Newspaper Page Text
MORNING NEWS.
BY JOHN M. COOPER.
W. T. THOMPSON, EDITOR
TERMS:
DAII.T PAPER $4 00 | TRI-WEEKIY $2 00
All New Advertisements appear in both papers.
Sulnrday morning, April 20, 1850.
I,ohm of the Ship Clmniplnin, of Plilla.
We ore indebted to the kindness of Mr.
Roberts, Collector of this Port, fur the fnl-
lowing letter from onr Consul nt Havana, giv-
r ^ A “ GES J CIRCULATION! i„f., rmiitiotl of th e loss of the ship Cham-
(&-#’ The Daily Moaning News has now a circu- \ °
lotion larger than that of BOTH THE OTHER DAI- plum, of Philadelphia, on lier passage from
LIES TOGETHER, and consequently is the best | N( , w Y(Jrk t(j New 0rleans .
A Letter from Professor Webster’s
Daughter.— 1 The following letter is published
in the Manchester Messenger. It will be rend
with painful interest, by all who sympathise
with the unfortunate fumily of the condemned :
Cambridge, April 8th, 1850.
“Daniel Marsh, Esq.—Sir: I this morning
received the very kind letter you uddressed to
me, and which I hasten to answer,^to thank
you in the name of my mother, my sisters, and
myself, for the true sentiments you entertain
respecting my boloved father. You believe
him innocent, and you believe what is tvuo ;
he is the victim of circuniBtanccB, a deeply in
jured man ;—that he is innocent, we, his fami
ly know, and nothing on earth will ever take
from us this conviction. We have never, from
the moment he was snatched from his homo,
had a shadow of doubt on our minds, and what
ever the world may say or do, wo shall evor
have that feeling to support us. The knowl
edge of his innocenco supported myfuthor du
ring the hours of suffering in the Court room ;
that it is that gives him and us culmness now,
amidst the many sources of sorrow that have
overwhelmed us.
Far different from what we anticipated, was
the result of the trial, for we had been assured
throughout tho winter that our father could not
be restored to us, and that at the trial he must
receive justice for tho many wrongs that hud
been heBped upoirhim. 15ut justice fled from
the Court room and prejudice took her place.
Yet hope still lingers with us, for we trust
tho public voice will bo raised against the gross
injustice that has been committed, and will not
allow our country to bear such a stigma on her
name, such aa everlasting stain, ns will i>o that
of the sacrifice of one so truly innocent as my fa.
ther. And if one word from us, sir, can add a
feather’s weight to the efforts that are now be
ing made, Oh, may we give you tho deep nssur-
once of our hearts, that we feel grateful for the
deep interest that you express and feel, and for
what you are doing in our behalf. May God.
in his infinite mercy, look down upon you, and
bless the efforts that are being made, and if it
is not His well to bring the truth to light, and
to allow this awiul mystery to be explained
may He enlighten the minds of those into
whose hands the caso will pass.
I must again thank you, sir, for the kind feel'
ings you express towards my dear father. Noth
ing that tho world can do now gives us greate
consolation, than the knowledge that others
boliovehiminnocent. Sympathy flows abundant'
ly from many hearts tov.-ards us, his family, but
how much more prized by us is that sympathy,
when expressed for him ? That our beloved
lather may be restored to us, is tho fervent pay
er of our hearts, and we wait tremblingly in the
hope, that those who are now to decide in this
ca«emay see the terrible injustice that hns been
committed, and has inflicted so much suffering
on so many. Believe me, sir, gratefully youri
Harriet W. Webster."
advertising medium. We state this fact in justice
to ourselves und for the benefit of the advertising
public
^ C; r '‘ See first pnge for our rRtes of advertising.
[2®?*Advertisements should be handed in at fin
early hour, to insure their uppeanuico in the paper ot
tho next morning.
Consulate of the United States, )
Havana, April 10, 1850. $
To the Collector of the Port of Savannali.
Sir:—The ship Champlain, of Philadelphia,
-■ , , | 624 tons, R. R. O’Decan, Master, on her pas-
The Tea Culture in the Un ted Stetea. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 0r]eail , f 9prnng u
It will bo seen by his advertisement in an ^ IsnneSt on lho 3d ill8t . It is
other coluhin, that Mr. Smith, of South Curo- supposed that she struck u wreck, us there
Him is laboring to introduce the tea culture in were seven fathoms on each side, and in a
is'countiv. Mr. Smith has given much time « hort time went down. The master and crew
is co ty represent that there was no opportunity of even
and attention to this subject, and nas, we De- 9{lv ; n g their clothes. The crew arrived in this
liovo, succeeded in growing the tea plant in port yesterday, on hoard lho barque Crusoe.
Carolina, where it does well, und promises to
answer his fullest expectations.
A vast portion of the United States, all that
section lying between the Gulf of Mexico and
40° north lutitude, with tho exception of the
low lunds on tho coast, are Said to bo well
adupted to tho tea culture, being within the
More Philadelphia Rioting.—Arother
fight umong the Philadelphia firemen occurred
on Sunday night. Tho reporter of the Inquir
er says that large guns and pistols were di
uoupitu lu' *'•“ ” ’ , B . f I charged both in tho street and from the tul-
samo parallels of latitude as those sections ot I 6 T _
. r ,• i u . jr lounng houses. A small boy, named John b ar-
Ohinn and India most celebrated for tho pro- | •' » ■”
duction of tea. Georgia being in latitude 30, 42°
9 Ieaino t
America arrivod nt Rochester on Bundui
Emigratio^ from Canada.—The
from
emi-
Very respectfully,
Your obedient servant,
ROBERT B. CAMPBELL.
ley, wus shot in the arm und hand. The ban d
Cotton Factory in Hancock.—VVe mention
ed some weeks since thut the citizens
Hancock, persuaded of the profitableness
investments in manufactures, and of the bene'
ficial effects which result from a diversity
pursuits, were about to tako measures to erect
a steam cotton factory in their midst. We are
informed that during the session of the Court,
which was held in that county last week, books
were opened for subscriptions to the stock of
the contemplated factory and about $80,000
m were subscribed.
W We are gratified to see our capitalists turning
their attention to tho establishment of enter
prises of this nature, which, when properly
managed, are not only profitable and enuble us
to compete with Northern manufacturers, but
tend so much to develope tho resources of the
South and confer so many benefits upon the
surrounding country. Wo hope that the en
terprise and public spirit which prompted the
citizens of Hancock to engage, in the new and
opening field of domestic manufucturies, may
receive an ample reward.—Augusta llepub.
and 35°, corresponds with tho latitude of the I will probably require amputation
centre of the tea growing districts of China Itgr 1 On Sunday last there was a slight fall of
which is about ten degrees south of Fekiog. snow in New York. Farther north a good deal
Experience has proven that hilly or mountain- had fallen. At Utica, on Thursday, it was six
ous land, with light, warm soil, and situated in inches deep. At Lowell, Muss., on Saturday
the temperate latitudes, is the best adapted to night, there was a severe storm, and tho snow
the culture of tea. So that we may set down wus very deep upon the roofs, and fell on Sun-
tho upper region of Geotgia as, perhaps, better day forenoon upon the ground and side walk
suited for tho purpose than any other section in great quantities, to the peril of those who
north or south of us. If, then, as we are in- were passing
formed, the tea culture has been successlully rj. nE s TEA mship Atlantic.—The first of
introduced into Java, Brazil, Assem, and the the Collins’ line, the Atlantic, Capt. West, is
North-west Provinces of India, all of which advertised to leave New York for Liverpool on
are less favored in point of climate, theio can 07 ing^ an d a large number of passem
certainly be no obstacle to its cultivation in g Prg ] lave already secured berths, or rooms as
Georgia, where it could not fail to be a sure and j t j g more proper to call them. The four ship
profitable crop. comprising this new Mail line, are the largest.
It is estimated that one acre of land will tbe j; negt) and R is thought will proveto be the
produce 547 lbs. of tea, at which rate it would \f astegt 9 hi ps in the world
require 20,109 acres to supply the consumption j We understand that the position of the Boil
ers in the Collins’ ships is vertical instead of
horizontal—an experiment in which engineers
and the public feel a good deal of interest
We copy the following paragraph from a re,
centnumberof the Georgetown True Repub
lican,
Picked Up.—We are informed upon pretty
„ . . . , 1 reliable authority, that Mr. Timothv Coward
lhe crop is easy of cultivation, and tho pro- ^ regide3 nt Godfrey’s ferry on the Pee Dee
cess of curing is said to be simple. The price 1 wb - do engaged in fishing some few days since,
which the article commands indicates its profit- heard the cry of a child, and on looking in the
ahleness. We have no doubt that it might be direction whence the noise came, he discover-
, . , , . , . - ed an obiect floating rapidly down the current
advantageously introduced in those sections of of the river He immed i a tely went in pursuit of
our State unsuited to tho growth of cotton ; und | tbo object, overtook and raised it into his canoe
when it proved to be a wooden box containing
a live infant, apparently some three or four
days old. The box seemed to have been made
[Correspondence of the Dnily Morning News.]
NEW YORK, April 15, 1850.
I don’t know what kind of weather you are Canada, with upwards of three hundred
favored with at the South; we have none worth grants, most of whom were from Port I],
mentioning, except, to condemn it most une- and Cobou.g. They were probably landed ^
quivocally—“it is shocking, positively shock- those places from the boats that reached the
‘ng.” Here we ure in the midst of April, with late last Fall.
snow several feet deep in some parts of the Massachusetts new Marriage Law
State, an atmosphere in New York freezing This law approved March 28, dispenses wit)
our young blood, and tipping our noses with the fourteen days notice and publication of '
blue, ns unmistakable as though Time lmd fa- tontions hitherto required in the state of M v
ken a retrogade movement, and carried us hack sachusetts, and enacts that such notice slml!
to Janunry nod genuine winter. That old fel- given to the registrar, clerk, or other officer
w’s affection for Miss Spring must bo of the pointed for that purpose. Parties married me
most intense kind, and I only regret that she is 0 f the stato must give notice of the fact tu tj,,.
not warm enough to render him more genial. | officer within soven dnvs after their return
Every body, I suppose, has heard of Bagley’s The Telegraph to the Pacific.—If ,| le
gold pens. I am sorry that his morals are not p ac jfi c Ruilroud is a project for the futu re t ),
as good as his pens. He was cast in $180 ) p ac jfi c Telegraph seems more near the nr,,
damages and costs, on Saturday, in a suit in- 0Ilt . h. O. Reily is now on his way West in
stituted by the father of a girl in his employ, purpose of immediately commencing!sec
whom he seduced. Ho is u married man, with t jon Q f t b 0 Mississippi and Pacific Telegraph
grown up daughters. Preparations have been made to run up the
Two steamers, the Georgia und Cherokee, left line at once as far as Fort Leavenworth, on the
hero on Saturday, for Chagres; the former with western border of Missouri, This wifi
501, and the latter with 232 passengers, all nect the East with the farthest bounds of civil-
bound for California. To-day, the Empire City izalion West,
nd Philadelphia leave for the same destination, a Sign in Rhode Island.—Tho Frcc-S,
they also, go crowded with passengers. Tho candidate for Governor at the recent clecti,
truth is, the gold fever is now as bad as ever it | received lossthat 200 votes in the wltolo Stat".
was, and I declare, that after seeing, as I did a
few days since, a 16 lbs. lump containing 13 I ^ funeral in New Orleans. In beau-
lbs. of gold, I felt kind o’ tempted to start with solemnity, a white-plumed hearse rolled
wash-bowl and a spade. Think of getting I away yesterday to “the city of thread." Fair.
of the United States alone, which at present
averages about 11,000,000 pounds per annum.
Add to this the consumption of Europe, ex
exclusive of Russia—which Empire would most
likely continue to be supplied overland from
China—say 50,000,000 pounds, and we have a
market fur 61,000,000 pounds annually, requi r .
ing the product of 111,200 acres of land.
out $3500 worth in onelick
Wo are to have a grand lunnch to-merrow
at the Navy Yard, when tho steamer San
Jacinto will dip into her appropriate element.
She is a strong war Steamer, of 1500 tons
propelled by a screw. Her length is 237 feet,
breadth 38 feet and depth of hold 23J feet.
They arc nobly backing up Daniel Web
ster here, at Boston, and other places; his ene
mies chargo that he has sold himself to tho
South, hut, in my opinion, ho exhibited in his
speech great good sense, and a highly pruise'
worthy independence. He will lose the sup
port of tho fanatics, of course, but for every
young, and much beloved t had sho been, whoie
coffined remains were thns being conveyed to
their last long rest. As hearers of the pall,
young girls, dressed in white, attended by gen
tlemen in bluck, each with a mourning badi>c
of crape, gave their attention. No less than
forty carriages were in attendance, filled with
tho mounting acquaintances of the.dear depart
ed. The solemn array soon disappeared in
the distance, but by it many a gazer was made
to reflect, for a moment at least, on the uncer
tainty of life and blightings of human hope.—
Pickayunt.
E3P Mr. Greeley says every mnnv ho smokes
supporter that speech loses him, it will mnke I n cigar is u blackguaid. This is highly corn-
ten, and may run him into the Presidential
chair, provided old Zack declines to run-again,
which of course he will. By the by, the rumor
about the old General’s Cabinet begins to take
a tangible form, and that some change is expec
ted, is clearly visible. Crawford will resign,
plimentary to a majority of his readers.—N. F.
Mirror. '
Greeley must be excused. Some men are
so little acquainted with what belongs to gen
tility, that they do not know what to affect.
as a means of diversifying our agricultural en
terprise, and of augmenting our resources, we
think it certainly worth the trial. W 0 If ust I w]t ii great care, well finished and water proof,
it may not turn out another morus rfiultieaulis and was well lined inside with flannel: and
speculation; which it will not, if those who take
hold of it will direct their efforts to the produc
tion of tea, instead of the multiplication of
“ eyes," “ sprouts’’ and “ roots.”
Georgia Bituminous Coal.—We arc in
formed, says the Augusta Constitutionalist,
the little equarian—if we may so speak—very
handsomely dressed in its “best bib and
tucker.”
Fortunately for the poor babe, and equally
fortunate forthe pence of mind of the diabolical
wretch who placed the infant in so perilous a
condition, it hns fallen into the hands of a hu
mane and generous man, who sets up a claim of
thut an inexhaustible bed of Bituminous Coal Hjage covering nothing short of the vesssel
and cargo entire. Mr. Coward would not rx»
exists in Walker county, just beyond the lunnel, cllan?e thc ]ittle Moses—a name we take the
and vety near the Railroad. It is the property liberty to suggest—for all other babies afloat.
of a Mr. Cravens, who designs working it in Awful Rail Road Accident.— O11 Tues-
connection with a Company at Chattanooga, day last the engine of a burden train on the
and we learn that on the completion of the Susquehanna Railroad, exploded when within
Tunnel, we may expect large supplies of the | fifteen mUe9 of Baltimore, causing a lamenta-
now borne by tho desire of winning front
Mother Earth what is so necessary to the
American Republic, a free and independent
existence.
»
Sir John Franklin and the Clairvoy-
ants.—A girl in Liverpool has lately been mak
ing some revelations with rcgnrd to the present
condition and prospects of Sir John Franklin and
his crew, while in a clairvoyant state, which
are thus detailed in a Liverpool paper :—
“Did you say,” inquired tho operator, “that
Sir John Franklin is dead ?’’ And to this nnd
other questions the clairvoyants responded,
“That cannot be, for I see him ! poor follow !
he looks sad and wearied, and not so well as
when I was last hero. [Tho Girl hud previ
ously beon sent in search of the missing expe
dition.] Hesnysheis poorly und tired, and
almost worn out with hopes deferred ; but his
me-t console him and behave nobly. God
never mado a path through these desolate
wastes. What could induce him to tryjto break
through these icty mountains ? He frequently
thinks of the folly of his daring to do so. Such
thoughts humble him, and make him sad and
hopeless, and yet he thinks he will succeed in
returniug to England. He is right. Ho will
return in six months and three or four days. The
ships areat great distance from each other. They
lookjdirty and battered. They have no sales set.
They (the seamen) are cutting the ice before
them. In some places it appears as thick
as two houses; in others, like mountains.
They (the vessels) are in a different place now
to what they were when I was last here. They
are now where ships never sailed before. They
are not returning the same roud they went.—
They are going thatjway (pointing to the west.)
—What can bo the use of this road ? It ought
never to have been sailed. It will never be
sailed again. He has seen some of the na
tives. They are wild, stupid, and uncommu
liicative. The vessels sent out for him (Sir
• Johft Franklin) will not find him; they will
cross each other, and he will be first heard of
at a place called the Cope. It appears to have
no other name.
It will be remembered that in October last,
clairvoyant at Bolter, was consulted, and she
fixed the same period for the return of the ex
pedition. This is thought to be a remarkable
coincidence.
A Sign in Pennsylvania.—The Legislature
ot Pennsylvania, tjy a strong voce, ,h%ve post
poned a set of Wilmot Proviso resolution stoa
day beyond the expiration of the session.
article in this market. We are told that Coal
will probably be laid down by this company, in
Augustu, and supplied to purchasers at $5.50 to
$6 per ton. This is but little more than half
its present cost in this city.
The Cabinet Official Contradiction.—
Tho National Intelligencer of Tuesday morning,
notices the rumers of an anticipated rupture in
the cabinet, that certain whigs desired a disso
lution of the cabinet, and thut the President
was beginning to favor the same object, append
ing to them the following decimation:—“ Of
these statements, we feel authorised to say, eve
ry one is erroneous, in whole or in part.”
The Cuba Expedition—It is stated in
Cincinnati and Louisville papers that large
numbers of men have been enlisted in those
cities and neighborhood for a proposed expe
dition against Cuba. They were engaged for
one year, and large pay promised. They had
only been informed that their destination was
Chagres. Tho New Orleans Bulletin,
the contrary, says: “We have neither seen nor
heard of anything which uffords ground for
the belief of such un expedition being on
foot.”
Pennsylvania Legislature.—The bill to
divorce Edwin Forrest and Catherine, his wife,
passed the House of Representatives on Mon
day by avoto of 42 to 40.
The bill to prohibit the banks from issuing
notes of a less denomination than five dollar
was passed, yeas 54, nays 24. It prohibits all
farther circulation of relief notes.
The News of Sir John Franklin.—The
St. Louis Intelligencer of the 5th of April con
tains an extract from a letter, written by A
McDermot, and dated Selkirks’ Colony, 13tli
February, 1850, as follows :
“A packet has just arrived from McKenzie’
river, which brings news that the ship that
went in seurch of Capt. Franklin is wintering
in McKenzie’s river. This packet is sent post
haste by the States. It is thought the Captai
is still alive.
S3T A protracted meeting is now going on
ftt the Baptist church in Macon, under the
charge of the Rev. Mr. Landrum.
ble loss of life. The locomotive wns of the
largest class, and under the care of efficient en
gineers. The boiler exploded whilst ascend-
ng a grade, instantly killing Mr. Milhaw, the
fireman, and seriously scalding and otherwise
injuring the engineer, Mr. Davis. The boiler
burst into tho fire, causing tho locomotive to
turn a complete somerset, and scattering it into
hundreds of pieces. The body of Mr. Milhaw
was thrown almost perpendicularly into the air
to the height of about sixty feet, passing thro’
the top of a largo oak tree, the limbs of which
stripped nearly every thread of clothing from
his body, which wore left suspended on the top
branches. This is, we believe, the fourth ex
plosion of a locomotive boiler that has ever ta
ken place in this country. As in the preceding
cases, tho cause remains a mystery. The boil-
srwasin good order.
California.—The following is an extract
from the Washington Correspondence of the
New Y’ork Herald, under date of the 14th inst.
“It lias just leaked out, that all the haste
and hurry to rush in California as a State, with
out her sisters in tribulation, New Mexico and
Deseret, arises from the fuct, that the specula
tors of all kinds in California, not the hard
working gold-diggers, have bought up ull the
Mexican land claims, and that these claims to
the extent of five hundred millions of dollars
uto held by men in and out of Congress, in and
out of California; by newspaper editors, und
persons employed at Washington, high in the
departments, a list of whom I will try to send
you soon. It is said that the Benton fami
ly are interested,'to the extent of four or five
millions, in these Mexican land titles, on the
San Joaquin and Sacramento, comprising
leagues of gold quartz rocks. This accounts
for the anxiety to admit California at once, and
alone, in order that these doubtful titles may be
baptized.”
Farewell of the Hungarians.—Gen.
no matter what the result may be of the nego- I Ujazy published in the N. Y. papers on Monday
tiation as to tho Galphin claim, and that will last, his farewell address, on behalf of himself
bo the signal and the occasion for a general and countrymen, to their friends in New York,
re-organization. Of this I am assured, there being about to stnrt for one of the Western
is no doubt. States. He say3: To these shores I was driv-
Anti-rentism is again rampant in the upper cn b - v to tho fields of the West I urn
part of the State, anil it is us much as a Sher
iff's life is worth to attempt to make a levy for
rent. The bill to legalize this resistance to law
and right, wus defeated in the House, though
passed the Senate. It proposed “to New York Testimony. — An instance of
set aside ths further collection of rents under what is life in New York is given in a report 0!
the Manorial titles.” A suit is now on trial in n criminal trial in that city last week. Judge
Hudson, a city on the North River, to tost the Oakley said that witneses there can be prodttc-
right of tho proprietor, Mr. Livingston, to jeer- ed to prove anything, and unless it is ndmitteil
lain lands. John Van Buren is on tho side of to give evidence of their character, there would
the Anti-renteis. Probably Mr. Livingston be no safety for nny man. It is to be prerum-
cannot produce title deeds, for they have de- ed that such an opinion does not come from an
scended by inheritance, and were originally, experienced judge on any but most satisfactory
probably, either purchased from the Crown, or grounds. It is appalling us to tho dangerous
royal grants; and I do not for a moment imag- | degeneracy of the great commercial emporium'
ine that his right can he set aside. If so, there
much other land held by the same tenure,
that must revert to the State. I do not see
how the most favorable result can benefit the
anti-rent” and “ vote yourself a farm,” out
laws.
The extent of the commerce of Now York
may be imagined from the following fact. Du
ing the past week, there arrived here 3 steam
ships; 35 ships; 20 Barks; 34 brigs, and 105
Another Murder Mystery.—A despatch
dated Boston, April 14, says :
“ The dead body of a female was found on
Saturday afternoon last, in a culvert, or deep
watercourse, on the easterly side of Storer st
Saco, Me. The hands were fastened together,
and a rope tied round tho neck. The body was
dressed in nightclothes. It is supposed the
deceased met with foul play. A coroner’s
quest was being hold when our informant lelt.
The Forrest Divorce Case is still before
the Pennsylvania Legislature, and Horace Bin-
ney, Esq., lias given an opinion that the Leg;
islaiure have a constitutional and valid power
to grant a divorce.
Washington, April K>
Lieut. Col. John McClelland, Tipograp
cal Engineer, has received orders to ah' 6
charge of the expedition for running the Me*’
, __ —, , . ican boundary. His party will consist of “k
schooners. The value of the vessels was pro- ty civilians, with two mounted companies 1
soldiers. They are to leave on the lit 11 11
. May next for El Passso, where the survey co” 1
000,000! monces.
The health of the city continues good ; the Father Mathew. The citizens of 5°"'
dcatlis were 274 last week. Scarlet fever pie- Orleans have presented Father Mathew, the
vails to some extent, but only ten deaths occur- gum of $ 7>0 00, as a testimonial of their high
recb appreciation of his labors in tho cuuso of t fI
They had a high time at the Clay celebration pernnee
on Friday night—tho enthusiasm was prodi- Naval Intelligence.—Captain James Me
gious. Unfortunately, not u very thick parti- Intos h hn8 becn old ered to tho command ot d
tion divided tho saloon from tho theatre, where f,i„ at0 Congress, now lying at Norfolk- IC
Steffunani wns enrapturing the audience with c ongregg j g u frigate of the first class, and
the music of Norma, and even Clay enthusiasm Q p l})e fil)egt gbipg ; n tbe United States W
did not supply a pleasant accompaniment,
Was it not a peculiar blending of “ mirth and
music, love arid wine.”
It was expected that Denny & Son would
have been tried again to-day on the Torpedo
charge, but the trial has been postponed until
Monday next.
A man named Griffin amused himself a short
time since by cowhiding Mr. Denman, tho edi
tor or tho Truth Teller, for telling the truth
about him in the paper; and to-day was 8Cn - | T.os Veira^ New Mexico,
I’orkmw
has already
Subscription for Dr. Webster s
—A despatch from Boston, April Hi ^ ’
to tho N. \ r . Globe, says : ^
“The recent calamity that lias
this interesting family, lias incited 11* }
friends in Boston to raise furthem a 1“
donation, as a testimonial of contmiH 1
ship. The widow of the late Dr. “
heads the list with $500, which bus
reached above $20,000 ”
I Baltimore, April 18. ?^ c8tcr .
Advices were received nt bt. Louts ^
day from Los Vegas, New Mexu
March, which state that a company - ^p,.
hunters have had an engagement
che Indians, and that t ".° ” ' gt0 ] e n. Tlir,u
killed, andjnll their animals were sto „
Mexicans were murdered on the road u
Los Vegas and Suntn Fe. ^
Washington, April 13,P^jf
In the Senate to-day the resolution^ ^ #
ted some time since for the “n[?' ghou |d be ^
commitltee of Ibiftecn to t b j lnve ,-y, *'
fet red all matters connected witn ^
adopted bv a vote of ayes 30, noes -
... TwEngla ndg l
A Tall Chimney, lhe ' . t be fo un ',,
Company have commenced 1 J 6 ^ ab „ u it
tion for a tall chimney, wh 7 (j a pibrȣ'
build for their glass works in ^ [he bn*
It is to be about 30 feet S( 1 „ig
tbe heieht ot
Tn- I earned off jewelry to the value of several bun- j and carried up the hemht °} ~ ent
ft.” l died dollars, belonging to Mr. Hull. 1 higher than the Bunker H.U
ovet her weekness