Erie observer. (Erie, Pa.) 1830-1853, October 06, 1849, Image 2

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    Q
LATE RUPTURE WITH THE FRENCH MIN
ISTER, AND STATE OP OUR FOREIGN
RELATIONS.,
We copy the following view of tho 'causes of the
late rupture with the French minister, and of the
present condition of our foreign relations, from a
letter Written by one of the Washington correspon
dents of the New York Herald, a leading TaYloi' pa
per. The writer evidently has extensive opportu
nities for obtaining correct information, and seems
to be well advised in relation to the subjects concer
ning which ho treats. We omit the private gossip
with which the letter commences
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.1, 1 ft 19.
not 0.0 true Poufces of the difficulty lie far- be
yond. They may be traced to a diplomatk conspi
racy, the obj. ci of Weil V. as to ictitnize the French
minister, atul to bring about a misunderstanding; be
tween the republic's of Prance and the United States;
for what could better eubserve the purposes of the
monarchists of Europe, and theii• agents at Wash
ington, than a quarrel between the two leading re
publics of the earth?
On the declaration of the French republic r Mr.
Rush, the American minister, promptly, and with
out awaiting instructions, acknowledged the new
order of things, in the name of tho Uniterl States.
But it is not so gene - ally known that it was M0n....
sieur Poussin who persuaded, And finally carried MI,
Mr. Rush to make this acknowledgment upon the
very heels of the revolution.
The provisional government was doubtless apprized
of it, and Were %Nell advised of the thotough repub
licanism of Mr. l'oussin, in appointing hint as the
bucces'or of Mr, l'agent. The French government,
then, intended hi., appointment as a spe6ial compli-'
nest to the United Stntes. Mr. Ponssin had sorted
in our rainy; he tea= almost rermrded as an Ameri
can, from his 1,..-idence and services in this coun
try, and from his I, ptddican opinions. The Amer
ican Pui , ;•'o, z.c(ineinted with these facts, hailed his
[timid ntinew a- /la Ct idOlie;!Of the respeet, gratitude,
and kindly di -I, , ,itidlis of France towards the United
Suites. And dos v, as the very sense in which it
was intended to 1,01111)1er:tool. • Mr: I'oussin'him
sell \sill' the most (timidly resolutions to
strengthen the undythle,rehtt ions between the two
countr.tes; Mir Lr., gi,od intentions have been defea
it,tl by the n cr. rft,t ~t:atagema of older heads in
diploinavy---Ism.h, for ii.Annee, as those shrewd
aVyatS nod Metichtm. cf It tit,sin and Spain at Wash
ihgten.
'flit. gnu& was simply this. 'l'lle agents of the
Move' thies of Iliiiiipe disttmded end feared the
li iendship between, the Cilited Sietes and France.—
Acting in concert, the two republics might revoluL
lionize the world, but dit ided they tvould not only
be hal niless, but might et elatedly be made the in
lArlfinr-"I'l in the destruction °foal' II other. Detipo-
I Jain rehin'nl hot C, it., pie:enco of wind. The crowit
,ii !male of EUti, r e 0 ere driven huller shelter Ity
the spreuoing thee Of the French revolution; but
-Nieholee, leoking enlinly ell, bOoft reorganized his
peattere.l foices, end has lee,elabl,shed their authori
ty nod ii fluence, et twine arid et Waellieeten.
'Things were all iu a state of fusion w lieu Mr.
1 . .0 , 1111 Olt We ever (.., the minkter front Frauee,--
'Pile f rim' Hy t tea tion.e between the tn o cuuntrieS
were most proini-ing, hut in - good time an under
standing, or a combowion, was iorintil to breult
them up. Fiance, at, Washiegten, was etending,
then, single-liatled against the hereditary pow era
of Eutope, is hen the adoiiiiistietion of General 'Pay
tor en we it,t9 putve,..
At this poet!, the intrigues against M. Pousiiii,
and ligaime the got spirit exislieg between the
Prem.:it and Awei i tan f()%erllti/etlis, I lieltily, hat
;•etit (Ay, commenced. The agents of the mutiaieli
ies literati to dot ise ways and means for creating a
inispairstanding betWiLell the French niiiikkr and
the Secretary of State. Europe was still in a elate
'of ferment. RepuhlicatliStil l`. as extending, its revo
lutions. It met be suppressed; end not one single
act Elll'Uileit. could hate greater moral effect in
.suppressing it Ono a di? pun: het n een the' Milted
States and 1 , ranee.. 'nat was- the task, then, as
signed to and taken up by the representathes - of"
mialarchy at Washinton, excepting, tierhaps, the
Briti-li minister, Veil° was autliciently immersed to
his own aliiiirs, or is, lit this time.
The cabinet of General ra y lor Caine in it ill) upi
versa Ipi ores-dons 'of peace. The di plownt ic corps
signelized the crept with their congraeulations.—
Mr. Balker), in behalf of hie "august master," was
particularly cordial and nactiounte. So tar, so
good. But the cabinet were new hands at the bel
lows. General Taylor - was compelled to trust them.
They had not shaped out their foreign ledicy. —
The' would lobe thiiigs its they came, and tie,et to
Tick. No positive course of action was teethed.
'elf, but eve.ryilling, appeared to be left to cha ic,?.—
Th'i only position declared was that of neutrality
end peace. Now mark the results. Denmark pro
tested against the United States (war steamer) going
to Germany unless tinder bonds to keep the peace.
Bonds %sere exacted. Russia and Austria would
have protested tit any interference in the Milks of
Hungary; and Mr. Clayton refrained from inter
teritiee except in dlie most private or innocent forms.
Spain represeetcd, Our - nigh her milliliter, that to
j ..riiit citizens of the United States to embark in a
crusade against Cuba, would be to violate our neu
trality, and the navy was at once called into service,
lied de. patched to arrest the expedition at Rowel is-
Lod, without proof that they had violated our neu
trality, or intended to compromise the government.
An ohsalete law, superseded by the laws of nation-,
was trumped up an the authority. for the extreme ,
'')e) ,ceedinn in snmeart of Spanish misrule in Cuba.
1' this extem thernionarchies were abundantly sat r
is kid. 'Pile cabinet had carried out their pledges
of peace.
At the sante time the main diject of a rupture
between France und the lCuited States was in a fair
~,,Y of accenielbdiment. By an act of social exclu
sion of'a member of his family, a very natural dig
tosition fir revenge had been excited in the breast
of Mr. Pons-in nenin-t the Secretary of State.—
'ne live hundred bales of tobacco of Mr. Port, and
the salvage aslwel by Captuii . l garpender fir saving
a French riel:r, afforded opportuniiies for retaliation.
Sneeze, therefore, as the irritation of Mr. Poussin
:wren; upon the naked merits of those case=, the
key of ex plehatiotes - inakes it perfectly oatmeal, and
. exactly what the old diplomatists at Washington
anticipated. Bill it/ th-e ilk hlllte 1\1:A1 ft they will
lie, perhaps, disrippeinted. There is Ito occasion
for war with Preece. on lei late abOut in It o ' dark,
the cabinet diseet ered that in efiering to their dec
larations of pence, they had wandered from that
tiositiye track of policy which it was their duty to
filllow. They found out that they been conniving
with the depots against 'our own institutions, and
with the same hurry they were ready to retrace
(heir stops. nonce, the warlike bulletins in the
North American and other now ;Japers aga ins 1
Louis Napoleon, as the real instigator of the rup
ture with Poussin. It is Slid:lV:4 discovered that
Louis Napoleon k tip 2 man. The publieation of
French correspendenc i ze hOwever, and the dismissal
of Poussin, settle the titivation. Nothing less could
be - done; nothing more, probably, will be required.
The commercial treaty projected by Poussin, may
14am - wird fur awhile; but the, cabinet cermet ex
. ,
pet!. their hasty interference in the Cuban business
to be hid in the'amohe of a war with France, altheugh
it is possible they inav yet negotiate this punctillie
(tinder the advice of Russia and Spain) into it seri
omt affair.
Just now, however, a more tangible subject or
repts the a t i onitien 'of Mr. Clayton—we an empty
IPlnCliiln—nut a mere question of words and epithets
limolied Omit betweee two 'nee; buteu queation of
, (distances and great flitiitlelat. It is a question in
is hiCh Jelin 801 l is a party, and he seldom troubles
him-elf with mere quarrels of etiquette. Where he
is a petty, there is land arid Water, rivers and liar.
' buns, at I,Ntle. Solt is in this case. For many
years past Great Britain has an eye to the exclusive
possession of a line of communication between tho
- two oceans, at some el igiable point eking the isthmus
dividing, North and South Ameriba, After buying,
in-petted ell the routes, alio has filially planted her
self on tho Mosquito cons?, as commanding ono of
the of the most eligible lines of water communica
tion with the Pacific. There is the month of the
San Juan river, watering a rich country, ttnikesten
sling back to the great hike Nicaragua, and the lesser
lake Leon, of which the San Juan is_the outlet. Its
head-waters are, therefore, within fifteen miles of a
fine river communicating with the Pacific. With
this !and some slack watering, and canals nt the,
rapids of the San Juan, the canal is made between
the Atlantic and Pacific. Planting herself at - the
month of the San Juan, Cheat Britain claims the
~,,) n oply ofihia passge between the two oceans:-
Bbelia taken up a raw, greasy, monkey-roasting
uniive, in his blaiikvt, and has crowned him
date Mosqu toes, and has pledged him' her protbc
tion, A NeW Yorli,company balling contracted with
the State of Nicaragua to open this channel of com
munication, her Britanic Majesty's consul (Barclay)
at New Yorlt has, protested against the enterprise as
infringing, tiiion the territories of the King of the
Mosquitoes, the ally or agent of Great Britain. The
matter has One tip to the Secretary of State. A
correspondence has been opened between him and
the British minister "at/ interim. Mr.: Crampt
Mr. Clayton justly pretests against tire assumptions
of exclusive inonoply of the mouth of the river.—
Here is a question in which our commerce is visually
interested. It may be settled to tho satisfaction of
the American contractors and the .American people
by judicious ttegoeiation; but it is a question, in the
settlement of which our commercial relations ma y
be placed in he most'critical position, as in the
Oregon dist+.
Between Prance and England, therefore, the cab
inet'svolicy Of peace, though not interupted, is in a
critical situation. In the former case, the question
without fort ter p 70% ication, will settle itself; in the
latter, Mr. Clayton may either heedledssly rush into
war, or give utt- the point, or conpromise, or tblky a
settlement by protracting aegociations. In any
event, Mr. Clayton has taken the right side of the
question this time, and we hope he will stand just
as firmly against the demands of England as he would
against this utaided King of the Mosquitoes itislaim
ing the sos tufty!y of the isthmus of PaLlillia• Mr
Clayton desires_ peace with Englund. Let us see
how he will manage this business with Queen Vic
toria, and the lii rig of the Mosquitoes.
CALIFORNIA LIFE AND MANNERS.
The journals aria filled with letters from Lllifor
nio, which furnish some interesting extracts:
Ltrx tx- COI,IFORNIA.—Life in San Francisco is
exciting and amusing.- There is almost a total ob
scene° of female society. It is no . place fur the
presence and Neill not be for some time to
come. 7 tierefore conceive'the entire free
dom free Fur instance, good board being
at $2l a id ordinary ut IG, many prefer
protiidiul king for themselves. You may
see these idents" walking along the streets
every morning. t ith a beef steak in one band and a
loaf in the other,'whistling "away with melanchly,"
"clear the kitchen," and other refined airs. Now
these gentlemen tare well; they buy their beef at
126 cents a pound, delicious sultdd salmon at the
same, bread at .;,.!:Leents a Mal; and coffee and sugar
reasonable cheap. Thus thick per diem expenses
do not succeed 75 cents. And they are those who
make money; for although clerks have 8.5000 sale
t iea, and laborers 6,8 and $lO per day, still the cost
of board, and washing at and $8 per dozen,
leaves a very.stnall margin for profit. It is aCtual
ly economising to throw away clothes when a change
is necessary, and then buy new, prices of clothing
have so fallen.
GALumNG.-f-kixtracts fiom•a letter; dated at San
Francisco, July ittnh:
This is the strangest place hi Cini.leialuin.
know many men. who were models of piety, morali
ty, and all that sort of thing, when they first arri
ved here, and who are new most desperate 'gamblers
alai ()milliards. I thialtinany who left Newark to
brier their fortunes, will wish they had remained
at home. Gold digging is out of the question for
some of them—they cannot and will not follow it,
and it rc•qu:tes more capital fur a man to do busi
iss heme than in the States. Many have already
returned from the wines, finding themselves uueq tai
to the work, add are about returning home. It is
mentioned as in indication of the wildness of the
gambling spirit, that elOO,OOO had changed hands
at a aware batik on the turn of a single card. A
.New, York gaud)! r is said to have lust $lO,OOO the
night Mote ilie, Ja!donde sailed.
I.mut AT 'riotNus.—A digger in the Coluni
bia mines says:
I have tried gd d digging for the first time an:d
Lind it to be very; hard wink. On these bars, which
hate been thronsti up by the rapid current, the sand
and ricks are smketimes piled up over the gold from
one to four feet, and have to be removed before yob
get it. IVe mhved to-day rocks weighing from SUU
to 800 pounds, and tons of sand, to get about 69
bushels of dirt, out of which we got 31 j ounces— r
better luck than common. The whole amount of
our digging for two weeks is two pounds—prett;
fair fur hew hands.
The Boston Journal publishes extracts of a lette
dated at San Francisco, July 9, of which the subt i
joined is - a simple:
.holies appears to be of no account. You can
hardly pass a person that has nut his thousands - in
gold, carried in a 'small bag. Yesterday I Met a
man just from the mines, lie had with him d bog
containing about ltik7ooo. I - inquired of him' how
long he was getting. it and he said "in one(sock!"
Seine of the pieces were as large as a-medium size.
bean,-and from that down to dust, and perfectly
cleat): I have a great breastpin made of a
mr) of gold just as it came front the mines, weigh
ing- from two to three ounces. Gamblers are doing
a great business. I went into several of their
houses, and saw a man lose $:30,000 in one evening.
After losing it, he very quietly said, "Well, I shall
.have to go up to the mines ag ain."
SCAtteITY OF Womus.—Acorrespondent of the
Baltimore Argus says: This country is sadly defi
cient in the Creator's last, best gift to man: and it
trill be conferring an everlasting favor on' me, if
you will just send me one of those red flannel un
mentionables that is hahging behind the door of my
bedroom. .I,Ve hail a wedding in Sacramento city
on the 19th, and a regular blow out it was—a_trts
ter of citizens and strangers. They kept it up so
late, I doubt very much.if they have all got home
yet. To such an extent is the veneration for the
fair sex carried hero, that I have seen a party of
Oregonians stop and have a dance around an oh;
cast oft' bumet.
_ _
Pullout ins EFLRAND%—Gen TAYLOR, when on his
recent tour through this' State, says • the Carlisle
nil:sateen declared at Vo.k, (his first landing place
in Pennsylvania,) that the object of his visit was to
"ascertain, by seeing for himself, what our inter
ests demanded ut his hands." Was the President
sincere when he used this language? Let facts de
cide the question. Passing from York to Lancas
ter, Harrisburgh, Carlisle, Chamhersburg, Bedford.
and Greensburg, and from thence to Pittsburgh, a
distance of ahout 275, miles, he never took the
trouble to visit a single forge, furnace, woolen nor
cotton factory—nor even a coal mine. Gen. TAN-
Lon, we therefore conclude, forgot his errand. lie
traveled through the State, front one place to an
other, as fast as a steamer could carry him. His
true object, however, in paying a visit to this State,
was n political one. He was induced to come here
by Gov. Johnston and other prominent men of the
Federal party, for the purpose of raising a political
excitement in favor of Federalism. But in this our
enemies have been disappointed. The visit'of the
Pke•ident will avail nothing:.
• Wino LI IS.MA LITY.—Wc have recently been infer
med,lthat in the town of St Jonsbury, Vermont, there
are thirty-three jiisticeof whom thirty-two are
whigs! The only democrat appointed lives in a re
mote part of the town, and has never taken the oath
of office. No man, in that large town, is remitted
to sit as a magistrate, or to be a member of "the
board of authority," which counts the votes and de
termines the rights of electors, unless lie is of the
hig party! Every ninth Whig is n justice of peace
and one hundred and eighty-five dmiocrats sre with
out a single acting magistrate! And this is the way
things are done; by a party which hus spent half its
time tor the last twenty years in denouncing •politi
cal Democrat.
• LcurANs.—lnformation has reached St. Louis that
the Winnebagoes had become dissatibfied with the
homemssigned thorn in the last treaty, and had re
cently assembled, together and set out for their old
hunting ground. Capt. Pegs, stationed at Fort
Snelling, had been apprised of their nravemeotti, and
marched a force to intercept them, which they did
at Rico Lake. - It was feared, however, that further
difficulties would grow out of the affair.
A Cunnon Fon ' OMEISODY.—A.Iady in Cleveland
c
advertides, for a young gentleman, .younger than
thirty, float in d r, as, nn enemy to tobaco, poorpuns
a o
and the conventionalities of euelety; to act its her
ainanuensls, as she is compelled to lay aside, the
duties and pleasures of writing. - Ile must also be
familiar with cribbage and backgammon! Herels a
linkchance new for a "nice young man." , _. ~
The Whiga - are' having mime victories now , ,.
They triumph in Rhode blend, Vertuorit, and Hun.
pry.- They are ashamed to
. shout 'over •this' last.
Ilieptioned success:but we cannot doubt that it adds
thi much to their joy us either of the others.
Crit 133nIt1ii eirgerutr.
ERIE,' PA
'SATURDAY MORNING.-OCTOBER 6, 1849
p XIII! 0 CIITAT IO N 0 MINA lON
_____
FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER,
JOHN A. GAMBLE,
OF LYCOMING COL T\
FOR STiNATOR,
.MURRAY WHALLON,.cof Eric.
• FOIL
DAVID OLIN, of Girard.
Wig. GRIFFETII, of North East.
SHERIFF,
E. W. GERRISH, of Edenboro..
CO3I3IIF. 4 SIONER,
TRUMAN STEWART, of Amity
Auovrott,
HENRY 'TELLER, of- Girard.
innucTon OF TUE POOR,
HENRY GINGRICH, of Alillcreck
GO TO THE POLLS:—Wo think it quite unne
cessary to make a labored appeal to i our political friends
to Go TO Tilt POLLS and vote on Tuesday. Wo pro'
sumo they all know, as well and better LIMO WO can tell
then!, that the whole country is looking for the redemp
tion of the Keystone this (idl e and that it is their dut . to
1
£30.0 t hut ouch expectation do the part of their frie ds
abroad, shall nut to be disregarded. If
r they co TO lac
rom.s thatexpeetntion will Mt ho disappointed, and they
will have tlio, pleasing Rath action of knowing, that icy
have contributed their - eh re towards wresting nu ther
State from tho political dot tination of the man of br .ken
plcilges and broken promis s!. 'l'ho general iabucti . in-
valvt*l in the present cent st aro in no wise thin
from those that havo characterized our political con
for years'. lioueo it is useloss to partieulariza. lleiuo
k now I them—the'y know their opponents' principles
nod they know their duty to both. Again, we say, GO
TO THE POLLS on Tuesday next, nod help to redeem
the Kevotone!
FOREIGN NEWS.—We have not thanght it worth
while to occupy room this week' with the details of the
Foreikn News received by the last Steamer. The what°
matter con be summed up in a few words,-and, to adopt
the language of the Pennsylrantan, it is but the sloiehs
of tot ruled Freedom, and the shouts of exulting Tyranny.'
Nirmor.es thanks God for his victory over God's crea
tures. Ilaysa . o is gozetted, and his atrocities made Mr-
MO/ WI ill loyal thanks. Young FRANCIS Joseru is about
to celebrate Austria's triumph by a marriage. Switzer
land is to be the next point of attack for the allied mur
(Jere's. At last Franco sees, the Roman Infamy to be
full, and Loos NAPOLEON is startled into a protest against
priestly oppression, and as he calls it, ingiatitudo. Rut
why continues history, which is told in a few words 1
The state of Europo is best seen from. the fact, that its
freest, most liberal, and Most just notion, is England.
whose mosses are slain in thoumands by starvation and
di,euse, whose workhouses aro Mc resorts of paupers,
und whioyo shins houses trice hornet houses and grav'es !
Whe'n will MArt be permitted to make another effort to
be - saved from his Oppressor?
T}JE FAlR.—Owing to the rain for some days pro
yiona the Fair, there was not a largo attendance, or
inuch of a Show, es- we. bad anticipated Laying
aside the rain, however, we thought we detected a DI an-
Keg lack of interest on the part of all. We may be mis- -
taken—and trust wo are—but it was, a general remark of
most with whom we commutricated. The awards have
not yet been furnished us, but will bo e wo protium, for
next week.
" Mezia.ts."—The Editor of the Commercial, the
man that Gen. Taylor thought was "neither honest nor
ca'pable' for the Nice of Collector of this Port, has had
a good Jett to soy lately about tho Observer being " muz
zled," &c. Now we shall not reply to any such insinua
tion ; the bold and fearless tone of this paper since we
have been connected with it is ample evidence to stamp
all such stories with falsehood. Every body that knows
us personally, will readily bear witness that it would
take a power more potent than puslossed by Ina*, to seal
our lips on questions we deemed essential to the public
welfare. .11t any rate, it has never boon said of us upon
the streets, as it has been of this who is so fond of
making charges about his neighbors, that by getting hint
to print the Constitution and By-Laws of the Masonic
Lodge, that fraternity had •• hilltd two birds' with one
stone"—one of its members had secured a debt:and muz
zled the Editor, in regard to latt institution, at the same
time. if this street report is correct, and we are inclined
to believe it, from the fact that since the Editor got that
two-and-sixpenny job, he has been as dumb as an oyster
in regard to that institution, it is only another evidence
of the downward tendency of prices, when an article has
beelike /Ong, in market. Three years ago ho was Moro
than suspected of selling his vote in the ‘Vhig County
Convention for the SheritPs advertising—and now it i!
'said he has gene cotT to the Masons for two-and-sixpence:
The Ot Fellows, wo suppose, will next have him for
ninepen e, though as a member of that body, wo shall
object to giving more than four-an&a-half.
NEW YORK. —Every thing looks bright in New York
since t h e great family of Democracy havo shook hands,
and buried tho hatchet. Tho Union ticket, from prosont
a poarances, will receive a cordial support at the hands
o the masses, and will thus, most tuumertionably, ho
c eetcd. Our Whig friends concede that Penusivunia
will be lost to them on Tuesday next, and with New
York pronouncing against them in November, will nut
the Administration of "Zachary Washington," become
a no-party administration in good earnest. Deafeated in
every contest since the inauguration, with both branch
es of Congress opposed Co it, the administration will be
in a tst embarrassed position—a position, wo cannot
.but think that has been brought upon it by the heedkeg
disregard of its promisee and professions previous to y the
election.
Q.? Tho Gazettz: thinks that the Auditor General, John
A. Purviance, Esq., and Jesse Miller. the Editor of tho
Ilarrishurgh Keystone, are endeavoring to '• deprive.the
Stato Treasurer of the credit which the people SOM dis
posed to_ award him." John and Jesse era certainly
naughty boys, and ought to he ashatned,of themselves ;
hut then they have had a bad example net them—that's
some excuse, oven the Gazette must admit. That bad
example was a Whig paper, too—and worse, was printed
in the State Treasurer's onrn town, under his very noso
Wo moan' tho'Commereial ! Dos'nt the Gazette recol
lect how it tried to " deprive the State Treasurer et' tho
credit which the people seemed disposed to award him,"
and how the Gaulle—this same whining Gazette,—the
State Treasurer's special organ,-owned and controlled
in part by the State Treasurer's most , honored relative,
dare net—aye, I 1 liE 110 T—so much es to whimper
Would it not be as well for the Gazette to defend the
State Treasurer from the attacks of his political friends,
before it volunteers to sit in judgment on the merits and
demerits of that gentleman's controversy with / the Audi
tor General 4 It strikes us it would
Tr The Die wbu ryport Adloriist.r. a Taylor paper, thus
spanks of General Taylor, in connection with the Cuba
expedition:—Gen. Taylor Booms to be blesied with An
extraordinary gift of doing little. and that little wroug.--
We are begining to arrive at the shrowd conclusion that
Limits peculiar to senility. or the conscious titaness for
the duties of his place, than a wise discretion.
- • Air 'Lwow Fann.—Thernis a farm In Illinois which
coutains . hvefity-Severt thousand acres. The pioptietor
IS, it reised'l3,o6o acres of, corn the prevent season. 3,000
acres of which are in one fold. At 50 bushels per sera.
the 13,000 acres would give 650.000 bushels; Beat t,
who eau?
t . - OUR FOREIGN RELATIONS;
In another comma will bo found an interesting attic',
on our foreign relations froni a Washington correspon•
of the New Ydrk Herald. It professes to lift the veil
from the secret cantles which led to the dismissal of the
French Minister, and in doing so is certainly not over
complimentary, to the sagacity, foresight and wlsdom,of
the present administration. W'hothor the causes alledged
to have produced this rupture between Mr. Secretary
Clayton and Monsieur Poussin:aro as slated in the arti
cle or not—whether the Ministers of the European pow
ers alluded to k,y this writer, have boon secretly opera
ting to Prodoce,a misunderitanding between our govern
meld and that Of dm Fronds, or not—ono thing must be
manifest to all, that the whole matter has been most bun
glingly, not to say disgracefully managed. by "Zachary
WaShington" anti his man Clayton. President Taylor
was a very good General, and a better "fighter," but ho
is most certainly a poor, a very poor manager of our For
eign relations. - So, also, Mr. Clayton might kayo been
a very efficient and, possibly, talentedSonator, but as to a
Secretary of State, ho has evidently mistaken Isis profes-,
siom lie that as it may, however, they aro legally
crd in the positions thoy occupy, and the country is bound
to stand by them, should trouble with a foreign nation
grow out of either their ignorance or stupidity. In a
controversy with a foreign power, we go for our own
country, right or wrong, and while wo shall at all times
deem it,duo to truth and justice to expose the mal-ad
rnini.stration Of the powers that be, the insolence and
arrogance of Moesicur Pou sin, or any other representa-,
tivo of another government, Will not find in us an apo
logist. If war should grow opts of these blunders wo
should deem it due to pa'st prort.siois and present fool
ing to pursue a lino of policy v, ry difforent from that
adopted on u similar occasion 1)2. our opponents. We
Should not hat n the retnote.t it.a' hat it would ho "un
constitutionally commenced by the" President,"—or that '
it w i as "Cod abhorred ,"— or for the "extension of sta •
vetY," or fur any purpose incompatible with the Nation's
honor. We would never wiNls the French to, "welcomeour soldiersatitis bloody hands lei hospitable
.graves,"—
nor would we deem it the duty of Congress to roles°
supplies to our army and navy. But wo did not set out
with the intention of contrasting ho past course of the
Whig party in every controversy with a foreign power,
that of the Democracy, but to call attention to the
article alluded to, and to introduce some well-tuned re
marks from tile l'ennsyleaniurt upon the Immo subject.
They are as follows:
MEM
TIM BAD Trvrr.ic AND BAD B D
LUNEDS OF
ScenerA
msCt.er tux,—lf war grows out of the French question,
nothing will ho done inure to produce it, thou the hunul
luting, blunders of the viuleut and hot-headed man now
in the Stoto Deparfineut.—llls whole management of
Chet question has hien mai ked by a painful want uf de
liberation, judgment, and tact; qualities without n filch a
stake/Min is merely a nutting politician. We do net
like to eniplby harsh terms even against an opponent;
but we think the course of Secretary CLAYTON has been
eminently indiscreet and blame-worthy, in regard to this
atriir n iii, France. We think it will' appear on exami
nation, that (ho whole CC/Millet of Mr. LrAtrex, has boon
extri - eilfilary and unprecedented—a series of blundois
and explosions of passion. When wo reflect that the
'flirty to which the Secretary of the State belongs, is the
beetle that opposed the recent war, and took strong
grounds evilest what they wore fond of culling the baste
and eagerness °film late administration to embroil us in
difficulties with Mexico, and when we compare the calm
teileeirance end iirtidence that characterized that admin
istration, in reeard to Mexico, with the ill temper and
heady of the present Regency, in regard to
France, (even rifts r allowing to Mexico all the advantage
of indulgence as a weak and distracted State, front which
wo could afford to take much,) we cannot fail to bp mor
tified and amazed. We ate no alarmists.; and wo sin
cerely kepi) there may be no war with France: but when
we regard the manner in which Mr. CLATION has con
ducted the dispute-now festering to a head, the petulance
and impudence et M. Peteisis, (of whom it is generally
said and believed, that he had no intention of giving of
fence to a countly he loves so well, mid Is greatly griev
ed at the present state of things) will be a trifling provo
cation inithe eyes of the people to justify all the exciting
measures that have followed—tending so directly and
almost inevitably to the worst results.
It was an mu pant en able blunder nil the part of Mr.
Cesiree to lug in as a'make weight the tobacco case of
M. foie, after it had been SETTELiD by the withdrawal of
the offensive language by M. I'oussis; and it showed,
that the voluntary publication of that part of tho difficul
ty, which was practically out of the way, was made only
to inflame the public mind, and to provoke bail conse
quences from the real matter in issue.
It is most extraordinark, and, wo believe, entirely un
precedented thing, to publish diplomatic correspondence,
of a character calculated to lead to war between tWo
countries, impel) the Simple request of a newspaper edi
tor, while Congress is not in session. Tho country ckri-,
not fail to contrast the eminent prudonco and propriety
of the administration of Mr. Pot.x, in refusing to make
their - diplomatic correspondence on grave questions,
save
at the ca ll of iiongress, with the advertisement of Mr.
CiArros of the letters that have passed between him and
the - French Minister, simply to aggravate bad feeling,
and "prepare the minds of the people for, war."
The closing letter of Mr. CLAYTON to the French Se
cretary of Foreign Affairs, M. Do. Tocquwria.tx, was
absolutely published in this country before it was received
France—as if with the deliberate object of forcing the
two countries into a rupture, by making that letter the
subject of taunting commentary hero I and in England.
calculated to gond the French government into violent
recrimination and action. We venture to say that no ad
ministration hos ever resorted to so desperate a shift to
foment difficulties between two nations heretofore friend
ly, or hes so recklessly gone in the teeth of all usage and
pi oprioty.
Irt Oct; same totter, dated September .5, and sent out
by the steamer of the 12th ult., we find this remarkable
expression:— .
"As Mr Rush is retu r ning home, and Mr. River.,
who has been appointed to succeed him as minister
. to
France. has probably not yet arrived in Paris, 1 hasten
to avail myself of the o dy means of communication be
tween the governments we represent, by addressing you
directly on the subject of,yeur note."
Experienced statesmen Will be amazed to see Mr.
CLArros resortm • g to the unusual method of overlooking
the American Minister at the Fronch Court, to whom
all communications intended for the French Government
are always sent as instructions for his own guidance, and
addressing himself, offensively and angrily, directly to
the French Secretory of Foreign Affairs; a course of
proceeding - entirely without parallel, as we conceive.
But is the excuse true? Can it be that Mr. CLArros has
directed Mr. Resit to leave France before the arrival of
Mr. Itiymis? Assuredly, Mr. (limn could not have been
so precipitately dismissed, thus leaving us without , a
Minister ut the French Court. at this critical juncture.
We do not beliere this allegation of the Secretary of
Mate. If it turns out to be a tins-statement of tho fact,
that Mr. Itum was not on his way home before Mr
RAvEs left Paris—if it turns out that Mr. Rosa was in
structed to remain till his successor arrived—what is the
extraordinary position hccupied by our Secretary of State?
The position of having proclaimed a mis-statement, for
the purpose of fortifying himself in addressing directly
the French Minister'cif Foreign affairs, (in violation of
all propriety and precedent,) his angry and bitter epistle
of the of September If this is not evincing n
minul anxiety to force tho countoy into war, thou we do
not to undorbtand the meaning of acts and words. Such
memos to be tho determination of the Regency—such,
indeed, seems to be the object of Mr . CrAvTorr—and
such is the voice of those who speak In his behalf. The
correspondent of the Balti num e Patriot, ("Potoninc,")
now in the employ of the government, thus proclaims the
views of the "peace" party now in power: "The only al
ternatives for Franco nro to mako a suitable apology' or
tight. The affront she has received is ono of the highest
character, which has been provoked by her supercilious
conduct."
And if war follows, by what a series of blunders and
indiscretions has it been perpetrated! We have pointed
out those which all present, strike us most forcibly. It
seems to be beyond all question that Mr. Poussis Is nut
only heartily sorry. but amazed that his language !should
have hcen,made the subjec tof such earger and angry
retort. lie is said to speak of it to all.- he meets with
profound regretjand to deplore the length to which tho
affair has been carried. We do not excuse his unhappy
method of explianing himself, though it is not unreason
able that one so much attached to our country. and so
ready even after Mr. CLAYTON'S furious tempest of pas
sion, to express regret at the state of quarrel, had any
ids h of being'a party to the omission difficulty new rap
idly approaching a head.
We repeat, we alionld deplore war, thus hastened by
an impulsive but siiMere Frenchman on ono lido; and
an American Secretary of ungovernable passions on the
other: : but if it comes, white we ore now free to com
ment neon the amazing blunders and angry precipitan
cies of Mr. CLAYTON, we shall he found, as over, among
the very first to support our country and- her flag. And
we are not sure.- weighing all the facts, if the worst con
sequences may not be apprehended, especially in view of
the course taken by the Secretary of State in fegard to
his filial lette to SI, Toequaviu.s. • .
QTTFio New Orleans Pstriaassers positively that the
plan of Separating from Mexico tho states this side of the
SiorrtilCladre; and setting Op ati independent 'republie,
is still prosecuted with great zeal.
EMI
CHEAP POSTAGE.—Our good cousin of the Bus
ton Olive Branch, has an article on cheap postagee, which
has a good deal of truth in it, but mixed up: we are sor
ry to say, with a little prejudice. The Oliva Branch is
generally right 'every time," but in this case we think
the interest of the proprietors is allowed to sway the Edi
tor's judgment. When it says, there iv no parallel be
tween the English Itystem of two cents on letters and pa
pers free, and such it system in event. y, he talks like
a practical common sense met. An he remaiks:
"the island of England is not much larger than a good
seized sheep-posture, and is traversed in every direction
by railways, so that the expense of transporting the mails
is merely nominal, while the immense extent of our
country, and the fact that much the larger part of the
mails must bo dragged over bad roads by horse teams,
—a moil sometimes costing for its tranvpoluttion ,fifty
times more than the proceeds from 11,—renders the ser
vice a very expensive ono. We think, however, that
letters may be carried all over the country—California
included, of course—for five cents each," Ire would,
however, have them pre-paid. A 9 to papers we also
agree with the Olive Branch " that sufficient should be
aired on them to pay expenses," but we would have that
tax equitable, "A half-sent each, pro-paid at the office
of delivery" might "be sufficient," but would it ho equi
table?, We ask, in ell candor, Mr. Olive Branch, if
there is any equity, common sense, or justice, in charg
ing a half-cent for earning the Obserrer four or five
miles, and no more for transporting the °lice Branch
from Boston to Now Orleans ? Again, is it right to
chargu'us mach- postage on the Wire Branch, or tho
Obserrer, as upon such blanket sheets as the "Model
Courier," " Saturday Post," and the like ?
It c'et tainly appears to us that againr a common sense
as large as a mustard - seed would teach any sane men
that there would be neither justice for 'Amity in such a
s)stessi! lint the °Bre Branch object, to "delivteing
paper.' within thirty miles fie() of expense." and says:
' "It would he a system of charity which other interests
might reasonably demand should be extended - to them.
If .we buy a gallon of molasses or a buqhel of potatoes
at a grocery, wo would ; have the Fame right to ask the
United States to carry thorn home free for us—or to ask
that our water for washing-day should be brought free
from the river. It is just us necessary to have a clean
shirt as it is to have a newspaper. To carry a nepspa
per free thirty miles, and chugs a cent for carrying it 31,
talks. is an absurd idea. Witun the Government does
this, we shall apply to the Department to loan us carri
ers to deliver our pope's to Subscribers ill the city. It
would save us a largo yearly outlay, and bo just as rea
sonable as the thirty miles plan."
Now. this is arguing the question with a vengeance. is
it not? If the goverment had a department for the pur
pose of cariying "molasses and potatoes" through the
country, we certainly should not object to its delivering
all raised or bought within thirty miles, but as it has not
wo cannot seo tiny furco in the ()lira Branch's argument.
But, says our coloaperary, "whom the government does
this (cart y papers froo thirty miles,) we shell apply to
the Department to loan us carriers to deliver our papers
to subscribers in the city." :Why man, such n request
would be usoloss—the Department will 'most assuredly
furnish you with just such carriers to deliver your papors
within 30 miles, as it will us. That is just, is it not?
We thfuk it is—and it is of no pecuniary interest to us,
to think so, either; fur when such a Ise was in
force, it did not add a subscriber to our list. There is no
thing, and can be nothing, unjust to the city press in such
a law Lit carries their papers free thirty mile.: as well aA
our, and consequently if it is a "system of charity," it is
a "charity" partaken of by all alike.
Hone Cles.sviosi.--LThe Whig leviers of our Stz t o nro
fellows of oi genital, and we shall not be surprised
if they should really discover a perpetual motion before
all is over. Mr. Fuller and the Whig State Committee
are bath very much elated at the ';/'acts" that the State
interest has behn paid in specie; the debts on the rail-road
and canals liquidated; and certain State stock i.urchased
under the present administration. They boast of these
things without laughing. and solemnly ask the people to
believe them serious: There is not a buy of ten years of
ago, that would not ho ashamed of such brazen impu
deuce. We hope the next time Falkr is caught repeat
ing this shallow boast, somebody will ask him if he ig
not now warmly supported by Stevens. Ititner, Penrose
Middleswartb, Dickey, Burden, and other heroes or the
Tape Worm, the Hunthlgton Bleach, and the Mission
ary Fund? lie will scarcely have the courage to ;ayho
is not; anti when he admits so much, just ask hint to
count how many millions ofdollars these supporters of
his, added by their frauds to' the State debt; end whether
it was not De.mocrutic policy, operating, openly under
the present administration, which reduced the burdens
which they imposed? If ho deities that, and does not
blush, he must have a coubtenance as impervious to
shame as the hide of a thinoreros.—Pennsyfraaian.
LIT Our neighbor of the Gazette., like the sportsman's
dog, L is a " famous hunter and setter"—he hunts " po
litical bones and sets down to oat them." The last morsel
of this character that he has' discovered and devoured,
is that the Whig vote in Vermont at the recent State
election, is 3000 larger than the sante State gave Gen.
Taylor. From this he argues that the people approve of
Gee. Taylor's " violated pledges." Our cote:lvor:try
is tuo shrewd for us. The friends of Taylor get awfully
thrashed in Connecticut, Kentutiky, Tennessee, and on
ly escape in North Carolina by the skin of their teeth, all
Whig States, and yet Venetia() the Whigs have succeed
ed 0111C4 more in Vermont, ho thinks it is all moonshine
about "the popular disgust at Gen. Taylor's violated
pledges." - Well, if the Whigs are satisfied with this
kind of reasoning, and such results. we are!
Garriso-rur.in Ecto 9er.7s.—The New York Express,
6 Taylor paper, has sense enough to find in the POUSSiII
land Clayton affair but "a mere question of etiquette,"
"a quarrel about nothing." "There is no principle at
stake, only mords,"says:tho Express, and it ridicules tho
official idea of the Philadelphia Gazette that'Do Tocque
vine, the French minister, must either apologise or re
sign! In fine, this Now York administration paper takes
good portion of a column to express what might better
be said in a single ward, "Humph," or "Fudge"! The
N. Y. Tribune, also an administration paper, scouts the
idea of war with France, and adds "we care not a but
ton which side loses Or wins by the stock gambling trans
actione of the day." What! arb they using old Zach and
the "national honor" fur that too?
LITE NAVY AGENT AT WASIIINGTON.-A letter from
Washington. to tho Now York Herald, gives the follow
ing as to Major Scott, lute Navy Agent at the Seat of
Government, who ivas alleged to be a defaulter,:
"Before his accounts wore settled at the Nav , Depait-
Mont, ho deposited to the credit of the United States
nearly five thousand dollars 'more' than Ito has since
acknowledged to be duo to the government. The actual
balance claimed against him is about sei-en thousanddol
lars, and his seetirities•aro responsible for fifty thomiand.
The Major,.howevor, as one of his friends informs Us,.
clai m ed the "me per ceutago on certain disbursements
as is allowed to_the other navy agents. This was not
admitted by tho Navy Department. 'Phu government,
it is known, cannot be sued; and for a man to obt ain his
rights, must himself ho sued, and leave the decision in
the case for a jury; and this course will be taken. it was
unjust to denounce this gentleman as a duratlieFr, in the
absence of proof."
WITAT IS lit TUE WINO7.—G(II/. Johnston IRIS hOSII in
Philadelphia frequently during tho last summer, and
Jesse IL Burden is nominated for the House oh the fed
eral ticket. Gov. J. has been at Erie this summer, and
John H. Walker is nominated for a seat in the Legisla
ture. The present Governor wos on a whito-waspiti
committed in favor of the hank of the United States,
mode in 1a137, and Burden, Walker,,and others, chief
manners, with Stevens, in fastening the United States
Bank of ,Penney tennis on the people previously. This
loads us to ask "What is in the Wind?" Is there a do
sign to set this rotten concern going again? We hope
our Democratic friends tilt over the 'Stato will keep an
oyo on the movement, and preventit, by sending mon
of tried integrity to the Legiidature.—Pennsy/vanian.
JET Benj, F. Wallace. brother of ex-Goy. Wallace,
who, edited oTavlor campaign paper last surtisnor called
the "Rough and Ready 4anuer." et Marion, Ind., now
publishes an address to the public, in which ho eschews
whiggery and comes out i'dernocrat.
editorial 30.otiagi 6intraiti
A SPLErtipm Place or Wogs.—A ong other ..if -.
mens of Nlichanism exhibited at the Fair on Wed .
day whielf did honor to our mechanics, we noticed .
titularly a bplendid rifle, the workmanship of onr yo.
friend. IX B. Derby, of the firth of .A. 8Z:15).77.
CO. It is true, we cannot epeek ith the eye ,
sportsman in regard to its merits, but a gnished pi .
of workmanship, we, at least, never s r Its superior. I
is certainly worth ones time to call are shop and
amine it. There was oleo come str crier counter
platform Scales front the same chop, t at deserve nett
By the by, as Itt.sse - ri keeps every thing in his lie i
business, living lately replenished his stock, we can,
do better than recommend all who desire any thing of
kind, to give hint it call, at the Shop on French scree
tuon wimr: You CAN.—Wo find t
sons fur rembilns" floating on the gre
perdow, without credit or name of,
think, however, wo detect in their gul l
hits at the "tong faced" hypocricy of t
ling face of that inimitable Yankco pue
!Aar, Ouvin WINDtLL HOLMEa.
R1.:.%5.0NS FOR RISIBIL,
611 COZ I'm 11 , 1P1).1 1% hen Ic l
l'at merry Nvhilr I may, •
For imf, at meat a narrow span,
AL I,t•nt iliterti day.
If care could make the sunbear
A brigbier, warmer hue.
The e% cuing mar -Ailey out mor •
The blue shy book Inure blue,
Then I ,Ituuld be a gra% er luau—
But *MCI` 'I'S not the way,
li‘A eel cot!—l'm happy when I can,
And merry SS bile I way!
If sighs could make us sin the, tees,
Perch ace 1 ;teae not glad—,
morning core the-age's dree4,
garb - ehomil then be cad;
that -mei: the angel's wingi are %kite ,
Arid eLea the y tam , 0411114 Battle—
Since virtue ifears a Crow of
And etre a [Otte or guile—
Since litughter to nut under ban,
• Nor 40 , e111 , 1, clad in grey—
Sit get lupin milieu I can,
Arid merry while I idayd
I's e r , en a bishop dance a reef,
And a otaber 1.1-1 and pray,
A knave at top of luirtune't, wheel,
And a gee man cant away',
Wine have I eeen your grave ones quaff„
eel oar fleet .1110,1 t,
Dal bevel' !ward a hearty laugh
From out a villaln'a throat;
And I net er knew a lumina' 'malt
Maki: sad a young'maiirs day— . •
happy when I can,
, And merry white I may:
U The' Editor of the Gazette says, that "a via
the country" " relieves the mind of dullness." Ha
our cotemperary better indulge in that "healLyitl en
uncut" every week ?
Nov YORK Jot At.toi.—Wu have he r ard latt•
cowiidertiblo talk of a new journal in New York, to
the organ of the "united democracy." The Horal
'Flinisday Kept; the enterprise is now assuMing a eh
and forth[ that it is to be a stock concern, and that
chief persFins connected in it are Mr. Forest, Col. J.
Forney, awl the v.tll known Chevalier Wikoti, uo
Purls. Mr. Forrest takes the major part of the stoc
the concern. IV,• shalt - regret exceedingly to lose I
'ley, for he is decidedly the best editor iu the State,
cannot doubt that such a loss locally, will be more t
counterbalanced by the gain to our cause in the Em
State.
EL7lfore i f s a stray spark, from sumo rhymer's b
w11:61? we h4ve caught tlyinz past us, and caged for
beheeit of our bachelor friend of the Gazette. .Z%lay
not libpe that he will heed the advice of thelmuses,
"Take a little wife—the prettier the better."
As to the sequence of such a step—" hush, my babe
st:II and slumber,"—we say." nix."
Cl=
'l•t preuu•r the beat r ; Of her aunts and comma
Pat her cheek, and is hen Ask them to •• drop in ;"
:qui ilia, to- hi , * Wl—lct her. Dine them all be doren,
Keep her in the home. I One of these odd
There she'll cook our, mutton; You'll feel one melt talk:
Darn, %OW too. IVlien )ou see her hog
if she's tt ortli a button. A thumpling little squalls'
l
Q 3 Among the beautiful specimen of workmant'
exhibited at the Fair, was a set of Copper Stove-Fu I
tore, znanufactured by Mr. B. Hontarr, corner of F
and French-streets. Barney.eertainly gets up a nape
article in the Copper line, and ought to be encoura'
Give him a call.
771' A beautiful lyric for the season by the poople's
It. li. STODDARI., will bo found on our outside.
.lIER SUFFERINGS isburemEaser.E."—A lady in I
ifornia, writing to her daughter in Maine, says:
think Betty your poor mother gives $8 a bushel for p
toes—hears nothing but 'gold! gold!' all day and ha_
seen a green thing since she has boon in the count
We know of n lady 'who thinks if she; could hear'
thing but gold, gold, all day" she would be willing to
$8 a bushel for potatoes, and abjure, "green things"
seine time.
Nunsmtv Itatvsms.—Our cotomporary of the Ga
has turned poet! Ilear him
Take tip y ourarins ye gallant "% Mpg,
And tightibr lIENRC FULLER,
ye bay e done in dare gone by
For Harry - Clay* and Taylor.
Hang out aimin your time-worn flag,
Again the tueman [amt.!
And yy the piercing darts of truth
The Lueutucos greet !
Shades l of Byron and Bryant,—Longfellow, and
hold, wo beseech thee, the raging Pegasaus of the
of the :c.trette! Don't, for pity sake, let him " kic
behind_and liefore" and ,throw him off, and bre
neck, for thou our illustrious friend, the "Dium-Nla
will be::"• monarch of all he surveys," his "right
will be none to dispute." By the by, is that "t
worn flag," Um ono with the "blood-hounds,"
it simply inscribed with, "two dollars a day and
beef."
THE STEAMERDIAMONV.—The passengers on bl
the Diamond—one of the Buffalo and Erie Packets—
were out in the severe storm of Thursday - . 2.3 th, h
united in a card to Captain MILL a, and the other
core of the boat, for their conduct in passing t'
"through.l unharmed, one of the sovereet gales ever
perienecyl i on Lake Erie."
EARIIT to VIE FIELD.—The Vicksburgh Whig
unfurleil its banner for 1.8.52. with "Crittenden end C
insCribed upon it. A .benutiful exhibition this of
consi.tonQ ! "Crittenden and Cuba." indeed!
Vicksburgh man should recollect that the fetter ••C
tniforturato l i n politics. Look at the fate of Clay
Cabe.—lll. two "C's" will fare the earns fate, or iv •
no judge of the future!
VT' Wh-d_hit coin° across our exchanges
.this w
They are all running over with wit and poetry. He
tho last effort of the kind we have soon—it is the p
idea of the natural tnodus operandi of the manes(
of woman'Nipsi
"She next made tvotnau—as the story gees—
With an 1111131'01ed material and art;
Cat e het a tbrin, the ehoirebt one of those
That stake aught beautiful, and to her heart
Ais VT to totk•n mass's—and forted the rose -
h
I.l,e lb c h i t: u t i i: , : d i it to ra
‘ h t f. i ireo w
801 l
chew
et
at 7 ti chips
1),
She went to nork and finished off her lips I" -
.• + g 'toy
-1 y
111.1surLbT Di_srlye . —Dr. LiebSg says "Womel
horn to be married.' Undoubtedly. I Men are bori
die. too—brit when you come to trdk of their preparrh
r
for the event, they ere as little fittod for it es the girl
the .. f uture state" of =tarn°
{y. Yet. 'Nome°
horn to be married—most of them and to be terribly
appointed in their connubial relati ons—souls of then
D There is a whig politician i
by tholunn appellation of "intone
can beat it—we have ono, rennin ,4
is blessed with neither "intellect"
it is said he succeeded in "teeth . 1
handsomely when the United Sta
venia was chartered.
133 The Boston Courier laiigh at the Philo&
North American for its bugaboo fca end is awful di
of courage ahout Poussin affairL The more ND
people look at it, the more it will appear to them to
political trick, The North, American continues to s
its head profoundly, but 'there is nothing iu it."
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