ception af a. tetageagh cable, and need ~ hed the | #ive for is che which the more moderate anti-slavery | out rather redundant in st} te—‘such citizen of this State coast of Greenland offered situations whieh precluded (6 | party has always had at heart. This is the prohibi- | who may have been robbed of his property by the failure yteat possibility of a cable being interfered with by | tion’ of slavery within the District of Columbia, or the } of such faithless State Jecage’, i er aye obli- -s or ieobergs, which has hitherto been considered | Beutraliged territory surrounding Washington. It | gations.’ But this is'pot all. The Northerners are not or icebergs, which bas hitherto been considered | TINT ied on all sides that interference with the only tp be robbed every time a State refusen to the oniy obstacle of the Greenland route slave legislation of any individual State would be uncon- | catching a negro, but they aro to bo murdered —— stitutional, but the legal diMiculty does not arise with re- | punity. In the history of the French Coavention nothing ‘Phe English View of the American Crisis, | spect to this anomalous district, aud it is the natural bat- | more atrocions is recorded than the proposal of Governor as? pig vieun ton ten tie ground between the slave power and its foes. No | Brown, hat “the renal Code and al other laws of this with the view, »rity on the bene august triboual of se bands of the to make reprisals, by seizing the pro- M.P. for Ayrshire; Mr. Joseph Cowen, | tudents still cling to Dr. Aylette, aud that it is doubtful Jr., of Newcastle; Mr, Ashurt, of London, and Mr. Mac- | i¢ even half that number will depart for home to-day, as Adam, of Glasgow, have been appointed a deputation 10 | previously agreed upon. convey an invitation to Garibaldi to visit Bngland. Shortly sfier nine o'clock yesterday morning Di. A practical soldier writes to the London Timesthat some | 4 yette, accompanied by his party, entered the college, part of the fortification vote should be expended in the |) orwithstanding the probibitive letter which the facul- construction of iron clad ships, mounting very heavy ty bad sent bim, and began in a boisterous style to guns, to be stationed at our different port= disenss the Hxnaip report, und «iso the course that ‘The London Times publishes an importantaddress, issued | Soent yo be pursued. One gentleman announced the re- by the seamen of the North of England to their brother | Contion of a telegraphic despatch from Dr, Frost, Presi- mariners, giving their reasons for supporting the Admi- | gene of tho College at Charleston, S. C. On opening the ralty scheme of forming a nayal reserve despatch, the contents were found to be as follows:— Anne Radiield, now a convict in Newgate, has not yet | we will be happy to receive all who may come, but been reprieved, and the Sheriff will to-day formally an- ] payments will be required for the tickets of the course. nounce to her that the day of the execution is fixed for ‘This announcement threw 4 cold blanket on the enthu- be printed and delivered to Vrof. Draper. Tho asudents ee, with the utmost alacrity to sign the rese- lutions, and i the course of an hour nearly all present hea attached their signatures to the docutnent sustaining the faculty. ‘The meeting terminated thus quietly, without any de- monstration op the part of those—if there were ang—who still sided with Dr. Aylette. Our reporter was reliably informed that the devolope- ments elicited at the meeting baye so changed the minds of many of the Southern students who strongly syiapa- thized with Dr. Aylette that they are determined te re- main and finish their course at the University. TO THE EDITOR OF THK HERALD. Untvxrsery Mepican Counce, Nxw York, Dec. 18, 1960. My name having been used by the faculty of the Uah- Yersity Medical College to substantiate certain charges brought against Dr. Aylette, I deem it a duty whioh I | am Europe to America, via Faroe, Iceland and Green. | aod, are proving favorable. The ocean line selected was | ascortained to be in every respect ealeulated for the re- | try, however lam ne we the Al 7 conceivable insult would be felt by the slave owners so | State which protect the lives, liberty and property of the i wank Pee eee rations, Moth ts that | deeply as a law forbidding their representatives to bring | citizens of other States while in this State, be repealed.”” | December 24. siasm of the Aylettites. The fact that payments would | owe to him, af well a8 to inyself, tostate that have country and to the whole civilized world. dt is dificult to | ee and ebeead hast any menseren whniatl Pr. | eee ee ey ee Se ee teres |. Tankem Wind nariboanty Ay be demanded dispelled the Deautiful vision conjured up | never made any statement, eitle ie Des Daa or any, me that 89 2Mi: "i ion of the Ut ‘ery far more imps han auy measi cl owner's property in his slave within its limi iy ‘ P r : : yor Person, bdieve Hh AEN ob Od Oe Se es | si Lincoln may press on the attention of a hostile Lag Naru, Dec. 25. 1900. by Dr. Aylette’s confident assertion that he would pro- | warrant them in using my name in any such connection; can be on the for him is, that he is probably writing a | sens and such use of my mame is entirely unauthorized, and without foundation in truth or justice. B. F. COLEMAN, Alsbama. ‘The General Tievtenancy Council revoked ‘the measures } cure al! the seceders diplomas at five dollars per capita, directed by General Pinelli in his proclamation of a statd | without regard to the extent of their medical acauire- of siege on the Abruzzi immediately upon receiving in- | ments. Where shall we torn next? appeared written on i the faces of the dil |. Where shall we go, gen- Se Oe. = tlemen?” exclaimed Dr. Aylette. “Let ns go somow else; let us telegraph to some other place.”’ wre semptome are appearing in | Congress is the mode of conducting foreign ulfairs to | tion” message, and knows that his counsels will never ost alarming distinetaess We, looking from ‘a | which his friends pledge him. They declare in the most | be adopted. The people of Massachusetts, Vermont, in the Union a federation for the parpose of defy. | Unequivecal torms that the notorious Ostend Circular Maine, ‘Rhode Island, Counecticnt, New York Wn enemies. and not uncommonly pushing that | Will be repudiated, that Spain will be fully reassured sion, as being the priucipal offenders, would at Desond the verge of international courtesy. | Ob the subject of ‘Cuba, and that every effort will be | once be declared * without the protection of the laws of vee in it the evidence and the earnest of nationa | tried to protect Mexico and the Central American | this State,” and it would rest with the Governor to re The Irrepressible r t io fut that isa very | States from filibustering invasion. They assure us— |} store them to such tiou when their respective go- port rece! THE WAR BETWEEN 7 Bout sted vwew ofthe son in ts relation oft component | oS oo eee ee Tar Cee re en ee me ap rn Ee ea cay Mai outy of New hgsoyr sth day of pimoed ence Sion erm. oh Richmond, then’ was | ‘TION SLRMENTS IMPORTANT NAMIEOTOS OF Tule ve benefit to be derived from the | to Raghehmet te er party. . z " Woes te penne caight heen Se timmixed | Sater will, from the ust moment of the new Prestdoney, | | ‘After this, even the mad schemg of prohibiting trade rg OF; boye, 108 Pris, 98—Total, 872 oo Sted {von beeriag the result of the Ristnond pro, | ““prrom the New York 1 went, Dee. 13. schie. To ' “ind. bully “England, to nibble at | be exerted to put down the slave trade, The American | with the abolitionist States, hy discriminating daties in | Men, 76 5 Maar ah ben ales apse, #0; Gace Se pecs ep nap pe tue Geno. [i - pote . 3.) sete, Oba and bauceaacer. in Central | squadron on the African coast and in the Gulf is to be | favor of those whose legislation is more satisfactory, Adults, FE gee ned a ns? males, ee jpaede She Woe ¥6E ES ee =i America, Duta paltry Westiny for thirty millions of | greatly iereased, aud the American captains will be | secms quite natural. Kis recommended that a differen Boel engl omg BG ee od 3 foe htaions wen ay (a companion upsets recast free men? and & sorry mission for the greatest federation | smply instructed that activity, and not remissness, in | tial duty of twenty-five per cent shalt be laid on the pro- | : ere soon + = rs mete a a al cae ite —- y abode Pop cin ppc Senate, hi of Christianty, the greatst embodiment of freedom, | this service will constitute a claim on the consideration | ductions of every State which neglects to carry out the . H . 3] y oh ledividual sought for ppose a ly 1y8— ‘No, the who clamor for dissolution know not what they | of their government. It will require great courage, great | principles of tho Fngitive Slave law, and a system of in- 1g « i 2 ones wight, Mar, Grea 4 ‘Re aniwic ok Mr. Rversen Jonves no leogintle of entege. He says:—“Gea- sk, and will not know’ how much they will mist their pres- | Confidence in republican principles, and great contempt | quisition is to be established in order to discover what aos r= Lee i “gl | assume kadascat aatee bower nl what right had eT speek, of concession-—of the repes! of Persoanl Cnt coheoiom unit they Aawe lost Af forever, in this, as ia | fF the prejudices of the democratic rabble, to fulfil theso | amount of Northern goods is yearly suid in the State. If oe cee 73 2 °"S | ee pone ek ight, to make that infamous starement | revolution, Is is nos the Wire, bas tee ene lave, Which other governments, the good it secures is chiefly | Promises to the lotter, but the sincerity of the persons | these remedies fail, the ¢ Thor recommends Sees: womb ... ; ; — hg —stlindes ke that infamous starcmnent | the south fears, oy oan aa oe ee et of that the more intelligent Americans are | 180m Whom they come does not seem open to question | sion, seeming not to recognise that his former pro- H HH heen) aa per cok, aa ing to do it for | Without the of the federal government by force, aware. Henee the horror with which ali patriotic | It remains to be seen whether his less scrupulous friend | posals involve not only secession but wat. The act of 1 feces tion of .e oe ae aad y aud reCusi {be republions rule, their institution (slavery) woud not last rinerreans regard its daswolutiwn. They know that it pre. | Will force President Lincoln to compensate the American | secession, he thinks, would be eazy enough. Should the ee in rie it ne ag frightoned man. | SRI°R seaney (ees Routh) Raow i.” This, thea, the he asked and conflicting eloments of which ft is | mob Cor the loss of accustomed excitement by olfering | United States government prosecute any Georgian citizen iS Laas ghee poy eee ee Hy Sst. PQ aE er Fy moet be won ho Composed from tearing one apother to pieces. They kuow | 2 M% similar indulgenges in another quarter. Mr. Se | for treason and take his life, “+I should retaliate promptly | soreness d YF FS a Et -- afl ta hteead aati Reed ol wate among cotamunities which, i¢ | Ward, as we have seen, told his republican audiences | by seizing and hanging upon the nearest tree two of the jehuemsiion tirer.. % yasingrear raed yn 4 Tena ion ati Carolina, | for,&- moral acdorery taveson, wallh, tenes te Oe Siates, would waste their energies | long before the election, to.turn from Mexico to British | subjects of such government for each citizen of Georgia Inflammation of lungs... 29 It os % Mur, “ wotig ‘Sacctars cacant ny threatens ‘the ‘speedy destruction of the veaourees in ceaseless and ruinous wars among | Atnerica for aequisitions of territory, and Mr. Seward i | whose Tite should be thus illegally taken."”- Tive rennin. pr an Re ee ee ee ae te refore sought | vital institution of the South. There is no argument against Lemseives. They dread the pitiless hatrods which such | 0 be Mr. Lincoln's Foreign Secretary: der of the meesage is devoted to, view of Southern . 1 | out and oontron _ Avie, ba, im an exatied | this deren Policy. Uadar the moving impulse thus pre: nuam cieilia bella” would speedily engender, and | {From the London Globe, Dec. 3.) ng which the Governor thinks most cheering. 1 bend = wy mn at eae = Te his | paunrines to the people he hsoked tee ey. 4 which generation upon generation would fail w seq | The Scturiay Review's speciality is ingenious essay | i is dependent on cotton, and therefore woul Fa bag Fae «5 4 yeaah wich “« aa tout"! hess’ tial the? ir ot the Aeacged. It was well remarked of Shakspere, that | Bot accurate statement, But even in its columns there | have to be friendly to the cotton Sues. As to negro in- me. oe Ngee Position parti cart of | iWeoth osedt aneathe: ‘The South esethon in nothing @id he exhibit his wonderful insight into hu | is nothing simile aut secundum to tho inaccuracies of the | surrection, he does not believe in it. “Our slaves are im ment ai pea — hed te ie as a. fe the i —-? oe tore more remarkably than in depiwting, in his | gentiomen who writes its articles on American politics | usually under the eyes of their masters and overseers. mess safuneens au ex] ee “a was evidently mi xe ee politi acting chen interest of tl ~—_. barons, the gradual change for the worse that | He writes on Saturday :— Few of them can read or write. They are not permitted » CURONIC DIBKAS. — CS sdehicsenmeal alta tale. Ad ee peponied my aren he heretofore sade {x a evil convulsions made in heir characters—how | “Mr. Buchanan has reinforced the garrison of the | to travel on our railroads or other public coaveyanee. | Albuminuria and Bright's eg ree yi toe vat othe wae the Lon — the at ee they became more ferocious, mote rapacious, more faith- | Southern federal fortresses.’" — Not a single adsitional have no mail facilities, no means of communication disease of the — 3 be J » gent as hee Le faculty have brought rage) lstocracy began to wane foas more merciless. The same objects grasped at by all, | United Stites soldier has been sent South. with each other ata distance.’ “They feel and recog- -rapalous a8 to the means employed. | |The obiet legislative measure which they (the repab- | ise their inferiority ax a race and their dependence On against me, but cau't sustain. Lam determined not to 1 1 7 ‘uns, iiding until justice is done me. If, the facul- el or ever be the form of government, | licens) promise to advocate is a H their owners, whose smile of approbaticn constutes 1 Marastmus, adult....... 4 ] leave this bai unti 4 serena pentane dies but Lites sad there too much | Writer evideutly doce not know that the Free Homestead | their *highest’ enjoyment.” Hence. general rebellion 1 Marusmus, tnfantile.::. 16 | ty want dght, twill give it to them, Come on Macbeth seen th teat that acre the American statce broken by | bill Was parsed through both houses of Congress last ses | 8 impossible, thongh, perbaps, occasionally there might 1 Palsy. 2 cued} kuow: ‘bat Tean't help it, when I chink disvnion into separate communities, fleree and tm ,. | Som, and was vetoed by Mr. Buchanan; and so the ques- | occur trifling disturbances, “whieh would oblige us 1 Rupture. 1 ye! Ape ppd Aide Bh yet bia ommnition would arise, Wholly ifrespective of the | tom 'rests for the time. It was supported almost unant- | promptly to exeeute the slaves who should have depart- - 1 Rupture of the 1 a re ao ae faddreesing a friend angry and \indictive feelings which would grow | mously by the representatives of the eighteen free States; | ed from the path of duty." On the other hand, in the . 6 jisease 2 peony sae ‘the Deauanste ia i helt on Fe ine Miruceles implied, in a saparation. | it found supporters even among the slave Statcs, and | North there is likely to. be an insurrection of the poor ar a ais Seatac? Chien kes ee © bold, enterprising spirit, which is such a dis. | Many leading democrats epdorsed it. In fact, as iar as | white against the rich white. There the white man per- & Unknown.......000.00. 1 oy ea ; ye ae inotive | characteristic of ‘the young republic, We have observed, it is not a direct party measure: | forms menial dutics which im the South he shrinks, from. = bd would be turned againat itself. The thirst for adveutare, * {t Wa side wave, mainly supported by the republicans, | In Georgia the white docs not belong to the menial class. | Total.:...-.-.---+.-.--0+0+ .-so000--0s-r00+ voo0s188.] (Som {or new acquisitions, an irregular glory, which ex: | but not bitterly opposed by the democrats. Satur: | “The negro is im no sense of the term his equal. He | picarus yROM EXTERNAL AND OTHUR CAUSKH, NOT DRPENDING | Thode wan to pended itself comparatively harm! ly against neighbor. | ay Review says:—"It is a measure of precisely the same | blacks no master’s boots, and bows the Knee to no one, lug aud aferidr races, raging within, would be oben | character as the subsidies of the French provisional go- | save God alone. In the ‘North it is far otherwise, and at Gsided agaitot. Itself, ated that house would fail with a | YeFiment (0 national workshops.” “We wish,” ax Lord | some future thane the white laborers may require satisfac- crash that would shakeChristendom. A nest of restless, | Melbourne half jestingly said of Macaulay, “we were as | tion for past injustice and assert the eee ye recognized daring, grasping republics, jealous of their home mar. | eerie oe writer is of everything.” The | in the South, that the true aristocracy is not an aristocra- kets, rivals in foreign ones, would contain within itself | Free Homestead bill may or may not be a useful or Be- | cy of wealth, but of color and conduct.” Such are the tho seeds of perpetoal howtilities, and a new word preg- | Cary measure; but in a new country, with many | auspices under whick the Southern States are asked to de- baat with woe—a word that has flooded Europe with | “4%are miles of uncceupied lands in the West and North- } stroy the Union, which has lasted eighty years, and given blood over and over agaiz—would make its ominous ap. | West, it seems natura! that lind grants should be offered | them a piace — the first nations of the earth. The pearance in the Bomenciature of American rulers. Thot | to tempt emigrants from the seaboard cities. Such a | world will (or itself what are the chances of a tword ts the balance of power. Fach of these rising States | Measure would be revolutionary in an old narrow conn. | federation im which Governor Brown shail be » leating TON CLIMATE: 0 SEASON, the close, when Dr. Aylette ry 4 2 ondgerns the room ina noiy manner, t causing: confusion. ‘Socealle however, coolly ould wit jealons 7 | try: but in our own colonies we see extraordinary facili- init petty C3 pat to wy tig ee one ties given for acquiring land, and to give one hundred and pis penned . Tained aunong young and growing communities with even | Sixty acres Of unoccupied land to a head of a family who THE LATEST NEWS. the case with whigh the staid and formal diplomacy and jo centnn on een eevee ends om pope (From tbe London News, (City Article), Dec. 6.) roared ah Known forece of Karope maintain it, | (vide. public tands of the states. "the Semtday writer | Attor rising i per cent, consols closed scurecly higher Dis assailant, anderas pommeili Sas rte pleasant ia jas 0 fasbion, when some of the friends of “The werk, Tikerty, now the pride and the strength of the ' says:—"'Ite obvions tendency is to bring into the unocen- | (hap yesterday, Some effect was produced by the still b ti to his aksistance. Applewhits was overmatched ‘a new Pandora; and, many as the evils | pied Territories crowds of poor settlers, too poor 10 | very unsettled condition of financial affairs in America, iff Hi lt i j bi H toondd be hich she tcould let loose on the human race, scarce. | Possess negroes.’ Well, and why not’ Why should not In the market for British railway stocks the immediate Bla-B & wo Sl awenSune some | without flinching and without fear the issue of events that baifte peblican cs. The Supreme Goart | fowe or five hundred persons, mostly students, being in » the viee thot has crept into the | at amadvance of |,, but a subsequent improvement was ot the jndiciar; blatant. would fut little difficulty in «welling imaginagy | grievances int» causes of war—o bere @ cotsideration a new By arise, and ly weal remain behind, at al! rents for more than | poor settiers til the unoccupied lands?‘ poor to by the resolute defender of ihe faculty, and would have | * the pation until the triumph. p Tose? (= tem inggrrous: yor not altgetber a porsens negron:”’ they may be; but, though keeping a gig | tendency of prices today was favorable. The diseount been punished soundly but for the rition “of is "Foere is no cecape from compromise. If festisable eaniiivenare premperity of their neigh. I eo ge ty, keeping a negro is Bot esten- | market was moderately active, but the supply was ade- | —f tien Ven ped Sirmiaaned by the frienén of b ae) can ee, tbat the thes bore id oft! 7 . , s hee: " “ ao bmger follow countrymen, and would fester toto wn. | TBE ReXt error of the writer i# on the Supreme Court of GAS te Che eamend, AnE Sin ee Wis Wass Setew ot ONT ated sane. 30 to Dr. Avtette retceating fom the ad 3s Lawsdi i il Shays See ‘concessions En releuting hatreds. To act one another's progress | the United States, "It is proposed (by the republicans) | per cent; for six montha’ paper the rate was searcely be- | 1 to, 2 years 4 to took Platform, and ells ered a ge 4 demands, a be sities by weakness or treach- would become the fixed and traditional policy of | 10 remodel the Supreme Court by increasing the number | jow 51;. A moderate amount of business was done at | 210 5 years 31 Wto stoned speech, im we i ery at Washington, agitate”’ the people of the the peciy republics, which would start into an exixience | Of Northern Judges. At present the Northern and South. | 1.” 5 to 10 years. 7 60 to cowardly uct of thé Ay’ . He said | North and West to the fever point of resistance and de- of untrained and untempored sovereignty. {t is probable | fo Judges are equal in numbers." (As the Judges are 10 to 12 years 3 to that no one but a coward would assault an | termination against the aggressions of slavery. There is that the Anglo-Saxon race could never «ink so low as the | Dine in gumber, this woukl give ‘precisely’ four and a ‘The Bombay overland mail has arrived; wews antici | 15 to 17 years 4 80 to unarmed oman with a club, and that of | no reat for business, no peace for politics, any Spaniah stock, which offers ao lamentable a caricature | balf to each let that pass.) The republicans propose | pated; letters despatebed to the provinces by early mail, | 17 to 20 years 9 Wt course the satisfaction acknowledged among gen- | scheme of compromise. 6 ee Se a ace ee Sears le ‘aot dicted labs Weetiaen une teiomemedeamen EXPORT OF SPECIE TO AMERICA su .— Sate. mccncipsten, ha oxprested Liaoott desmeaian’ Shs hte thet the South fears ven tee at the very ter which won e. or be vd 2 . y 4 . h torve it from such a open that whieb ies over | ne more than the pe ny of The total shipment of gold for New York by the steam: TeRvivees se nadeembbaderusd . to sift the business to the bottom, and called wpoa the ps srery does a ean an armed in of the takea the Spaniards, whe are literally now governed or | COM are styled Northerv Cireu er Atlantic, which left Southampton yesterday, was savenn. prog py rm the afternoon, when would Sn yy {nvasion,” whose fret cud parca baeiiincnetgy to Ge cirogyler nich’ wound £140,450, an by the Etna, which left Liverpool yester- | Breland... soo A rotten: ..s.-00 94 | MT peedleas 60 add that this gowme carried the excite. | Solus tnreatens the deatructia of slavery. Lat ts, thea-at eras when right collisions of interest. which must » day for New York, £70,000; making total of £219,450. | Garmany. 90 Unknown... g | Mentup to the feverish point. Nothing was thought of | men, meet the facts as they are. Have nothing todo with eowr, and which Bo grestet caution and forte oul | peor Seoenety yo is =. In addition, the Borussia took £3,500 in specie on Tues. | Ireland id tt 76 Weat Indies. 3} es “y fed ed Dr. Ayleite and | concessions an! com ye the recog- not avert, should We exaggerated by hatred and ) zy | he court, but the republh 4 , ee : me 2 | the action of the fri per nition of slavery. i consti tut! § ty aapardonab!e wrengs, and wegrtacipt wtates me 9, | hope that (as the demecrais, for years in power, have dey, from Southampton for New York. } Total " t L872 |. At half-past four o'clock the students repaired io the | let us opbold te again al "aefamers ‘and acipeost whose existence amougst otf Transatlantic cousins we | llled the ben rtisans) the vacancies {Prom the London Times, City Article.) | Maree eg | lecture room of the college, which was lit wp expressly standing upon the immutable Jaw of right, let us await have already too often to deplore, and a press ever “ur * term hice will be Ged by the | ino melich funde continue buoyant. Consols opsned | fret ee. | for the occasion. The room Was very well fll \i Bie’ sland, 7 Nursery and Chili's Hos- pital. . banan calculations, and yet are luminous with al teonsness atteudenee. The friends of Dr. Aylette were also on | ¢ r tothe knife, For | | ests itself whicb ix ever pre | ™ purposes of truth oud right sods hi inity of the heater, but | If faith tn Ged is worth anything, the electiot for | not maintained. ‘The appl ‘tiene for discount at bank | hand, crowded together in the v rene poy pa En A! be king magne oo bn — ' tt Hk be jaaichartes te 2 to-duy were of on average scale, There were no opera keeping themecives very quiet aud orderly. Dr. Aylette | in these times ¢ ial, prove itself by 4 ¢alm and stead y ongest bond of upion wou nw prove the 1 . . direst calamity, the of acommon strength would | ‘he demovratie part tions in gold at bank. The £2,000,000 in silver from the After about holf an hour's delay. the officers of the | d¢retion to moral princi whatsoever lary or be the skeleton in the cupboard Pa to the pos: |, at = guniton ~ 8 }-4 worst ann Bank of France jx still in course of transmission. Take ‘on of a common language. In Bi differ olt his Tepnblican audience long before . adh. . sess se nastan Salittes bento, ere erg. | term trom Mexico to Brith Ametion fur noas The Suffolk hag arrived (rom Australia with two days | <¢ "Tuke's Hospital, communication at all, the press dow little t» foster interna | Fr Mr. Seward's words bear no such interpre. | later advices, baving made the paesage in the short pe- fomal hatreds. Germany alone contains divers nations | ttle, For the beneilt of this very careless writer we | riod of sixty-eight days. Her gold ix said to amount to | Meeting, headed by their chairman, Dr. John W. Lawson, | politiea) sacrifice; prove itself by that e1 5 uote their appearance and ascended the platform. prayer to the God of truth, ‘of Justice, of merey, Dr. Lawson said that, im conformity with the proc. | shall prevail. Faith in God knows no compromise with | mation which be had made in the merning, he now came | wrong, aud should suffer no perturbation from the threata tal. debe cese coves ssoeees 80°) forward, not to abuse, insult or malign apy one, but to | of evil doers. The sentiment of the Christian world is freedom 4 3 uw 1 himself woe, however, bot present fuet adherence to the i ve itself by Myividing a e 2 peak. the same language, and Germany ale | give the extract on which this statement is founded. Mr. hea cred 2 Toast of a thirty years’ wer, The Italy of history hae | “eward, speaking at St Paul Minnesota, compares him- | £125,000 at least. 1 | sod troth, one to Support coe whe ten boon genty at. bo ‘en 0 nen been so uniformly subjected to foreign pressure ttiat « elf ima rather jnflated passage to a traveller sur; The last prices from Paris show a decline of iy 4 tacked and insulted. He was present to adduce facts in presents no analogy toan America broken up into con. | Rome from the dome of St. Peter's, and say rentes, altbongh only 13,000 sovereigns were withdrawn | 5. defence of the character of one who had been wronged With two or three : Kiguous _saticen, olf speaking the sume Taagange, all ex. | Mo a lg from bank yesterlay for transmission to New York by | 8 yee aet anak ae Digs’ Oe ar rent te | utterance to their eutipathies and rectimhantsons? thet” | self on establiching seaport towns, the Atlantic, It appears that the vessels have akem out | ¢° Tan.” Ho bad thet day an tnerview win aeaee Seed from the scorn and deflanee, in newspapers: employing @ languag | jb os outpesté of ~ emy r. ee = £149,500, Various amounts must, therefore, have been | 9... the freulty, nud the result of that interview he would States iv sacichon - of mi can say, G0 on» Bull outposts to the Arc! tha proceed meeting "yigorous chet, pM ne rx A S05 ae sean. they will yet beoomne the cupenoet my owncoun. | *" om" Private banks or from the branch at | 10 cvcie Oreos fuk a fremtn Pre. Feltsenl iicods, eonons teen ot porpeite than hoarmed extend the civil «a United States: poetemonth. . + 5 yo "From the Aaturday Review, Dec. 1.} Northwest “se i on Frace to and and Ganda, ‘he suspension has been announced of Mr. A. Ingram, _ fe og ky a ee pottiont trheeas he oe mong : Sead ‘ . ngenions people and a enlightened r Carclinn-—tende Tha constitution of the United ge dh orne B. veruaeens sre secupted win be oun riveriant wong He ie at present engaged upon a contract of £00,000 for fore | Toth. cccee eee ee ee Seeth Soren tentared Nien 0 OT owe“ ¥Ty ‘ than thirty years than that which interposes a period of nearly five inant | “alireads amt telegraphs, to prim = ize, create, | tifeations at Dover, and another of apwards of £100,000 | The number of deaths, compared with the correspond. saver f Mme be ag) Lo > oy om J were ea we Detweea the clechion oF fad hia assumption 0 | AB Browerve the grows Writish provinces of the North, by | on the north level aewer in Landon. ee ee ee at Le vnadewmeen Seo te tae slorea er Naonetey an thoe-sessteces na Pros: | GOD Sareea, tan toch office, When Tench constitetion of 1848 we " reat lakes, awrence and around the shores ‘The London Times it has ¢ fhe 1, y “yd Joey framed, it was thought ‘logical " ; | of Hudson's and Lam able “Tt a very well: says ranepired that one of the route ne of the y when declared im fever ete perticeee Wr | you. are Renbey emoellent Sete ay bee harterlen ar: | oldest and most reapectable houses in the building rade, | Ove. 818002 « he had gut | Bures President ML od sione, however aad the deed fon, should Raye fect withthe trifeat‘prubia elay | mitted into the American Cnion. applause.) | can | that of Meser. Thos. Piper & Son, of Bishopegate, tin { _, on tote. | | Again. fom years subsequently, when, the Uaited accordingly Lawie > Bonaparte becam: con alsions ‘New ‘Bank recharter became an olemen ‘enee Fideat of the republic white still intovicated with, tho | reaking up the ancient provinces ot pain—the Spunisn | “eulty nO | ow Masa aun | the Prestasetial oloction, we shocted dutiageutees suaten- milkons of votes he had recived. But the fathers of the | American repnblics—eee ip their deray and dissolution | To-day the raitway market improved in morning with <. Eee, him the de. | men, and brought the whig party down upom this journal American federation thought that» triumphant ty | the preparatery stage for their reorgunisation in free, | consol, and although the (wil rive was not maintained, | "rees® this weet tickets. Mr. | By “cutting looms” from and our paety rated dependent mem! wl oa " bi mm - full executive 7 aad on thia priociple-thongn, | America,” SOF | closed intrinsically good. The principal improvement | Nw York, Dec. 1 ‘ . Metealfe that ceed ee Oe ee $f ovaree, they can-aever Bave anticipated a crisis lke | This portical annexation of all America—South as weil | has been an advance in Northeastern, and especially ia , Carter We differ again with our political friends. That didier. } 2 os North—this rectification ef frontier in the mind's eye | government stocks. Caledonian and Great Northern to pay | ence, however, would be Se eee, ee Baa cota oe haan te sams | tegatana inert Reson | Mind, Cutie cep, ad andy So | mt aneceeen ea ee aeeoe Had Mr. Lincoln entered immediately into possession of has slightly relapsed. From increased prosperity of : . his new powers. the irritation of the South would probs eq) railway property in general, good guarantee stocks are if bly have excecded all boanda: and the North, imatead of | America for acquisition of territory,” The truth appears . cates Yoong on. 35 it is Mody 10 do, in comtemplaons tean- | 10 Re that the writer tn the Satwriay Review ever rend | temand, but very scarce. ‘The snygetemengel ee og " ae ty, might have been provoked into requiriag th * original peceh. tie must have road some jnaevurate | MM railway securities continues, filinvis Central aw Comyraets Deanseen.—A despatch from [odianapolis esident to puniah what is already bigh treason, As (t | Seotnt of it tn a New York letter Ni ’ 1 ily in demand The 6 4 bbe tty "ot Taine i eet ‘igh jew York and Erie being capecially in demonad. Ind. dated Dee. 15, eays:—The complaints against A. TH. ix on Mr. Buchanan, the viewnity of Fort Seott to natural laws: that, ax a fparty, we wore indebted to n over the crisis WUAT THE UNOLICH THINK OF THY GOVERNOR OF « Walesa se om 5 , THE MONETARY DIFFICULTIES IN THE CNTY 4 ee or a . Hinsay, charging them with complicity im t, owe ae onder, iversaries for bho triumph we achiev 1» Who bins peouliar facilities for GROROLA, he Boone County Bank frauds, were withdrawn ¢ nd the folly of ou — operation. On the ono bend, the South | From the Landon Times, Dee. 8] ‘The New York news ts outy three diye late nt honorably discharged, there being uo ev(- | De. Draper replied, You feds nad hats writ thee ona Were renewal ovr ° tpathios, for We strong point of his At the grow! boak esis which is going on at Pere acm. | is anid if Some of the papers fo be #ix Hays beter, The on thee aecure tion Vall bum, fram me, that tis i all wroag, aod crnnot oq 4 y.iation was ended; fend Vat, Goally, tae wadacas wha