/ '73,i Il General Cass, , . . - - L - tram, lb 3 PC 1111 l y:1%141211. F e Tilde 'is in the following send r ' nts ex-_ pressed by Gen. Lewis Cass, i hit fitfe . ,] speech on the Oregon question Ins year, not dull great eloquence; but great truth aria. force. Since, _the feiteralists in this -cicinitlii ; have adopted General Taylor 'as their' candi date for the pri;aidenty, who i s not only a scchern man; but a slave-hal rto boat; we hear "no more bout slavery an dissolution. Tkei didatica o the Inquitter—t e heroics of the North Am rican—the forebodings of the . United States Gazett e—bn the- addition of new-',slav6 territory to the Union,-are sudden ly hushed! *en the Net York Tribune half promises to support the old chief, and so to swallow its alumnies upon the south, arta its gloomy lire ictions of .ilissolution and dis-. aster. Fein t tis spectacle we may glean a new proof of the brazen inconsistency, and of the utter want•-•\ of principle, so often exhibited -.. . . . by the fetleralisis; They have presentcd just such a spectaclou numerous other occasions. & Once a call nk was ,the witch-word.— Now this favorte'dogma is not only forgotten, . but actually op cued. ' A bankrupt law was then preposedi mssed - by a federal Congress, and repealed at thd 'same Congress which created it. - A mlitary herd, used to be their speciadhorror, nd is now their especial fa vorite. ' On th •tarilr they have been equally unfortunate, an. will be, we predict, yqually inconsistent.' Vho does not recollect the' borriblelore.bodings indulged in on this sub- \ i ject by the whole federal press and by all the leadersf, Mr. Walker's estimatei , and the new tariff were asslied as equally infamous and 1 .1 (imperfect—as . ore to stop eypry manufactory in the land. • re heir nothing of all, this now. The cja tor has ceased, and, if silence gives content , hese partisans admit that they have been de eked and deluded themselves quite as much s they .hoped to deceive and delude others. Well was it, therefore, in view of this wholes inc übandontneut of principle, that Mr. Morr s, in a speech sortie evenings ago, admitted their overthrow ixy' the oppm,t- S , lion, unless No, vidence steppe Ifor)vard to tq deem and to slave their cause! , " [ , 'Gen. erf?' 'bly exposes the.dissolution-of the-(tfa:tin hu bug. Nowhere has it been so -handsomely at d effecti-ely shown up. His rfatirocal alltis ons to the croakirigs of feder alism are exc edingly well-timed: .- 'lt pains in , sir, to hear allusions it) the destruction of this governtnent, and to the dissolution of its confederacy. It pains me, t 'not because tl cy inspire me with any fear,' but because.% o ought to have ono impro - nouncenblew n.d, as the Jews had of , old, and - that word is i issolulion. *,,,.We should rejeCt the feeling from our hearts, and its name from , our tongue's. This cry of 'ters t ,' wo to Jern- I •i salon); irrates harshly upon mv ears. Our Joritsalcß is neither beleaguered nor in dun -1 ger. It is yet th city upon a 'hill, ghrrious . in what it is, Still more ?Jur:oils,* the bles sing of God, n % hat it is to bs—a landmark, inviting the n tio.as of tiro world, struggling upon the aura y iicean of political oppv,oss:on, to follow as to a ha‘en of . safety and of ra tional liberty. No'Lltiglish Titus willenter our temple of freedom through a brealth in i the battlement F, to bear thence the ark our i constitution and the book of our law, to take their stations in a triumphant procession in I, the streets of a madern Runic, as trophies of ! conquest and )roofs of submission. - "Many a ri veil has crouliq.l in my day, kt ' the augury kr link:if:and the 1-opt:bile has marched 6r.w rI. Many a cri-is Ikas present ed itself to the imagination of our political ' Cassandras, I tit: we !lave still increased in po litical Fosperity, mi - we Face increased in years, and that, ton, with an acciderated pro-,1 gross unknou D to the history of the world.— - 'We time a class of men, whose eyes are al- Ways - dann, -tt e flunk merioolitog rho bleb, ,i t mi L ,...;5a?2.........t . el. ii, - ;Ter.apilrAtettsive of here or oilier on t Fellite4N, gut_ rib. tlrm we are the image of cr, at d brass, and clay, Contra"- , which the - first rude blow of coune some iniile:oom. „„4 , sib ne-tyjn•unit) misfoit tine is "For my r ' Pttongoa go far good, and because sup ,' people intern the earth in, ... . laud useful ki into their poll --. and x•iio.w•ou if it were nn fil their jai.. • ' evil, from t ' „would make nal of i:s ove , ,Jit in ihtk tti! •ert. It for s•own c qiir Plot - , 11 . to .strike from its pedestal. own Part, I 'consider this the einment on theface,of the earth the weakest for rted by the, public opinion of n r to none of the cotnmunitixf II that constittitei.mornt th owletlge, and Who ha vn brenthcd Rica' ystem • tho-breath of life; I lddestroy it, as they created it, orthy of them,- or failed expectations. And•wedk for tis tery consideration, is follies and its faulrs'ihe sig throw. -It is the only govern tence which no. reyolution can 'may b6 . -change:l, but it' pro' , :ide l s diange; when the public will,re and insurrections, and the=va- rions'strogges bN, which nn opAree l sed popu- Istioh Mani( pis Ws sufferings 119 d 1 Peeks the recofery of 'la right:- Ime no plabe here...-.. IVe /aye nn ping to fear but',ourselves.”i : 111I t t s:Iti Ey. °AO:. o.—"W ha tdo you charge board!" sked a all Green Monitain boy, she walke up to ti secon4 rate lint I, in i t ew York, "What do you adZ a w ek for onr.l and lolging '' "riveldpllar .' •Five / tkillars! tho's - to6 in tcli; but li•s'po:•e yi till allow for . thO'titnes T a absent from. dinner J• and supper !' .. , Certnini) I ii i lrty-seven and a '., ,holf _cents telt." Hero the converFation , - tided, and lio Yankee took up', his rtuartera -- for two weeks. During this time, he lodged . . ... ,'"•'. ' I ..:-.-, i k 'and breakfasted at the lintel. bu t did not cat ~ beillier dinner nor supper, sayin g his busines detained litti in another portion of the town. At the expiration of two weeks, he again balked up tits the bar, and said; "&pose we tettletildt aocontit,-1 am ft going in a few minute." '''he landlord handed him his bill— ''.Two %redo' board, at $5-810.7 "Here, stranger," chid the Yankee, "this bill is wrong il -- :-..you've . rnade a tnimaket you've not deduct , F ildlite time f was absent from dinner and sup • /-: I . per--14 daP..t; meals , per day-28 Meals s --- r Wit Cents each...;.slo 50. If you've not go , 0 "the fifty dents change that's due me, I'll , take ti drink and the balance in cigarsPi / .;•------: i' , : A Pint.stirntrius- Filrmm.—An.awfur oc 7'.- currenco lord{ place at a' small tavern in Phil :•adelphii on I Vednesday; A father had , bet ;iftie dollars I at MS son, a mere lad, could . .drink three titles of Iporter. The bet I was :'..:titken by set e unfeeling wretch, and the twig. `4l-,-: on Was pou ed out fur the little boy. Ittiobe- II; dienco toot to stern ceinmand of his father, Ise 'drank two' bottles. but funnel it iinpossible r.t.'... - Act finish tbe third. , Ile was now in an alinost '.4 , :' lielPless slate of intoxicatku' c'.. when his fath ' :e .M r, becOmitiF l cm - varied tt ith his nen:complj '%,.:‘,.„ ell with fits Wivres, ceized the remain* I',lnie r tiod i.kireting the, neelt of the bottle 'into 7 1 .detAikts mouth, (ideally pon..ed it down' his . :,V fri?ati l . - TOL not too hnrrible . for come . mole . ---- - WO Thelather had won ib i s- the oipars, ic.-,:- and now, beth.being being wildly and fhroi!- ~,4.:•,. , 41.43 , d..utk,t! el started f rhome, 6 reeling nod w.:fttidlalliftg at every step. The poor lad cut -.. ,;'hiMself frightfully: When they reached .1!=,:- 'barite; il was necessary to send for a pliyai-! ,1',..." . -, ..eitith'- who, !for a while despaired of the.rfco,v- T ; , etrof tbe,child. These are - the facts, -as 'T- A ' heed to its.l It is a long time since we have' .E:c.-.-,,teatf of any hing so replti ng.—True San. -•_s--.',.:,--:4N INeDintT OV THE B.yrn.n.--I.on the ' - ~2.4 th. near sunrise, a most incident occurred. Get deals 101 were hi Convursaiioni, when rode lip to them, and anipatinc .the-Mexican army. 4 •What mdcliimed old Zack. - ,Gen. "to hirt, an I threvi his 'arms :.lt to . embrace him: ' Taylor 14 - around Wool's waist, and Ate:air like cr "child, General lieved when he reacher! the ming around said to me, '"Cu ie men here and give titre . we did; multiplied by three end' will as ever we did esq, Arcot% Sr. Louis Rep 4, ATEXICO. 110' Battle of Cerro Gordo. nta Annal. again Defeated in a pitehed aide, by=Gen. Scott—Six Thouschut iltiicemstiiken prisoners—Five Mildred Intericans Killed and iroundedGen. La [ Vega again a Prisoner. DAILY PICATVSE, EXTIVA, Friday'Ereoing, April 30-5 o'clock. By the steamship M'Kim, Capt. Pillsbury, which left Vera Cruz on :the 20th inst., we have glorious news from the scene of ac tion. On the afternoon 'of -Vie 17th the . ad vance under Gen Twiggs encountered the-en emy, wben.a severe but indecisive conflict ensued. As the genera orders -below show that kwas Gen. Scott ' s ' intention to giro-bat tie only on the 18th, - it ay be. that this en gagement Vas brought on by the Mexicans. The main battle occurred on the 18th, ancfre suited in the complete'triumph of -the 'Amer ican arms, •- • . _ Santa Anna made his escape after. his army ,was \routetl;=- Gen. La N,,,a IS again among the prisoners. . Besides hi m there were fire generals taken , a .lo ig list of colonels and subordinate and ?La wird*: r victory over the enemies and insidt era' of rflag, and lino•her point ! , ained toward the ultimo e investment nod capture of _the capital of Nlexico. This latter al.ernative, we trust, how ever, will not he neilessary*— alti ough the sup'er ciliotts oh-tinacy and self elorit .in , r pride of:the leaders of the ).lex lean nation w uhl,seem to rem• der peace under any other ciretti stance i probledv atical.- But atilt we have hopes .hat these leaders will now see, us the i u at Id alreati does, that peace with. the United Stoics upon fa r and honorable terms is far preferable to War— hat they cannot, even upon their own soil, eope . r ith the hardy sol• tilers of the North--soldiers tha do not fight-be cause they are compelled to, but sit has been not inaptly said, lust foi the fhn of the thing!" But one year. has Row passed since ho first gun was fired and the first blood spil lead on the plains of Palo Alto, and Restea, and yet the wet has Wen Pushed with such energy th s at at lettstbn i half of the whole territory of Mexico is in our it disputed poSses sten. From an army of-a little vcr seven thous and men, scattered in detached bodies along our frontiers, %ve ha;e increased it ,tEt nt least thirty thottiand, and could have as ens y tom hundred-- have concentrated it i tipon Mexic n soil, even on the western side of the continent. hese results'aro gdmirably summed up,'in the f l llowing from the New York Herald: • I • idents do not g l the heedless 1 realizing the heir garments lutes, or any Lyopen. We ages pass our 'flectifin that the folds of a f a govin over, . r is / riding in, rut accident— 0.--National "1. The conquest and ocCunni menus of Tiirrtanlipt s, 'New Leg s by Gen. Tullor, with rout' inestl Want victorkA - . 2., occupation of Slow :‘;1 lica,rneV, with several i liple bait sive and auainst equal odds of th 3. The occupation of Califor milita r y enterpi ises, more like t mance than the sober facts of hi i r The march of Gen. NVool. miles, through - 'the enemy's con mirable i9neLiun with TayJar u 5. The eplendul and perfect Cruz and die Castle, and thtir Ott!Minn, acquired with a loss o ed in its smallness in the,history ed towns and impregnable east! To this we can now add thoau• ro Gordo, the possessicef of th'- Jahipa by.,F.cott t 'aod the capti by the biave Alissomintr Mule Doniphan. And .yet tbese grr linvo been accomplished by a which id daily accused ofbeing competent, by the 'whit*, party.. tin has controlld and diretted o in accomplishing - all this, and told by iht .. -ivlides that tho net areompetent for 'the cri Inirst count upon the gross ignor ty of their readers, or they neve etirrontery to put forth such an =I It -- j""MiseAnn 'Williams, of Ohio, lately Ina yerdiet ,Josiah , S. PI ants; far% bmach isf A iife,tty49s4l)Ortlfthfoi tlto ..pratt,o I V R E R All the Decency MUM 15 the Wore Lato Wcwa. on of the Depart , and Coahuila, signal .and bril- xit:o by General es,! equally deci,. • enemy. " ia, with various le fictions of ro . tory. .cseven hundred / try, ani ir l hie ad- Buena ism. I veqment or Vein ineonditional ea f menu parallrl-: olsiege of wall;. s . ll iievemont or Cer. i •oun l ry ati far, as L Ore of Chihuahua. the gallant Cal. dt achievements Admiqiitint ion ;neiricient anti in- he Administra r army and navy 01 we are doily ent and his eabi is. Surely they • nce 'and media I - would have the ,bawd and falie !awrord county, r 8400 a , zOiriO, nit* Contfact. itivat op mitt Mill ~. , iATE XT iViIITH A. CONTEXT.. , /- i ; Or the way the Federidiais "lend a zelping hand fn' carrying on , thw Wm.. ' Some . few weeks since (Ap#l,t22) the - guzette; in speakdingof the iereamt . v4e !with Matteis, made use-of the followint laninaget . . i "It is true that the itkrbigs tar 'have, and now I 'do, disapprove of ib" (*rfpient causes of the pres ent war; but, it is not , iiitit, that they havealectined to aid in its prosecution, and the triumph of Amer ican arms. They believed, and now believe, the war could have been avoided • without any sacri• fice of national honor and dignity; but, once en gaged in it, they hale conceived,it an imperative duty to lend a helping hand in carrying it on and bringing it to a speedy close." This is our text, and/we wish the reader to mark it, and note with wh4t coot eftUntery, with what easy iinpittlenee . , they writer puts forth as filet; that the veries . dolt i n , christendom ought to kno 4' is not true. fly- "irfcipient causes" ,vre prestatile tlie Gazette ... )etittiti to beiunderstoad, the annexe t. tion of Texts, and the ilonsequent assertion and ma i intenance of ourbotufdary to-the Rio Grande, If u), the entire evidence of all its frictids, it di retly against it. k Of ihii 4 t, the language used in th proclamatioit of - Gen. Scott, given 'ln our to t, is probal4 sufficient for the present,— T i 1 . e General says: "Mexic ins! —Americans are no your enemies; but the enemies for 'a time of ti men who, a year ngo, misgoverned yoh and B OUGHT ABOUT this unnatural war be twlcen two great republics," Added to 'his, we ha l ve the assertion of Henry-Clay himself—the immaculate "embodyment ;of w tigcry," a; our neighbors delighted to c t II liim afew months am) 1 1 —.hat it is a just war, Wage to "redress the ter ngs of our country,7c a 441 th t he too Would, if , it %ere not for his age, tuil for some po;t where he might "slay a Me:tic:ant!' en, Taylor, too, oa iced lind urged upon thetqec etai . y of-War, the pr priety, not to say absolute on •essity, or the tr ,m) under his command matching aittlltakin ,, poi , etiseinn of the Rio Grande lei planting our lii i,t lir+ batteries oppoiti eMc ilexican ci:y of Nfata• Maros, against which so Inn:eh federal indignation ha been expended, and so much abuse heaPed iip• oil the Administration of Pi l ,caident Polk. What - I 'thn becomes of Ode _phardi.iit•el cant a holt,. ilii, "i eipient causes of the present wain? •Geneial I . Sc ;t4 upon whose hack the original inilitaryl glo rifying portion'of the patty thought to Ode' into po ver; is nainst it, emphatically wi thouti the kast reservation! Ilenry'Clay,.the idol of thttiman and money worshipping Pnrtion, contradicts it. And lastly Gen. Taylor, upon the back or ~!4oso bar i earned fame, the yanchrent of . the rrery. i nW liopr. to rise /lean de piedat iti upon - the 'o Pala id garb. 1 are of pripate"cor ) porations, to ,the picking f fat office's in' the gilt of the General Governnein, etitii,!s oflici.illjr, in a contrail iit'ory atiititdc! Minn 11511, , .. "illit," vans die G a zett e , "it is'nett tru- that t hey (the whigl) have declined fo" aid in rtS. (Old u ar's) I prii.ectit ion." Let 'us iexairline this cenfident rn is• I 1 , section one moetn,:and I , fe whether',oor, nei• It bur is notklisposed to impose upon tile t redtil y l l f his r . eaders.l ‘Ve commFnee with' the State of Massachusetts, the most ort 'ludo.% whig, or fedd l rai 1 State, in the Union. l Whe calltd upon to rai•ca re'.l. , :inrent of volnhteers, to "aid in its,'!(thelvai's).l r [ pros..etniko, and the triumph of American arms, - d we find ler legtlirg behind until one of iter most %serthy''s' l ns, and choice sidrits'of' tl d age, Ova. Cu.hing; becoming ilit:gteted l ivisli the "moral treason" of the cluyftnagistrate of his ' native state, aliiintlond the ease and leltsures of I tres.don f ` I and lia4a'ry P purs uits, Pr resigned Id, seat in the le . isisiattire, and throwing. flidipersOnal popnlatity, influence and name inio the S'eale - , rais«l' the re (wired ittma of men. lie it as electit.:olon4 of the Iteeinteut by acclamation. In ' etnean time, flower er y he called upon the legiAtittno to appto preuic.-.......—. 7 A. •1... ~.4 . •:r•......t. sabc) taVatn,c•".invo of the volu\ deers until Tust.•rbil into. he ser,vice. But that body "rehised" to aid in . its (die mar's) prosecution" by appropriating money for any such) purpose, and private cOnolibutions had to•be re sorted to, twenable the regiment to hold together tintil inspected. Do our nei! , hbars•call this aidinm , . in the prosecution of - the War? - Remember this is no individual act, but ti , deliheate VOice 'of the party of the Sta:te of lassachusetts. ,spedking through representatives duty chosen and clewed by the people. .But the .position of the federal party in Nlassachusetts to the war ciiri not.stop here. 1 No, riot content with having refused to I grant a temporary supply in aid of the volunteers, a regiment raised in lirrl•-own name, and by au thority of the 'Governor— the Commander in Chief —and forcing them to leave the State Without one aullar or its "aid and comfort," they 'passed a se ries of resolutions just before the adjournment cf the legislator , a cop .1,1 which 'we gave iMour las ,in whi they d pounce the Mexican war as "Onconstitat onaliy declared by - our government— . . 'as havi`ng its primary sourer, in the unCon-iitu tional attriciation or Texes—a , i being provoked and Pro'duceJ on, our part by the ectipation of Mexican territory—as now wtiged by a ,powerful nation lagainst a weak itc.ighbor, unnece'ssaril) and without, just catise,.&c., for the dismember ment of Nlexico, and the conquest of a portion of her territory, for the tiiyle obj,7e.t of extending slit very, of strengthening the "slave power," and of obtaining the control eithe r free States—in . -short, that all g„,. f orl citizens should unite in arresting ilvs war, and compelling our country 'll retire from the posOioei of ingression which iiltiiw occup't.-0 towards a weak, distracted neighhori, and sister republic.". , , Now, has not ibis proceeding on tlt part of the federalis:s of Massachusetts been responded thy i their political associates all over the Union? olt t at thefaaious opposition to all bills for raising men and means to carry on the war,in Congress. Mr. Senator Corw,in, 4 for, an:l as tlfe representativo of the federal whig-party In the•ureut State 01 Pith), exclaimed in his pl4ce on the floor of the Senate: ), '•You must c u your, army back! You must, int• less you are filling to he thought a robber— nit inirader_of, yo riheighboryou I niii:4 'recall that army! . Retra9+ your steps!—and if your Persi dent ask`'of: b - men d mnney to p osecute the war, kitk G ,u as.' ante and my oi t'i-poor Etc ultiee, he sha have neither men n. money to prosecute any t Such purpose." Ag,aii : "tie (the President) ilhall have no funds< Iron me in the prosecutilin Ofeittch P war. , ' I have no way left but to withhold t' l mans - to' carry oil' tto war."— These empha t b,cieclirrations, togethe with many others (Ai ndr d sentiment with which that speech abounded, w a welcomed with a h , zza" by the whig press I rptighout the' entire nion—and ainongthem, none more; so than botl our neigh bOrs ii tiii street. 7'he Gait.: t even too upon itself tt!e eh' Mpion .hip oi` the onoruhlo ' cnator, and his sio edh; an dulled ust stee:nun f.r daring io questi n the 'p t+itisin an( correetnce. of the ken:. tirnentriherdi expressed, by classing their nutkor anti the Ar olds and Jude+ of he •wuq(l.- 1 1 Perim s • they w 11 tell us that this is lending 4 , a helping hand i carryind it (the w r) on, and bringilig it to a speedy closer 4Ve • Ity,yerhkpe they wlll—b'ut really.i t.. appears to us he very op. p' site. We have examined it mall its bearings— ?;.ti spontaneous outbursts of approval .f the course of the Stale of Massachusetts, the oud hazzas which greeted the treasonable and jibe lons speech 4 of the Olaci Senator, the faction pro eedings ,or the minority in Congress, the es, eta t alms° !mil ccondemnation pt the war an 4 o Ad linisfration which has bpen weekly and hourly , Oured :forth from their party presses, and we cr see nothing in it all to justify our neighbor, at it laterlay,in claiming for hit( party The position to doe's in mit. quoted ` sett. - That 'there sap many'lindividual is hfga . who ltitte noblitind,igloiriotts!,,isiltitained the war, !kith ,nt horns }' ir'o,ltifOrit,ltli c ii , wall t of llonteoY strufter.“;4l4 0 0 4: 4 1/01:e•1441 &Ms ..: .. 1 _it - of Biara yilta and Cerro e (A , „ t —so have ever asi l 'arde.l to tli..in't.be to patriotim.nnd cDttragU,a„;ol „ er ~ t haa ; as the nets - tiOd private opinions of bolt e d viduals e : rinot commit a p.irty or eninrnuniti set of principles ,oracts, c protest s o i,i justice and strai n of the iihig'pany f a ip in ; aeon the f l strie arid Patriotism of a Clay, a a Raker, or even al'ajlur, %ii•en c‘cry nient and vote of thwepiearretjoion; haCotei. rgre;, dect - State majorities, Le g S a t a t and i t l e l: ' tire public ,vrces. (until a the last mertti) prole, ineruliestmly that the eral wihig party "bare deihrAt: to aid in hi( war's) prosecution, and the triumlia of Ameii. C e. o l l u F ti ra t 7 tt i t b ß.7 lo S u h r ti ---- d ak a . stbartek,ruti l l: In Doodler of the present inenriuptible and patriotie.C. Ala,tfistrale i of the I,:eys:one State. Cotnintg. doe. , from a paper in a neizhboring meled by party influences and prejud . ces, it dessed peenlia: force. , 1 4xhibils (he I fe ofF, I cis R. Shun'o in a liz,ht pcouliarly W rthv Of consideration.of the ri,in4 generation, and ano her eloquent and b antiful c ommtlOtary On Ovamagts and exeelletice of our treelhativio, Prom' a poor boy he 44a rose step by ace, u, non he' is con t fes,9lly one of !the hest, c ot ~,, must popular,'Executires in our family of §tat a " p f p h e p ar w nce inaviclatl;;;sifiluitr-g" illope,aulr!Ose:fl:aot mrs,,tairilp:l.7l buy, th'at in him Pennsylvania, would, at a rut • day,. find one of her•best and \ ' one Who would play so couttpiet t o, ~,t , n deetnin ,, her credit. a ' • esta'altahih* h financial pro=perity. 13 .Qo it is—‘ilth India., perseverance, • intezritY and talent, in our 1 ut country, the poor ankl obs ure youth of to day r e beCome 'a qiivern .r or l i tcsident at some; fut. time. Upon • the carecriof such men we ore dwell—they arc the titzlit' of the arc—in tirert arc sure to 11 14, IA 116 : 1- Lombinett with dterlinzi tetztity of pu,poselie most ardent and pale supra:yrs of. poiedar rights and the peopl infereSts. In tlii re , pect Francis ( R. Slut stands pre' eminent; wi , hold a sitperiur, Final from the people he,l, now; their wants Ttaingh, all his days with the hardy tillers of the soil, ay. potlii,ing in all ti :' cares; hppcs and feelings,, i s i t..„ ep l y iimmed vith the r worth, and ean a 7 preciate their petit cal hot esty tied far reachin p min:ism. ; He is em rally . tily thainaa of 1 people, and his tidna oistrat on may juslyheitA ,ed upon as one of Lto mos thototiAldemikrat is .sell as pro.pero 13 sin e the days of ''S ha , _ 1 \4 , ---- 111 ,', l The Cloven Foo ntio m, rather too far '.)tit. SEEM (•onithoddre Per'y, if sent Lieut, Hunter ivtd bloc/fide A i'varado.l Th e before the place, stunni,'nett it_to teurrender,ior, Ihionnintins was Promp lye omphrd Ix ih. let he Teti a stnall oniard, a d iprocteled IT the rite and too't ano her place f tome impnttante. 0 Coin. Perry's arriingi tenure tie place, he fouo our 'fiat; flyin g ; .so he' %as 'Aura of I ii,"giorvo tdl: in! , tha town! Tto :renntodete ordered t bola Lieutenant to be rested and tried Thi 'ha, beed dune, and th gallant Lientent ha i been ,dismissed from, t lel squadron' 'filmset tence way be in l icor'ohr ! .niLy to thvules of th navy; but it n ill or veriliCless do far more Ilia tl Lieutenant's blootilesi cidiquest to make his ore , . the uni on. IA known throw , hout 11 apt to lay the gttqa . nt ' \C ommodore is a lift jealous--and that its claven tbot otielts opt ;Itch too tar. ' An act of Peer Daniel Websteti is no;w (on a our thrcrett , Southern States. 1 his friends . in e. r cedtly gave him i a4ublici,dirtne, butte lm:A Ek President Tyler who had come doun to the thy y- for the•purpose of recciring Ur. \V biter, ania citation. Stich an' act of petty meannetiv r grhT eunitt to cover tl.t managers of that fafrinift shame. , Webster himself Was retared a$ 'F) icr's confidential adviser for years when Mr. Tyler could haVe,Lent hint adidft at ad itouren lice; but now Mr! Webs;eris aartieg d otltt coine in contact with his benefactor. Ir-/- , Our bachelor friend of the Gazette it of opl ionlt that it is"dcidedypoctical lo iall in loie %VIII /a pretty heireiss %coil% fifty thousand difiara". This tray' account for the itninstial sentimental strati% in u hieh he has een wiitiic , eilitari'dlski: j } af V. ew eeles pa , t. 1 "F.. - 3r .en,ficlils'," -.leathered %t 3r. biers,' "etil ivati( i n' of flowers" and , ho. "heat• en born II alfrance,l' 1 h ivci.been iiil.ie i tip :Irwin all the _lowing ferl.vor of a. lire.lorn yun Italeigic teen. Po 'r fellow! he is decidedly in a bad clay --if'he don't ~ et •lla s'so.oooi I . "-Comila F/eats cast their Shadd:ga Before." ' The Phthide Iphi l a,Builetin 4 uys that a %cry in tellieient Cub lan:cr, now soj ituninz in tLat r, r) el.)", Indite c use of a couversa ioa on , Sunday, 'relative to thi: estiny of that Island, boldly de dared lhat he haled lorward to the day,. ane prayed iir iis'sp , e l ly arrival, when the l iars and stripes sivitilii float over it. Ile- was „cOnvinced 'that a lepubl ' the bet to live under, ar Ii ...7•oir arc comnrrfi• ' ably enterprioi. ...r fleas poni ed and' eirculaacti hclUce'. older in, mbers- of dit 9:raterniiy" were a wal4 MI their rceeF,lCa. 1.4 sometimes an advadtage to bd on hand da Sonia? Even i ng„— G az a 4.. • I ' ,1- Just so—but ITOnt the way we saw our biettlzr neighlitu , sui•round l ed "on Sunday evenine 0 concluded hi:: was ,"on hand," too—lll'Ougli the 'signs 'indieate tha he NI °WI-be !nue ( Moe of that - .Rain.", Another pill of I THAT "ruin;" we sec I,y Clir er chnn.es, is to be Crecied in -Warren, It. 1., 1 ° contain 10,000 Ppiiidlesi and to be operated by steam pOwer—the capital to be 8 .1 110,000. 1. 11 formation of another eompany, in j the same man. is talked of. This "cursed administratiOn"• if is very evident, will Ilestroy all doisCie hranuful turesovon7i it, ye protective sages i of 11:4;3; I • ~, ,r 4 A Nut for the Taylor wings. -' `) The following resolutions were Idopted by the whirls , of — Mhtabitla county, Oh l io, in Comity Convention, on the 7th inst. Thev i squint mini/ hard against the Taylor movement to; supplant the "wagon boy.'l j 1 . , , i Resolved— . ' the tNhoe " r ' pt l i ' : l 6,o la pi t .ol terhorett.ichtojhncese .oath, no i l a gl t e h y , n al ci i i i ‘i i fi t ) h r tens their tt .'-' allieda r / 0 1 f the iirm pledged ought to' arouse everypleet r of the free States to- t ones. ponding efforts a ainst such ustirpationS and 00t. • 0 lb ,exillesmitoon rionfostilawyrerayil:minictra,, tai.'es upon our ri hts and our sacred honor. rhitt while we discard all attachment to any e particular candidate thr President, We feel bound to declare that we ;will support no .man - eor that high ()dice who i'ffnht hilly and 'putilicl, plechrt li against the extensinn of slavery, and against -tbe: further sacrifice of ;dor National treasure, aria .°,! . human life,:in prosecuting the present rear wi t s Mexico. , ' 'N, That we approve the patriotic and truly c ,tian course rfursucil by our disti nghished Schen , Thoinai Corwin, 'upon the' subject of I thil."` with Mexico, and, Pbmme id him to the cor''' er. ' htion of,our fellotd!ti7cns as worthy:their ell tire•confl fence and h safe dcpositoty of P° litic power. 1 The edit' s ) f the Commercial.dtlo oirl• edgest himself a? clss in his hist paper. klitlh' vel heard the fain bin4d before, but did Wt think he cyas-rpti:t so perfect an one as to arknoreleclge it . , . _ ICY' The Chicap Dr,tnoorat of the let lost, gives returostf the 'election f 2 . detnof raw ink. 45 ,vhigf trod 4holitiebibte dehi 6: ates to Ito EtAti, • • - • f?natity*ttil"c-cktvptition. to the ta-4 of Vera' C a. Final] nasal iorc Lir thtnant, oh arri I,