., . I + . t i t f - , L t ,1fte . . . 1.f' . : .. ,.. '. ,. .... . -- : "-, ,, - - . "'JlUi.tI..," "II : H. _. 1 __" _, _ ,.. : ... ., .! t -' , trI t-1"" :'jr" 1 .' l. ;#c.:. ,11' :,# i 4 .'t 1 MJr 'T-it. .. .. \iJ 4; :4 !' _, aat'M tjnf ti .i;') ; 1T.- # .. , : ; 'b"".! f. f lU JIltJ.. u fen iiacdwketi "! "il: '' : .. ..0 f'f' .J...., .. f, r..,, t .l.u., 1 -u 1. P .'t, f f. ". .sat a aal"jertaei Dad'tI1U ,Ml.- nko&el1, : .cn dificnli tJ ,' :,4. '+ o:" .y/M ''i !. t a.". .iI'' ; r_ -_ "'. "f..4Ir', .tt ..... Ul.! *. j_ ' otJa , f-t, ; """ .IAJnIIiIoa matthe eharader of a disease,than'it .. : -'" I. ....$1-. ., I.IssPZir"JVn' -1"(" SiSlfr.K- )S-, _. : ahe 7Ua of 1841 sad as;t1 21l&if 7 .0i&'afttrits: ; areJhu.bteai ,.. .I"t /-r I; 'I'm. .t ..' ,.' .. Much 18f..:On. Eheiftwascir'oClhststtR' : that lnorderbtrat successfully -, -,c.. .. tht1''wstre'1>r f1 1,3$1.360 . tii tm .' '-<, 787 tollies, sad 8,173,124,,en e.ihe . psrtioahrly"thbsis e'of the mind j ; -J -*,* ." I' : : ;- Wtof theae'dateswerel"ll; ,00'7 'bodes t,. it tint the subversion of slavery is becoming Democratic, there are Cuba but Spain itself; and not only Spain.- prose or Terse which he..w.nklq.p in hi* and obligations of iDdlrliu.wl; ofStitesand it not destroy, the means by-which they still Constitutionalists among its public men ; Let the maritime states look to it; the star- mind-Mr.Macaulay seized s.maaBiTe: decanter and Re- w a departar from; them i is. Fa 9i \Ir.Irownson srain their wfaltb" Bat both of these classe8 pnblicanl.: eprangled banner in Europe will have tttmtd held it a moment suspended in the'air and argues, the immediate came of tbo-ei the driving the South from their position. then dashed it down upon the table with seek absolute hiv: for purpose France there is no majority, thoughone Nor need economists be thrifty English i I. ietrt bnrningi and sectional nitnoeities?! itinn. countenanced the conduct of the might be created by the mere fact of proclaiming alarmed. No English taxes will be needed hearty about in good fragments will that,while the the solid numerous crystal parr flew M the integrity of the Union and the become a crusade against Absolutism, on nnlese asked'to the Peoples put litioistt, until the latter have they are fight against tie*dining round instinctively started ups existence in America of civilized society. And too nnmTtms and hold to be easily restrained.The grounds sufficiently broad. The first great ;-and then they. can be refused by the stared at the curious isonoclast Not whit to the national independenceof objects secure are, Faithful Commons. The Federation of Peoples - t mYell convinced is he that such will be the politicians and the money-kings have now each nation and the freedom of each Pe>, will atone put out;however, Mr.Uac ula,,who was well fight great advantage against known to the waiters' called loudly for.; his ' Ji malts of the fanaticism of the North, should accomplished their object. By the "compro- p1e; leaving internal and ulterior questions tobe the; 'Holy Alliance Austria especially. >The bill to be made out at the bar,and then pullingy : ea it continue unrestrained; and, so fearful that mise"measures they have succeeded in restrict settled by each People when it shall be free, despots fight with mercenary armies, and Austria with'a'couple of jerks,his hat and his u inbre& _. and relieved from alien control.' We to act : a a short time it will be too powerful to be restrained ing slavery to its present authorized limits and have no, fear that,the Democratic party of Europe -; has of Peoples a bankrupt will fignt exchequer.with patriotic The Federation forces his from head the stand and strode, clapped out the one carelessly the other oa" . unless the conservative South shall aid !. of course hate secured the ascendancy of will be unable to subdue the jealousiesand and will know how to render the war self-snp- flourishing t tie helpless minority who are sound in the Northern political power; and now they would unite in action against the common enemy; xnrting. Yes the victories Governments cost The British la Isrfla. ,ka Free States that he earnestly calls on us not to fain cheek the mad career of their more honestcoororkers but no one can be blind to be the fact that to each national debts; but this victory of the Peoples Something like another project for the acquisition section of that might indisposed accept party shall the means of redeeming national purchase L inert them. -The to "sow the of territory for the British is on hand , South must not now. ; but having helped the lead of any other section,lest itahuold debts. The Two-beaked Eagle governs], 'India.[ They do not call it annexation .: h aye he,"desert the North wind, they must reap the whirlwind j" such appear, ipso facto, to give up its own defensive to devour; but it is*'craven,bird, accustomed that is peculiarly an American appetite They ': Well; the S"uthill not desert the North, are atleast,the, fears of Mr.Brownson who, rinciple. Such mistrust would not apply toan tyranize, not unaccustomed to defeat; the are only going to war with One of:the Satire lib latter dissolution American leader; territorially remote not Slack' Eagle is a bat among the kings; the Princes for certain of deb and other ' s: will show that she is willingly tow after deprecating in eloquent terms a of arrearages . in the sectional questions Furope'aooy implicated Great Bear of the North is harmless where he to take of 'and to fan justice to the foimer.Many of the Union, which trust result from a all suspicion on the score'of sincerity in cannot hug 'the Lion ef England 'slumbers causes complaint, they expect ; indemnification with the costs of war in terri- el Southern men have long anticipated, continuance of Northern aggression;.and after the vindication of liberty, the Republio'wonldbe like a lap dog fall of feasting;,the Bald-headed tory. The latest, accounts from India,state that it zrf disunion to the specially fitted out to take, the lead in the : of the West fresh rom the wilds, har- ." tome have even foretold, and wvnei the depicting the baleful effects of Eagle the Government at'Calcutta has definitely resolved - struggle for national independence,and popular I danlened to the eltment&'bold in flight, sharing -, , f Berth,that the destruction of civilized society North, concludes: "These considerations can freedom without prejudging the external to march an army into the Deccan,:ant ' the the fortune of stars/-is tmconquered; exact satisfaction from the Nizam :,i. * ; Tmlibethe fruit of abolitionism unless .a have no weight; with the fanatics, but they question of any nation. We believe that,the untamed,uns&ted;he casts his eye on Europe "Deccan"signifies south;and during th.'ea-j;- : :t ti&ely' and vigorous war were waged against it should haTe weight with our cool-headed busi- mere hoisting of the star-sprangled banner on and the Atlantic shall not arrest his swoop. stence of Mogul Empire;the southern portion the field would call forth the vast body r tJ .to Hi extirpation; and the signs of the times ness men. and with all that portion of our population of the People Europe of Europe-a rising of the People The Sierra Madre ,Bevolntloiu-Mere Aanexa- was goTerned by a '' Dm,' which signifies rtr ailttte that the crisis is near at band. And that haTe not yet entirely lost their from the Rhine to the Danube, from the ti... i "administrator.0? When the Mogul Empire was _j msaor governs the States of, Massachusetts, to dread the chaos that is foreshadowed'- by for the deliberate settlement gf that social If successful, in the outset American interests debts,the Nizam already.commuted cessions . &if ..fefotont. and Ohio; and is almost triumphant Tree-soliism and anti.rentism,by socialism. andsgrarianism question ousl It which would presses enable upon them them to force most danger-back to and American limits.arms Commerce will push is it avaricious to the farthestpossible ,.and ,of territory, and yet. he is largely",itndismoreoverdiscontented ,arrears, k 4a it New and is and the thousand other urns that 'With the proprietorship and New York Hampshire ; European ground that class of disputes which when it has an opportunity, unscrupulous and L. K_ erfnl even in Pennsylvania are exhaled from the pestiferous sloughs of English Abolitionists, aided bymanceuvoring The mere removal of the Customhouses on the neighborhood theBritUh;flehasno hostile tribe with whom to keep war;sad . up : Sow these six States contain nine Millions old and new England. And in their extremitythey I English diplomatists, now make.them discuss Rio Grande"will not'ratilfT.it.; n-.i1l'wu&' does not like UP'pay for keeping up the troops '?' ; American ground alone. area of its trade extended pandas Duran50 - p Ifll. twenty millions of free persons in the would fain avail themselTesof the conser- so ,inconveniently on; the with which to enable a strange pqwerlo,Veep ' intert.ntion-the in with its and silver mines borders on ' is gold Besides not European , , Is not the case, then,a bad one t.But. tire power and influence of the South-the terventions of.E pe n.Gbetween, Coahuila; ; irwill probably be brought into the him in tsar subjection., end He had his ownSsate, : .these Ain condi- the insulted South! and the Spaniards; 'at' last be. YI1ex'of the revolution; ,Lower California troops pay ,. foreigntrpops"td'payto f'd. which are already a wronged, the. plundered, the Americans present keep the State ,troops in'order,ouxdiasJUltd ton almost others in which the to gain come imminent in Cuba? :: may made to fulfil the destiny which has with tax ratherei3,and. s hopeless,there are Now then fs the time for South bis country, < mercenaries communication of certain political problems for her and then ' The.workinl'out been planned , &k drained I h State and *disorder has taken root. without violence and bloodshed. be of vast serviceto of the'Rio ,:who. re pillaged.the : .i her rights on the Continent would between the Independent Republic the and 1tten the British debt seme P, d Waat hope is there-then, and by what randy The South is in no danger of any of the urn the English people; and not less so"to the Grande Valley, the Gulf of California, and,the 850,000 treasury,or,over flit u11 ons of dollars,inarreasv - colonies. One of-the first'advantages Pacific-will be a desideratum ' ib at the.N rth.Herlustitutlol1l English Oat civilized the disease may b.ex rpt.t 1 We that threaten society its faculties must be c ThepayofhUbwntrcibpsisalsoin Rr- would have the revolution pnsh effect would be. that England To &this : w cool heads"of that he cannot dismiss them itliewouldHs Wwrt thm. is one remedy; ,but at the same as some of the"" of apeech and action unlocked from the present ed beyond the Sierra .Madre,.and Chihuahua, rear annual,so shows deficiency'of.f3g0- .tiae,.we, entertain but, little, hope; because the North-already admit, and spa:many others ,nightmare of,doubt and apathy;* audit would Sonora and ,Sinols,be lopped of from I Iexica .000,far about budget a million and a.half of,dolUrjUfHow. - ?****KlrtMiT that the reined,'win not undoubtedly know, are towers of strength inpregnable > not long suffer.Government n ,to abstain'from At any rate, the present,revolution appears io .the British expect to get paid,by inarching . V I that wild radicalism taking its proper piace'bl the side of"the Republic be the beginning of* great end, ,and.thatjlheextention is , e of this resorted to in to the attacks an armyJnto territory, not yery jmdent . time to;;'nave: the/Union/ with France at the Jsead'of..thesAnli- ; at.jtto distant;day,{of the, United seize and the ! unless mean to .keep itfor ft it nuy,be in time to'preserve&kites which: pervades, under :various aspects Despotic. moTement.;, States down to the.Central,American:States, they Unless,there.is a satisfaction other claims., ; on;! and dvUlzed society' at thee the,whole texture and frame-work, of)Northernsociety. But the commercial and economical..advantogeaof when we shall become very close neighbors lo surender once we.may;. look! lbr.another-.In- : .''Consequently, 'aho id the moral pestilence l thegreat movement would not be'less John Bull's interesting family MOSqUIto In- ,dian ending,toanotherJannexatic.nto.BriU 'in New striking than the political. ?';these,'for iani ",.As'we observe that gone of our late.an J :war. ' desolatinVfary: ish India--not from any.deaire'fif conquest/ . .1\ remedy, is in the States burst out with; touch briefly object to the \ slave ;ebntemporaries holding a the the present, we must necessarily ; ti-reTolutionary but in .order to obtain fiDd 7-gr: course, , f ,Odin themalone. Let them unite 'or even a England, snd other, \Northern- regions : but we beseech the reader to thine' out the considerations forcible removal of the Mexican Customhouses the past and security for tbs ff&Cll - . r. South in.self-defence, .would_ ,:isre_ ;nothing ,which,we indicate! Par the'Americans 'op'th'e Rio Grande;rte infer that there'will beno'procUmations : . : 1 yoftiem in calmly but firmly _Insisting the pickings issued JIIxt. g ,L.'.;. .&"._4 114I ro:".,1 I. '! moreao do than _resort,,to, amputation; ,she 'we need not enlarge upon against Filibustering .. . tte restoration of their: just.-and equal which zee to be enjoyed in the conquered treasures expeditions against Mexco.-=N Y'S>tuu. ' -:11.. -' -' -.1.1" t : could-cut off;at once the offending members, rr 1' .. ; ; "%1 ,_ _'bitattnoNiwsrusss.-TheGeneral .pott.a : aD'MppraaioDor'&he,; abolition and the captured palaces olmperial.1uXJ.1i. has decided that it aofnewepapeni J&wfU1 rot p1b1illJtn without pang saTO that which herlcompnsrionatefympalhy far more solid and general The Irish Couoa. : : ttr " but we mean othmt' draws m retaain- n 'OI' /ss the vine pta *** for .their the The rdetaila of the '..Irish census which now, ' suffer.Ing of . might feel forhmnan For example, the shipping, : adTertaement-for:the cJ1 t . advantages. *n porpoee. ,Ii :the Union and' that nion, wHL>e. to make theirappearanceJDU1e: English J. "T. .J . , begin r ; 't'erribIe tale'of old and once faithful United States, which' seeks an unpleaJ&nt'6ndhuardou tention to I. .. ." !! ,S1Soathtra.sla. ", ,will. be:preserred f. for,the ,-- employment in the slrrs trade;might papers/are in.many instances sppallingly.sig- r j 4k. 44 "7.114$ ciri1bed..0Iid1.d- the North- where it,Is ,' iites4-- -.* ., .." p'y'. find more congenial and not less profitable em nifieant. great decrease in the population: .Bnrl' 1' lixnici't3runirxrs:-=x.adebf of ; wasuken : : : rapidlrj8 the crusade sgabutPespotisnyIn since the time the last census ten medicine out ia Mkhigaa TJaggoartcdyear at a . . think art S% Invigorated. .ntjre tg ploImIl1'm . jeopasrdy'wWbe '. ._ + J the JUnlted States l'Pghr years since,seems to strike the British journalwith : and rot the mittco, iaaterne4'caro 'sadsnedtieris4bszf4r"t8avasititepeaihlt " At ? tied Jhat,"the / "MBg suggesnpon' -- thecho lt ...ttaorieip roo ttelan- form that the respect functions of Venice during,the cmsades i I. mats,_ _. .surprw' and.nearly all of. them, 'e J ; .ss . t i1is baaed the belief that MrCBrownf -I uto,'I.:-, tobe d a epdbl.:, sgainit:;the less barbarous Sartcens;- i.e- .ate. engaged in";thohuaprofitable et deavJrccount ..-...*M4iJ i.eI drat : h .and ckIf. .;W..people rho: would 1 find -abundant.tmpl 1-: to for iton'some reisonabJe;sing eatIfidorhJpoPothesiItia'"ceagrUQn' Monnoairai aweasijtQ flourish Jtrtry where but - halfterriag capital .'k A f .in aUributing the Free Soft igita- EngUab andafterwards # ttat.has 'm TrtaZ-Intbi SUl-W, .lri 10 theses a of Co NjnM UiitMa'of feu: aii tin ootassidottit T,wreeeJesiry' t'tertals ts tinuP lyingth.emanitioteof:rotr = crie another;whileatJakd. xnco'yvttlenefeti Tn.u be 'I i'mlll.iR'Wb7t1t . : K ... ,., f Whether the iu upp1.rmg.the.newly freed lD1'dutries done it,says one,"famint Gnal BaKialw'i.tJetCltf \"t tOr7..1tt i t4Lst1OL I"' : Id.f.i\tl "at _. C D.1d, ,,we...1WI 4$.. t of Europe with the'JI1WsJ otndop- Imbued with' the sectarian' f. ""f."'.,."1ii"i'ni- g .. i .- ...' :V'.r"ifi'Lt r- - "f. .A'"rr#u,a' oonscionabeliefihit" '- >" .. .ifM' 1ah .tttwtll 'infc IDkiia1-nsCl1U'/"Indeed,'thief emandps-t time,"ia't dised'to._.eft it airdowabfwra. J Jy ".,'kt. .e" lrtha.1 .. "!1.1.J' >-.= . i t ,.f.1b'B'Af;, : would'realize the tree compli 'enough tb e'hceo of the & ._41&,. .: %IIIiaL.: _. A ' . clad.: tion of Kurvpe ' lc 1 care # *sjnful w. shoo / -//rata' P' 'J Ko8iifii beJ' tbaV") 1e'j ifa 1to) lqitIa.. eiN 1i.tJ.j "Ii..t"l cii, and.11 ,Free one 'nds . ; 1.il l 4 E-n ra ; alfd.n - lisxey 7Ji r uiiasn-msniatl: : 16.j"'U i1iA tbf jTt cam t e P.fJ Wen otB"I. it'tss **** : rtl .yF. rJ its foremost gists .J.iil\tf4ID- I5 t. "hJ t \ U .I,. &". ) .f snathdsm indeed t. '.1' w.,_ j we oU1f:, .far I ', .o Pa t .". . 'i-