-~~':: ;,•:~~- ~:n.-:tom :.. THE .DEMOCRAT. 101(031.t.lthOBAr Thursday; fikt- JOHN S. -OMEN, and HON. W3l. P. will accept oqr,thanks.for:cepi6l of their respective speecheii, ' on:tlia var. Trensendbus WsiO' 'Meeting in the City olf Se* York. :.•.,,, On Saturday eveitioccrOck, the Democracy , of New Y.orh ,assembler ' in \ mass !netting at Taminany BAR)? thb puipcee Ofespmsing their views and feeling 4 in relationitOftliAles lean war, and :id' : sustaining and t ncouraging the GoVtrnment in its Further prOseention.— • .- .t .So large: and2enthu's iasiic% a Meeting, judging from alineceitids, seldtim if ever asseinided in the " V ii - Wipiim.' ph6 Globe sayi" never have wewitneSsed.witilu the walls of Old Tam many 'a more numerml . assemblage 'than that which convened on Sattnday - evening last. A mong the thousands: - who assembled there, but one feeling prevailed ; pad that was an enthu aiastieldetermination ti sustain the Adminht tration in the prosecution of the war until an bortoratlepeaCe is obtairiteC This meeting will mouse joy and gladliesi throughout the Union. It was - one of the inolt harmonious political nssemblages we ever stw. ' Our Whig oppo nents confidently relieg !tj ol! disturbance.— The perfect harmonya :d.cordiality that exist edt throughout the end e.proceedings astonish ed then, as well as Soliie few in our own party, who have preerred to have had a division a mong Democrats on this important oecasion." The principal "orat,fds were Gen. Samuel Houston, Senator Fo4e . , of Miss., and . Mr. Brqwn, formerly a me+er 'of Congress from one'i:of the . Westerti S,es, each Of whom was exceedingly eloquent, la4gumentatire, - and eon vineing. • tt Sketches of the remirk's of Gen. Houston, in relation to the Texas boundary are given in another place, and willfie:read with deep inter est, aiid create energelie . applause. Resolu tions were passed condOnnatory of the Lexing ton platform and, throWlng the responsibility of the war on Mexico, and ,also guaranteeing the 'support of the New I" . rk Democracy to the Government until a penie, giving us " indem nity and' security," shall have been attain ed. They were reCeiqd with rapturous ap plause. A Correspondent hating kindly furnished us with a detailed account of the Meeting, which may be found in another - column, a further re port from us is entirclyouperfluous. Canal Cornmissloner: We observe that thei names:of quite a num ber of gentlemen, all d4iabtles.s eminently 'wor thy, have bpen nientioed by the press in va rious parts of the Statti for the office of Canal Commissioner. This i all very well, and un- questionably proper, iniasmueli as the Conyen- lion to put in uominatOn a candidate will as semble in less than foul. weeks from this time. While considering this subject, as it becomes every politician, or editor to do; use have been, led to inquire wby a candidate ?or that office, the right kind of a mait can be produced, might not be selected from the Northern section of the State ? or why Striquehanna county, which Las heretofore been diffident of her claims of this character, may not be honored with such a selection from her blirderi ? And the more we hare reflected npotf, the subject, the more confirmed have our im(tressions become that no good reason exists' whY it may not. On the contrary many consi4ations appear in its fa vor. If there were node other, the simple facts that Susquehanna Colinty is one of the strong -holds of the Democracy of the State—that it is a county to which 'Our Democratic- friends may always look with st4ire confidence for the upholding of our flag, Oven when . it trails in others; and the State, Orough their recreancy, goes ovef•to its enemies and plunderers,) and that it has never beenfionored with the selec tion of any elective St4te officer from its bor ders, are enough to espblisli its claims, at least equally as valid as ot4rs, prbvided it can fur nish as good and as available a man. This we are eertin wsean-dc4and Many of them. The Ruestion here arses whom shall we name from annuli these we tii i eut entirely Competent and worthy for that offire ? Ilere We find our- Selvesin rather an embitirang situation, as it is assuming most too mush for vos;ito say,in the absence of any pliblic expression, whom die Democracy thi4ounty *mild delight to support. But bold ! Our en4airassment is 'relieved I,y,the kind widsperinis of _a fri'end at mu' el bow, who refreshes out-.recollection that our Coady Convention, one year - ego last January, expreleodi a onauirnons prefenmee feriVrt.r. tan Esq., and 'instruited our Delegate to, the 44 Of, March :onvention telloiVing, to present,U ;Ai 'iims . - es; *re then se harenOarniiintifiiithenominatieb to-Wiona not their/00 Hofiti:ebjccgcm.ealibe °S iced; Than Mr. ilassurr .fs4 truer., , sounder, more •active DemoeraCcanliClonnd in the State, =gait rot : bigness 4i; A* :i 116 " 21 0. - . t act=lx; one 41110 kunws hint 7 /4 11 01 1 4 4, t Pronounce tm P e tei l t• 4o d:4o 4 "at• The noetini►tioin if Mr , Ilmgifikr; iie.°/"Ilt; credit t 4th (if -- Mai& V;onren= ;the 04te'!4-C°PPTIMmt to #;4 4 4 Nortbera - dection:of titttStateitnti inner of tte - anceess4 the Democratic ticket October next. ! 1 . • 1 February 10;1848. - . -• • • Chirlfir,ndF;fl..* ii,ft4lY 4_l; ':'':::'; ti . &T. ,' ,•,-; .. ‘ • - . , ,_. ~, ~ r, '', li•-' I ..T 11 !- 1 0 4 10 2 .hduresi ''' r , . 'V' Mint littlSjbasiheei'donlil- by this bodifof public or *era. intrist. "!~Petitions and risi. o ifferi4lsl siiiitinno to be 0i43 in on all iitibjeits aand't foriSlirimrposes,i- In the is- chastising 063k1 tails (and 4rtSring of ilei ones) &wit to tic ..fixatiotil t iot pisoat forliAding 0.-. lections. ' • 1 ; A bill to protect married woman - in the use of their preperty and to preVent it from -being taken for the debts Of their husbands, has been reported. , Alen to 4xenle:property to the , valim of .$4OO, from4viiiia - sakt on even tionanfiLidistrese for Vent." Also one for th: , " regisirral marriaieS, births and deaths In', this tQunmenwealth."l Also one anthorizingl thcl3aiie. of new relief:notes in plaei3 of - those n4iiikeikation, , and badly 'defaced, which • was ligiliptpd e by the Se nate on Saturday—ayes 22 naysl.... Al bill to .extend the charter ofthe Furthers' k_3.keebithics' Bank has passed the - Senate. An amendment malting the Stockholders joint-. ty-and3mlividally lipblo was,.. voted .down, of course, bv, the Whigs: — It will find, rather a sorry itime of it-in tie' House, we opine; but' if it gets past that Watch, there is a Governor who ivill.withenii..douht arrest its further, pro gress:unleas it .earries',:. with it the "liability principle." Quite a number of petitions for a _Railroad 'from Pittston to the Great tend, wo notice,. I have been presented by Messrs. Streeter' and Taggart-in their respeetiVe bodies. SCE:: TING ALARAL—The great War Meet ing at Tammany Hall seems to have given Of the iTribune, " particular fits,"-to use a phrase of perhaps rather more pith than dignity. , The nextday, he came out with one of the most bitter, malignant, attacks upon the meeting:and the GroveHnent that . we ever read. He is evidently alarm 4, and it requires no ex traordinary acumen tAidivine the cause. Bach a voice—which is in fact but the voice of the people throughout the nation upon this ques- tion—as weniu.p,fron4he countless masses in and around The Old 'Wigwam, is certainly enough to terrify any 'Corwin traitor who has not yet, as John Donkey would have it, " paid the debt of the Nation And the debt of Nature." We wonder not that an anti-irar Whig of such a school should scent alarm , in the distance. _ JUDGE MCLEAN ON; TUE WAn.—Jndge Mc- Lean has given his viOws cn the war in %epis tolary form. ; lle says that the war wasimeon stitutionally commenced by marching our army into disputed territory in possession of the Mex icans; and that Congress should put lin end to the war on just and honorable principles. Ike is opposed to the issue of any more Treastry Notes, but fav6rs the authorisation of a loan at l• par. • A cotempdrary has well said : " The letter of this politi4l judge is an alr.minahle piece of partisan bitterness. There is an asperity and ill bilmor in it which evince an arrogant and self-w fled man: The production is totally un becoMing the dignified character of a judge of the highest tribunal in the land. I say so, is alt that this ambitious judge condescends to. fa vor the 'people with; and as if to manifest his entire independence of the administration, and his faithful adherence to faction, he charaetiriz et, the war with contemptuous epithets, and heartily coincides with that miserable craven band of blue-light politicians, who have tun questionably protracted our unhappy differen ces with Memieo, by lending aid and comfort to the foe." Thai judge has shown cleartjr that, how anx ious soever be ipay really be, he is not a can- &date fur the Piresicteney. ILook out ! For counterfeit! s's and 10's on - .the Sussex Bank, N. J : , some of Which, we learn, arc cir culating wheriattcy can in these parts. Bicknell's Reporter of Tuesday last cautions the public s against new counterfeits on the People's Bank, Patterson, N. J., Trenton Banking Company, Trenton, Bank of Penn sylvania, PhiLldelphial, Chesapeake Bank, and Washington Bank, Maryland, described as fol lows : 5'..s spurious: 'Vignette,' Eagle on a shell. Rawdon, Wright & hatch, Engravers. 10's spurious. ; Vipette. An Indian look ififf at train of 4ars. On left end nn Indian and 'an . end l ie ship . Bowdon, Wright, Ilatci& ,Co.,Ngravers. • .„ Counterfeit 511.1 M: the Bank of Silver Creek, N. Y, and 2's on the' , Mechanics' Bank, Bos ton, arc also reportedi • OrlitAGE AGAINST A SOVEREIGN STATE. ',.h co*spondent of the Union states that The iliFilig pariy in the House of Represen tativeiglowa have 'Mined to go into an dee , tii, n iOn Stites Aenatori and Jedges of the tiaprJeaie Uourt;od,..tiving a majority of one , tote : ii the Hon e , can keep off an election. .1 . regret tbdt we stall continue to be unrepresen 7 teal iti:t icl&tiite iliksessiMi: It is, bewereri taiia IP.' 6;iiisiam-.lile excitement --- r -V.. , . 1' -,... .....-- , sails;:iiiclitbe, perimiittit are highly indignsrit: ii'e'lias4,iiiiiajority 413 joint billet, and .atio tritbe! i to. ...Underthese 1 eireamatimees, to bi , l4p,` t iwittieut a represeatidiiii is an -- out." . -, .1v ., , 1 !i' t .! I. ~.".. 1 ~ r • - . 'i*WaOin i row ce itTesPot 4 ent of- the New Yeile`6lt: . wtensays: -i“ Icis now,elenrly under - - /44 04 General / 1 3 1- ?4, Wil - inf Wtill tie.lne ' Optf, a i. ' l;ikillfrie,ds;gdiAeWbjet Conven tion, , spd'thit, *yaw will !tide "kerma of their delibernanne; - lopenkliti on the iiiheit ad; ibil i iilF -I ,i li - '.--- --.'ilt: l' ', . :i - --:- .', -- • ~.. i I'nE:SMALL.t Pox igq, and ice net/ices, in tit's' poriingb; se we earn has been reported in , . venous pots of the County. 1 , • - Ces r rieliadeice 'Deli -' Democrat. H(.l _ a 1X141%-le. ‘ .7 February 1, 1t46. a2 * : - *r That the report of :the prOceed i: .... , y", •.i . . . , • ings of tte;firai mcetinkaegiven.in the papers I. 7 .'send yotOIS as comet as could be given, I will myttelfpencli for, 'es ' I Was 'Present, 'and liitenedto,ind enjoyed the w hole. l . ' Ihe.crold was: immense, m fact I doubt wiether a !pore tompiit body of human, beings was ever coirded together, and thousands, as I believe, game to the 'meeting, that could not • get. into thi building. . I was near the strand occupied by,,,the .offa- REM . , cere and stiSakers of ° the meeting, and ma siemalli When there was a sudden outburst of . , applause, at, some remark made by the speak er, a.generil rush would be made by those-from the bad( Art of the room, to get near the PASHA multi can only compare it to the effect of thewiii4 upon a tree in a dense forest, blitz tlo wavingi to and fro, and all is.right. I was astonisheant the order and quiet that prevail ed. i , Gen. Iloinston is truly a fne looking man, and an (=Went speaker. In Short, the speech ea were all eloquent, argumentative, and fulbof pstriotisn4Creating the greatest possible en- thusiasin 4iyoughout the whole crowd. There , , was some ffW who felt a diSposition to annoy the meeting, and which were very properly in vited by ohe of the speakers,' to be taken out and treated to a little hard cider. With but this exceation, the meeting passed - off with quiet good; order, and was conceded to- be, by tall present; the most enthusiastic, as well as one of the)ergest meetings ever held on any occasion-moo heralded too, by all the newspa itiers of t 4 city, except , the Tribune and Ex-, I press., ' They of course, could not sanction the proceedings of such -,a meeting without violating i their mandate from Clay, Webster, Corwin & ICo. ' The ~x press said but little, and I will 'give it thekcredit of publishing the Resolutions and.Speecims. The Tribune gave vent to a `most bittei invective, of which 'here is an ex tract : " '4lle advocates of more butchery and subjugatiop among us, convened per order at ITarrmanyillakto rekindle by lies, and' liquor, he fainting, flichering flame of infernal war." 'Perhaps lan account in part, for this; though I am awa4 that no man but Mr. Greely him self, can ktio w why he possesses so, much anti • American reeling: , After the,meeting was over, I took a stand on the side walk near the door of the Ital) where I might watch the coming out of mylriend (Mr. C. the P. M. cif Brook- Ilyn, who tient to the meeting with me, but in ! the crowd= and got departed from me). I bad I been stan ding but a few moments, before I heard a lire saying, "there canes Greely, 0 .1 how I wlld like to see Old Ilottiton hug 1 him." . 0n turning round I saw Mr. G., and judging Om the countenance he put on, he did • not at all iapprecate the joke ; and probably Icould not forget the remark which, with the '.immense ciewd, had so ruffled his mind, until he had peaned the article alluded to. , Hastily and Respectfully, li_____ A VoLOIE oe THEASON —Gen. Pearce, in Ids specelqat Concord, N. IL, last Wednesday on the occasion of his public reception, stated that on entering the national palace of Mexico, our soldie; discovered a bound .volume of ex tracts fronj the different papers' throughout the United 'S't4tes opposed to the war. These ex tracts wcrii taken indiscriminately from all the oppositionlpapers, and were used by the Mex ican goverment to produce the impression a mongst th 4 people of that country that the peo ple and prOs of the Unitell States were oppo sed to the• War. , ,Tue FItIMONT Tnl:4.—Lient. Col. Fremont• occupied the Court several days in reading his defence, which was principally a refutation of the evillenee on the part of Gen. Kearney. It is supposed the trial will result in his acquittal. Eli)TOß=PleaSe allow space in your columns Present my most grateful acknowl edgementlC to the many friends, for their very generous and most acceptable donations at my house on Friday the 28th January. This ex prtitibm iiannot be forgotten; its influence must survit V° many changes, and prove in after days a source of most pleasing recollection.— We doubQuot, but Goa is inCul of such or fiees of lute, and as they are done in his name, will pletgonsly reward the doer. May all who have thus manifested unto me and mine, be abundabtb blessed of God, and ever know the preeioisness of that t precept assurance, " to do good aild to communicate forget not, for with such 4acrifices God is well pleased." ' MII. eIIAY.--In thel Whig General Coni mittee of *his city, on 'Tuesday evening, Philip none, Pro*Orient, resolutions were adopted, 58 td 3,deela4ng Mr. Clap the first choice of the whip of this city, for President, and, as they believe, tb*. irsrehoice °film whigs (If the 'Un ion • also, tin favor cd . ai lotion:1k Convention. —inn Irk Tire. Pef.Tt., , . ..ELEcitfror .1 SVfATOIC is LIWIITIANA.— I ' Ou the ~ .4th ult., Pierre Simla (dem.) was elected United Stites Senator, to take the place ok. goo. Henryl Johnnon, Xwhig) 61 ;* I Stiale, - 684-four ,whiga haring voted' for the latter.. 1 i . , I . I , .AisCinttua Msaii4.-0 .. the l ,lBth tilt. ; a I color t il,npomloy the nilie of ohn Yates, real- I ding at'Priaipum Yang , N. X.-- and his' irife, kiokibor,oilldiiim' eteen mouths old, Oa plae -oit upon 'hot 344, 'and ttere ;Emma it: d deith ;' Ittran ei,ertse for A e trek oue ;if tt o fiinds lini d That A had the Vickets. -,, Tait V , -Nam Csiim—"The Supreme Court t r. ofthe - Nnilta States iSvediissisme4 tie appeal , of lalrs.,Citnier, who. imed l to 114 the wade of Ciaterel - lt„. yin N'' on - hal- ground of- a want oTj o iiisdietioa)Vi feb,l ' ef f ect;confirms confconfirms e i t the 64110(4 . 4 the. Co below, which settles the case adversely to the plaintiff. M=MI Arknowledgeme,nt. 'Jou:4Na Feb. 7, lIF4B. EiEll BE Speefh Of Gem ot. The following an extra' ettrotn the apecall of Geri . Houstonlit Tat:dal - imp Sztil an i 6 sub ject of the war 14d the boargary, 'of Tpx=p3.-- It is an overwhelming 4f4diCation of the Gov- 4 , ernment, antlinnst produce a. profound impres sion on the mind of any person whowill read it unbiassed liyparty influenies, and 'tratninels.' `We are happy to find the•viOvirsl we; 4ave pressed upon this question in tiro or ttree ar ticles, so clearly, ably and triumphantly sus- 1 tamed as is done by the reatakspf Get). Roes ton ; . We' should-not -be properly; able to appreci ate the truth and justice of Our condition, and , of the present war; if we did! not revert to the causes of this war, and the petition in Which wo were placed, at the time of its commencement, in relation to the civilized tvoi•ld.. I grhnt you, fellow-citizens, it is true in t•eferring to those speeches, of which we hear se much its respect to . this war, that in part; it has grown up out of the annexation of Texas. ; But in that an nexation the best of the barghin was yottrs, and you ought to be satisfied. I say the best of it was yours, not so much in the materialiyou got I —though by the by, that . was not bad ; but in the extent and-richness of soil, in thejvarietyl and beauty of climate, and in the variety of those institutions we posscsied., We load no thing to learn of these institutions andiprinci ples in this annexation ; we imbibed them all with our mother's milk, wit returnedito you, i chastened, it is true, in the Ochoor of oxperi- I once, and taught by the bitter lessonslof ad versity. The great politicians of this dey hie now .put themselves in opposition to this war; and yet they were willing ;.at its c4minenee mint to embark in it. • They then said! it was the duty of the President to . fix the boluidary of the newly acquired country,' and no they deny that her boundary was that which she i possessed before the annexation was made.-L -'lThat boundary, howeter, fellbw-Citizens,iwhich they now deny to Texas, was hors, and ibelon ' ged to her by right of .conqoest. We , ained it not by rebellious force or power. IV nev er rebelled against Mexico!, but she, - it, was, I who first violated our constitution, -subverted our liws, subjected us to the most cruel des potitan, and drove us, by her injustice,yian ny, and oppression, to vindicate Our fights, 'which were .the • common rights of trectien.— The object of Make, in her system of :4,spo tism and oppression; exercised against 4, was, lif possible, to sweep us front the soil, tog anni hilate the whole race of . us, ; awl not to Isuffer one of the Saxon blood to leave the itußess of his foot upon the soil which we inhabacil.-= What did we do? We resisted this Ipres ision, -we asserted our lawful: righte, we istab lisbed fur ourselves a . provisional !government, land we continued on in the tope that a 'letter Istate of things, a better government, weld Le created in Wilco; that the other tales would, like 'ourselves,• assert their rigl: ' • un der the Constitution, Which had been soante -Ifully violated. .We continued hoping th' t. the Mexicans themselves would rally to sum at us and- redeem the country tram despotisu vio lence and oppression. We Went on in tl en joyment of our republican liberty—we entlured ! till our hopes became fainterond fainter.r. But notwithstanding all this, it Was not until 836, when Santa Anna marched against us wi b his !myrinidons, threatening our. destructio and 1 devastating our fields and our country t was not until the day of the Alamo, when • a),Jrave I and Spartan band was sacalficed by hi 4 san -1 guinary hordes—l say, not until then, when, driven by desperation and oppreSsion, did we declare the Declaration of rlesau Independ ence. Then it was we made that declaration. 'We made it in tlic face of ltaveu. We then pledged our lives, (Ali property, (that, indeed: was but little,) and our sacred honor, that we would vindicate our just .and natural rights against the despot and oppressor. We did I this, and after the tyrant lay manacled at our foot, we liberated' the captive.. It was after the declaration of Texan Independence ; after • that the despot was in the military . coirtrol of the country, when victory : had justified our cause, and triumph and success had crowned our Declaration of Independence; it was then that the tyrant directed the - Order and _sent, the mandate to his general, Filasoln; to vacate the i territory which was now thOndependent ter • ritory of a nation which had risen up and de dared its independence. That mandate - Went the next morning to Filasola; ordering him to I retire with 'his troops from the soil ot . Texas; land where did he retire? Where did lie stop i They did not stop at the Nueces. That was not the boundary of Texas, they did not stop at the Rio Grande. That was not the lboundary. But they marched on in pursuance ! of the aiandate,.to leave Teaxs, and they first stopped at Monterey, leaving all Texas behind I them, and leaving it free. , The • government agreed with Santa Anna afterwards upon the Rio Ciande as the bontdary! of .Texas, and no lquestion ever arose as to. the Nueces being its 'boundary pending the negotiations for annexa- Ition ; but it is only since this war began that f this question has been raised by its enemies. IBut still more... By a law passed in{lB36, it was promulgated to all . the.civilized would that the Rio Grande was the boundary- of Texas. ' This boundary was then flefined ant ' strictly laid out as7beginning at the imouth of-the river of that name.;. then running a north-west ' I cotirse up the middle ofthe river, from thence crossing in a line, particularly defined over tfie Iterritory of the United Stateh„ on to the ocean. This was then declared; by law to be the boun dary of Texas. This ws.s nit done in acorner —it-was not hid under* Inthel; but it was . I promulgated in the face of all ! the civilized world. This was in 1836. iThbi was thenre cognized as being our boundary by France-r -it was so recognized by)itelgtum. It was not questioned by any one,: ; or by any Kurd, bet'. i that this was mir.botindary. 1 ' 'Piro man can cern test•this truth.. All Christendom recognized this ttc,:be the boundary : eif Texa# by. their sub, sequent acts. ,(Great . tipplante),. Thit thia,iii not All—the.eliidetice thiek4ns inpon. me, but time rili not :allow that • I ,shonia - bring - it - all ' for - ward before - , yoit,. - When: Mexico : invadedl Texas, she crossed the Rib9rande, and..wiat. 1 1 ed And plundered - the ranchora - ,Whieli were on 1 the Texan side' of it. When ship camp to TAT our country, to rayage‘onrlankto burl, our %lb bgetrand °ajar : ins, Mid :spread„destruction and .desolation pieri•lie*ar.try.of.Tnicas,, the amnia theltio Grande , tind .. tlien . and there tape began :her work, of ..spolfforttl*vastatiOn. Aid:a g *ln, after ; these,.' When !sh e se,4, drivenittway witkielleny. IT Or 'hold- Fier - - - eititens,risinialiulketi • bne* . ,asahl to hide iiii I herlastnesses on'.the .other , ..4ido;ot that river; Thjsnaiii:.dOcliircil and ; nianjfesedAefore , all . the world to be the "boundary of Totes, ,and this ION; before the act of annexation-with the 171EN3 ME I • 6: 7 7. - 1 ... . ''—r viiiie-a:, statif. l ' , ,,' Xik-.ii, , Ois}vF-:. 3 4qxi `coktaf-'l - twe; seccessive otititiges-;ntootr', ~s e xas,' -OM refused td leitizt:xviiiie4lliy experte;litit4. 4 , :1 l' Thel!resiiient of_lo r tiu .. 1, lord°itlit-sP . ( l le= pared . 4an ~ :e' y,' wlnel l idere over,,t ytte,,,,,•-, te.„ Grande, reduced Guerre,r64' d' T4111'414 it' ti at its leisure, sayink, tiff 2, ttiallyi ft,!-;Dlex- n it rico, ' Woman cross ovaint4, ,0 11 l'i ern,#ris us *ell as you can into - our!': yo :stayloolou • are; and we iilllet yot(elon ,:'', They :74 f iver 1 crossed again. ~= T he upfertnnite IMpr_'..4.. e ditien arote oit'ii,f thie itate'Of thiiiii:Z. ,It cost ,us much trouble te teach; 'Wile:4 thatJour }boundary must be resPeeted; by ;110, or - else ; that her boundary would not lbe regarded by us. . But this is not all. Mekieo i 'acids . oiett-' pied, this country after;iour - independence -ins declared andatsserted.: We PosseSsed-andion , copied the conntryouid would nofi-pertnit lithel estatilishinent of any:Mexiettkeettlen(en4iitbe country we occupied.:, In rah theinegottatut which were entered into in relation' tn.thlar mistice, there was no , question ritized-0f;44, the I Nueees being the boundary of' Te*asi butlour; commissioners went on-the other' Side got he Rio Grande to meet the Mexicanitionktils.. on ers, and there it was they negotiated; for tqar mistice. Again—whqt Santa- Anna patron ; end to the war, hO denounced all those f;ho !shad(' be found in league. out this; side 'of; the Rid Grande.i This abeam that he _himself, re-* 0 frarded this line as-ourilionndary. ; But tills is not all. When, in 105, a'ireaty was t rade by the nen+ Executive, Jones, with thev - ernmerit of Mexico, lhich t teatY, n'as; ea led la the Cubes Treaty, lk cxico, Iby teti. oWniact, I then recognized the Rto.Grande as the todnd- I 1 arl of theßtate of Te*as. . . he'never ;ralsed the question of the Nneces being theibounillary of Texas. She recognized' ageinithe . .Rio Grande as our bounchtfy when she rkiquirell of Texas as the cendition of acicoolvledgingiber independence'. that she should -not becomet.; an nexed to the United States. All this, fellow- Litizens, which 'I have here mentiened, land _'note which blight belinentioneil, ',• vies q ea ablish the fact that the Nueees nevei ; 4 wash the oundary of:Texas, until it was ma. ao" ),ere n the United States.l - Me*ieo herielf never bought it td lie our boundary; we Markedi out lur boundary by our life's lilood; win obtelned t by the sacrifice of our eitizenir,;and by nible conquest. ' It Was recognized by; 14,exicofand ' the world, and it would be a scandal to tilts U. States to give it up. 'KLobikeries of "Never, never !") ,We made ourselves by l'ouragts a free, sovereign, and - independents ration, -Land ire had the right to annex entselves to tlng 11. j states. We did so. iWho will say it wael not 1 constitutional to take tis' . It was the vines of I the American people Which toolus,i into ;:this' teepfetleracy, and eoW that we.;44 part ot the Union, it is the duty of the li:xeitiveto 44fend i the soil acquired to the confederacy. 1! The e is no question what is tli4e boundary, for itbyes defined,: asserted, and maintained lieforo the annexation was made T„l'and it hes, never 'von questioned, except byj those ; who; have raised ' the question from party motives: and faction. ' Was it then, the. President'S duty tb .de cnd !the soil of the -Unites States'? Or di ': he, 1 withdut any cause in i ig about this War, „pen I poor, oppressed. 'Ale ico 1.- (Laughter. . I I sympathize, indeed, n . th Mexico; I bav no antipathy to grad y gaint....t her, but Wh e I teat) divest myself of al- bard feeling to rds her, I cannot divest myself of a holy i devion 4 • to ley country, and her righteeueentise,. a nd I must spurn the man who would peeve recreant • • PI to the sacred cause. of his ;country; espuse that of an alien. (Three cheers called fo4and rapturously given.) ;I. cannot .rbgard asgel low-citizens -the men who 'array the:11411-es 1 ag ainst the.eause of their eountr) •'— wbo, . tcle - I tame its armies and the g lory' they huge aquir -led for the nation, wl o array then3selveit a I - gni hit the ,adreinistra ion of their country, I seek to srtengthen the bands of the enemy. Such people , de not ikticet, or they lavefor lotten all wisdom of the mind. Inapellei§ by ; action, they are the enemies of theircounffs ' eause—euemies of that glorioua entlittsnism, which animates the American patriot4-vihile they reserve all thei- feelings and pityij for "poor 31exice," and Ore nothing atiall about the United States and their ?own eonntryl I Say that you have gotta good bargain in get ting Texas; and I, who say' this—l think I can prove it and make you belibve it. ',3, As Surely as to-morrow's 'sett will risk and pnisue its bright course along, the fifnuneent of hear en, so certain it appears to'nii mindfmusqthe Anglo-Saxon race perVade the wholeiSouthern Ixtremity of this vastjeontinent, and 'the iiee- A° whom God has placed here in this 1!!nd, spread, prevail, and pervadb throughout the whole rich empire of this great hemisphere.— The manner of the consummition'of this gfand result I cannot predict ; but j there is .an in atinct in - the Amer' 'oplo nitiCh hripels Hum onward, whiel 4 the; th pertade thii cantinent, to 4 ! its •sorircesP 'to _. Civilize‘ v o its people, al the rich bilun ' ties ofthe creating ' the Divine Pievi donee. 1 , ; ‘ ....L.._..........„ ' i - Revenue of Me% e, gross sizinittat of the nominal Raven Ode°, ! aceordidk to offfeial documeutS m 5145; andiraniiiit ted G overn G to our Goverenerat:Scottli a mounted in 1.1344, 905 - 34 Fr: ! terlitin ~ , . deductions are ma Ter, tvhid,b - re4ueo the amount to about sierenteenh risillions—tthe average annual receipt .into' the - TreasutV for fourteen years. ' The ettproduee of !the Cus tom Houses during th t petd, a verage p 6- 896,a45. The annua prodt osi;7lne the pee - ious metals is cstim ted 1,009.--r d/obe: ' Railroad front V a. !exit if his contemplated-vo n , s mt °film • icaytt' no states, passe of ,nine, mod; Crosses no straivps; the i 7h' great ; s ...,, is 'very gradual—not More tian .. t yatd - tfid' a quarter ni every iindt*d—S 4, theAtituri ..`of the`ground 4tretnelyfisvorabo ut Almiiii himself ' libetElly iy *hid du uni . te( preirLE gad arriic~ lan. 14th;. night .l o :rahrzre-hopses. ,- - Do al ___ -__ _J4L _ _ , at, 100; T Tliptilg AdiAlGiiijriiiviiig,On rd 4ii tios e icalt, P.l , Ti'flirongs,- , Eik,cand I on. T om Th4o ) , and isuitqi,,artivellA Ilavin on 'ha 'ha 13th Inia. • Il' -----. ' ,-; I 4 ----r. -,- ~ II r r. 4441 f, u he i t uquil ` blitoroform.ao lii ortieer ropoits a'l , 4 oform to 4 14dy . l'af .h 6 ,wasi Il'efrfectly, A f 1 o 04 ,‘,). loOktiii or ;W it hi ini,444 - 4ftei tl orair4h6 'Wilts lita' ; Insled about half in .Wporatively (idiot. =2== MIMI =ME= to-ntrAaro to-V *hum ------, 0111 1 P ill nisißdi-ofsQo. e itfiltesfer J o itiliciltiO''kire 10- , kw 4inguAT 41 1 and 1- previouir it, ileolt, 1144. Ai cit. 1 ' tiott 0014 10- slunibes; Bo' 11- end ttleti - a ke, ..`! ; ; ME ...1 'Z'. 4. tot:l*m - iv) , 1 -T i ihn4teamet. Acadia anis , at'llontot t on the Mil dayl of t4s , mynah, - with tif,n,',.weelw l i f er news frnin - Surope-..,Tliehi: ereilore - fnilure; b*ol 11tifiiiild Ittonliad-1 . tiortentedn sliebt 'decked; , : Tlin tn neynnike _will gad 'i Th e , Oldies in Tre l old, *et*. so*, : 00 1-1- jtiever. 4 - 1 1 10 )'outig"ti*Ou'Rf SPLia v*lnttpp(*42;te b e Iwo ItY iqc. e9Pilitolt,44/tO.Dg by Angle hair pis , still 0t0Pe0.4 041 over t: 'leads- of .men- Kiel's.' ''rt is inpartedzihat Itodel 'Wee 14 nrrendeied to` thevPreneh , doubtful; IFine. inn is nearly its ,bairthiiseis , nin Ireland s 4 ft, was last. FlOods of sp ecie I went arriving! in Loudan—tsveive Million po: - ds of bfilliOn wen in the viilts.lof thillank;,- From,- Anita W and bunts here;' con , "ng to interfer e with, thd affairs ofilsWilerlit ~ .I: 2L massacre inui tiken place inVan. - The had ehaig. ed upon:the pro* ind:lollWere killed. J e. - new TExas,--rDates from Galveston to the 22a have beeii received. - :' '• ,- o . A War hadJitokeii . onf betwee n the Delaware and the....;caniarldie, tribes foriki diens, , and a blookyttlAglid,Oek-placq in I whieh thefor mer were' - 61tt with a'l ' s of, twenty-86 Iyarrioni,?:; Ther - .6 twiel ` of !war' is attributed, to the'Deliwitres having en _ aehed upon the hunting grOuOds, ,f . ti!e Cm nehes.-.. i i 3 1 The hissirwurriors will pZobalily.ezeite the I Delairaie, Nitinnlrto 7 -revenge, and _they will probably rabwkw-la rge force to carryon this new IndiakWr a- ~ ;> , • • • A' party - - iif[C wilinelies• hail stolen twelve ri horses from the` einip _of paV.. Gillette, on the Selo, some taimi Ince., Jae t. cozzens, with twelve men, tillci ed in pur4uit, and after nine _ days' _travel,T - * took the Ipar9i and routed them complete*k illing keyen,.und re-captv i ing the horses Et eli, and seizing a large num ber belonging teiiiindiani. , i , . • , 3 It is rumored - that 'siveial:tribei of Indians have volunteered to carry n - *war against • CI CHLolloFop3r.+Cliamli6fElEnburgh Jour- ' nal, in the ccitirselof an: article-on ehloroforni, breaks out as foil' s: ' The Into,- it undoubtedly exist in per. fection of &tut( ishing iiain in all circum stances. stances. Such i -the anncinneement, and no less, which Wp.in t. make to our readera! A soldier may now. tialte a phigl of chloroform to the field with liiiii and if it: be his fate to be wounded, dna' tfr 'o . '4, nightl, without relief, be may inhale i .tliwy,.por and-be at ease. A ,deli cate patient,, t, , to submit to an operation - fearedto be too at for, the nervous energy a to sustain ie,tiy. .e.this ihhilatiOn, and his life is safe from \idle st the Shriek of the pain. 1 peculiar slais, n ed o of' le suferinks may he said to be abolish the earth by this simple ft ema fluid. - 1r:. - , - 1 -•-• WELL l 'SA D..•-•,.G enera Shi elds remarked, in 1 ' -------- the course ~,4 a: recent entertainment. given to, some officersiof the army in. lliehmond, Vs, that •" Genero Scott, inikht, ihe a small-man in small things4butbo-.was a great man on great occasions—olith'e field of battle, with an ene in my'before Min." •- - ' 'Without fully n doesing - the sentiments of 1 Gen. Shields; w e are convinced' that there if much truth in th . Gen. geott has suffered ireatly tithe fro' - ykiding.ito little infirmities of temper, or fro 'ttetins ;without sufficient thought and delib ration in matters of ccmpar atively ilighi, imp. tanee.' Still, 4e:is a noble old soldier.-4 S a t. Post. 1 . • 1. It • . , TUE ClrO just - , The report Of. the Safitary t Committee, p i lesentedtoiParlianient, at the last- adviees, .tat s that, according to inform t iou received ifrci the Engliiiir COMMIS abroad, the pestilence 41 /3 *lily ,adVincininpon pre cisely ,its fomer i frack of r 1832. - The Lord Bishop of Lohdati had addressed the clergy of his diocese afgreatileogth; Warning them of its approach. We trust-our eastern titles will be prepared as iar 'astissible,for the visit of this dreaded 'disease. . leaulineSs of houses and streets is ibei bet 'proveni f ie oa the part of communities( cle amiss a 'person and rept ar habiti, oulthat . ef individuals.—Sat Post. DEATIth air..pm. L IST ' AVATION —No less i ihan three deaths-I:we - en red iu dial Ths' triet of loy amelaking iri one ay rest Week: . fromni:ttial want and staivati w. I The grst was; that , of a colored woman, : n me Janel Dennis, residing in Brag:4'B,4 . oy ; - th second, of anothei col eyed person, whos ..natne Vreidid not learn, liv ing in Baker 'Etre t; ' and, the. third, of a color. ed woman, mimed Maiy,BroWn, living inn eel lar in Sti4rtuttuin' Court. ;•• .The last ciao was a most dii3tre4in one to view. the Jury at once remd i from starved& are, to death-alt melee choly to vcr. Tun't I light . ngerod fp ley take a largo an ma b, f one Bank, at a single haul, they Cannot be roe& available,— Of ' Bank of Cherhn -. gton, probe a. its way into a Chester Con see ifit is date wissul, in pr If net, the . eminent um] aried bus , ban( ..:•le ft this life ... . hero s only his kaiak e 'Jed: -ae`Sidow of a famoSS,:kr4Se niiN .1,1•-d-jr,itti the idea, ; adopted it, onm - si, , filar. - oe'eas'ion, ividi ii,slight variation; a nd re aikea ofjOr 140 that, "He had:gone to: that ;lased_ plane !here only hit firevioih-ao4d..ba: - :-#"461.- ,i , r-Th . in Y . . t ______ .. 1 .....2 ,-- ;,t , , 1 ,.. 5 . ri 1 d, who bss NKYAII so-` -2r , h o j! iS ki:eturneiktrP.TiTens. ~ t ha t f - . 11 f ? ,....___, wag:not a littla-mipfised . w t ironing t hin' that'Stater ta,ll oifortiWqtYWP. tes f • ",, a h i h i g af ate there— ,g,veli-t9„W.,_ .4.- 1 ,...- ,T- from 31e. prorktion,Jue 41 9$!!!= a ,'"'". , rbeing ; , umbers, Enugrapt**44 Wkin_.'ir 113 :g , 11 1' fi ts e ini as welt fiamibok tates44lloVniiimi-s, thO Old World :. - :'f'tf4.vt, ' liiai. lii-tPio.TTrto <. iiiiiitieborough Eagle itafairt l 3'atilli liieieliof Ver'iiiiii.:,,tt., iivoiliog thomieli4 of 4:iiiiie bonorpd,,iiritrogotive of 10 , 1 1 1 11art,44.‘ ' , ngeruento Ali :ilk dance:op TuesdaY -creilii , l' 'eek invithd thel-keatlcani.n. ' Fanaete444 a. # : ' , end forth, Jo =paid the '. 1 1,iiiii4iegii. viarTfmt:,Tbbliiiiimeia• I ~.. 6foi ti i t iAir. la-grogi'l In" WilailOgiolt eikYrY it e' iliaglpit. V 4 d e b om bed to, retro miaa *tiWilegif ' * tionfor the Otim inotsiit of Pi tialitiiiiCand 'Vie a' Titiiden I. 11 1 0 tiuio or plooe fret coignated, _ I , 1 I • E=IIIIII! .5- VIS. I f • ke ' I ,~'~