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American Freeman

   American Freeman (Newspaper) - August 11, 1847, Prairieville, Wisconsin                               VOL 3 DEVOTED TO POLITICS TEMPERANCE EDUCATION AGRICULTURE MECHANIC ARTS AND GENERAL INTELLIGENCE i v WISCONSIN WEDNESDAY AUGUST 11 1847 JNO 40 AMERICAN FREEMAN OLIN PLUMB OO Of net it BACON BLOCK STORY TERMS dollars per if paid in advance or within three months otherwise twenty-five in addition for every three month's delay will be U- All and remittances sent through tho Past Office must be PAID and ed to O LIN It Cu Publishers CORRESPONDENCE THE HISTORY OR ORIGIN AND OF WESTERIN In order to give a distinct and accurate tiew of he origin of this Society it is essary to allude brevity to out e trait 4 of circumstances and which led tn formation U may properly be stated in this con- not however with the design of creating any invidious that U is the legitimate offspring of ct movements ID the Mate of Illinois upon the important ct of Popular 1 Int is ev fiom the ing transactions foreshadowed the or g of the In the early part of the jear of the friends of with atrophy the minds uf ill classes of people on of Common School and Aca Instruction dett to call a Convention in r to awaken n r interest publicity was given to the usual arrangements wire made fur the of to assemble at Jacksonville in the month of June following nnd trans ict such as the then demanded Obe In nl to the t ill a devoted friends con Yet sifu r an interchange of thought and ti cling the Convention mlj mined lo in Chicago sometime timing ibe autumn ol the Among r things done lowing pi a corn to make foi the aforesaid Convention GOT Meeker Wm s nt Win li Biown J Jacksonville Almost con PI oils I his JK Co ivt n ion si MI ill individual it s uli nt in Wisconsin ft It ni i il of united to u upon put lie mind h 1 ol 1 tit home rm nt point A w is tin issued llu columns of tin pul lie pi i ss th it I e u hers and all cl issi s intt d in ms i f ir instruction uo t vi neat I'll vide it Illinois on the lo in to dc VIM such is t nil to cure objects of thn At the linn ppt but 1 few dilt gatts re m met i I li or Mie er A both pi ible I lie lh it in d d rausi tin y adoj t tin miMin nil m idi pn I in r and the M low cot e to t their L IT J Ci H P appointed nt D M llu foil month the eon n nil It t v e i c ill t u I tie 11 ai 11 ers to in to listen to ad- and views lo the cb ir r of sellout sli IDS ibe lime ber f mdiv convened and after an meeting ol duration following to m ike nil lor a subsequent g of he at tbe timi and reafler D M Chutes O L It 1 o i j t N bliter 1 bt Ml Beanet hie 1.50 j hen the above named committee were the point of issuing a notice for an Educational Com of a general character they w ere informed that nn nd meeting of the Jacksonville Con- vention would soon lake place in tht city of Chicago 1 ho co operation of St Committee was immediately se cured two conventions were in- merged into one Extensive ar- rangements were therefore for a great North Western Educational tion lo be held in the City of the commencing on the October At the time and place above named egates assembled fiom various portions of Illinois Wisconsin Michigan and some other States and were highly gratified with tho presence and counsel cf educators from abroad among were lion Henry Barnard of Rhode Island and Messrs Satem Town O B Wm S York This Convention continued its from Thursday until Saturday and was with a spirit and profit ly honorable to the important subject of popular education It wag during the de- liberations of this meeting that the con- ception was entertained of a 4 North Western Educational which could unite in associated energies ot the ly and controlling West m order that a mighty people connected by ties of one common interest and destiny may embrace one common to con- summate the not merely of tbe agricultural and commercial but of the moral and intellectual of en- tire country The following therefore appointed to report to the Convention a constitution for organisation of a North Western Educational TII 0 B Uomo N Y D M I H P Chicago on J II Mich Organization G F 111 j In Jue time bufore Una I adjourn ment of the Convention said re- ported n constitution and which were Whereupon Society was immediately organized and officered and upon ihr appointment and instruction of its respective committees made ion lor its first regular annual meeting to be held nl Milwaukee July Such is an account of origin the Western Educational and the educational movements which pre- ceded or paved way for ill formation Ils object has already been br andean be easily Its design to promote the of nn efficient md of Instruction in s Ohio Michigan consin and low n is both laudable and fea Stale therefore im mediately be formed auxiliary to and and township societies auxiliary to those All their respective to the il meeting of rent Society and then the advantages would be so gieat and numerous n tongues A nnd adamantine lungs Die first a meeting has already taken at ils second sta ids tl lo meet at Detroit on tbe August Hoping this will become to tho cst vi hat ibe Ami ricau Institute of Ins lo hnJ I lemam as ever I lie advocate of an Educated July Dear Brother You sud I must send thi ly and so I have gol pin ink ind pipi r We have just lill and ne out on the 1 ID id h ue se i swelling M an s a lie inte of about U v i n miles an hour on board htt U it boat on Ihi mil II d I suppose is fill now i stilt aic is vvell 113 i nut or 50 than can g t In i ids 1 lit re be a grt it dial of I as us wi is west 1 im told that Ibt uc as crowded ing di n as illuming although ibere are t r gomg west lh m iast lav nt M union Island d ur houis took on about ol w uid J he p lind a great t im i ng the wilds of tint almost uninhibited Is and shells or into atut and gut ns 1 ind other c in The boat throng J tn ons w J i it and v but the ti toi lick if tins hid to clubs and stones At fn n u li led in old n w hu h T net d st thf pigions Im y lost in and man killed two sb U i sept finely in I u is 1 ly bj tin b U ng at We bun led up md wi nt on but the boat d niH ut lor is to visit strong w illi d lion nil j foi I of Ibis Mountain Isle Hut it md boles to send out Ibe bir and throw the in long our fellow intn us ol horrid of w u Ob w n will ind lo to kill inn un the r H was this tint lie Sullim the a lew nnd guned ibe palm lor spud as described imus n on board in the last Milwaukee is n new boat splendidly brushed and furnished have got down past I humli and are out ID the greit Uov out of of hnd We lost sight of leira we crossed the Hay fresh oci ai s We must have commerce on tht se seas Kalher Ritchie's standing or else our will soon be bif And it it is to im prone of Na lion thi West soon call loud fur an in the Constitution n morning We have just gol nlo Si Cla r and slopped at Port Huron long enough to look about the tow n a little Here Ibe owners of the Oregon on which we P Phillips Co are anew feet longer than Jt must b and will cost tt is said 000 In pushing donn the St Clair we have a fine prospect on both sides the river Out thu houses look old and the farms Reflected especially on tho Canada side and we discovered very little of that thrift of improvement we see almost every where in Wisconsin More anon Yours ns ever Oris F Cunm nuptial not be too early lied between knowledge and the preservation of her honor static n and landing demand their plighted troth The cautious grave and rt disposition of an increasing knowledge in required to lame down into a quiet and the wild and of restive the cool and calculating to check the ries of the wild nnd thoughtless Labor's confiding ami implicit dependence upon a vigorous active and stirring knowledge conversant with her several ami dis- advantage willing and prepared to act foi her benefit M now her remaining hope ami present under the numerous and ing difficulties she to encounter a knowledge which will and mint disabuse mind of all preconceived notions toil uproot the several means she for btr COLLEGE PROCEEDINGS AT THE LATINO of THE Con The Corner Stone of College via laid with due ceremony on Thursday June 24th Yoar readers will be interested m an account of the proceedings on the sion The day was as height as ever and never did the green slopes ot bro id prairies spread themselves m greater beau- ty to the where than as seen that day from the College Bluff It was a picture that you could oot gaze too long upon contemplate once u a soul lull of exciting joy and thankfulness at the beauties of Nature before jou Those of yoor renders who have travelled that way will remember how the road from to Beloit as it enters the I itler v winds around on the bank of Rock under a bluff beautifully crowned with openings Ten acres ot land on the top of this bluff a splendid view of the village the river and the surrounding country constitute the College Here beneath the a little distance from the foundation a form had been erected and arrangements fur seating about eight hundred ple At 10 o'clock A M according to pre- vious arrangement the procession was formed at the Congregational Chutch un- ofJ M Keep Esq Marshal of the Day and after ashou tuin through the v proceeded to the bluff cheered by the music of a well bind were already tilled and hundreds wma I here could not have been less than two thousand w the of v some estimated the three and above the were opened wild the reading of passages ot the Hiv Mr Montague fiom Kort Atkinson Rev Mr Rise of Con- an appropriate at ter winch the Choir in a Psalm well md sunp made the grove resound lo the ot God A paper guing a briet account ot origin and progress of the was then by the Rev Mi Chipin of Milwaukee Iho Rev Mr Peel mule a statement concerning the ot the College to the ing The citizens ol Beloit have given a situ of ten acres of lantt cing village lota and a number of choice lots the whole valued at Iroin two to three thousand dollais seven thousand dollars for the erection ol building commenced thus making the entire donation of the citizens of Beloit nme or ten dollais Rev her of counly New York his in ule a donation oi bundled acies dl land in M Iw lukee county which is valued at one sand dollais and to crown nil the llou I bus W M of New Ins endowed a by the don ilion ot tin thousand dollars in lands in Wisconsin anil Indiana In honor to the ity ol h iv e i led the thus ed afler his name i best with by Ibe audience It was then stilt d tint in consequence of f stowe ol Cm who hau bun relied on fin an id- i bid tailed o be the fact was not known in season to provide a sub 1 be only was to fall bide on speakers called suddenly to to meet the emergency Ibe ability with which the per formed llu ir put soon put out of mind all thought ol and gave an- other ilion ot the ot ern men for such occasions Mr Montgomery of Beaver Dim first took the He begged the indulgence of the audience as he was oblig td to come before them wilh only two hours notice and ihen in a of fervid eloquence ID show the lance ol Western mind on West ern soil with a view lo action n Ibe West He slid the est could not and would nol rely on the Kast fur education There some in which that tion failed to qualify men for action here I he western people are a peculiar peo pie and need an education conformed lo position and circumstances This thought was happily illustrated as he pro o urge the that the cation of the should be expanded hb iral nnd a universally polished 1 he Rev Mr Hopkins of was the next speaker He he had read in sacred writ of a certain assembly of which it was said that the greater part knew not wherefore they together He had the satisfaction of feeling that this could not be said of the present assembly They bad an object they knew what it was and they appreciated its importance They had to begin their for training of mind He dwelt briefly upon the importance of training mind to pendent thinking rather than the de lo authority in the adoption of the opinion of others and then He gave way lo the Rev Mr Bascoin of Chicago Hems graphic and beauti ful manner traced an analogy betw een the means apd appliances Philadelphia's Fairmount water works and their ion with purity cleanliness sod of that city and influences which go out from a college property founded lo fect ibe moral health of Ibe re- gion around He ben met the no why so much expense on Why nol invest this twenty thousand in a manufactory or road He met the question and answered it by the dependence of all the practical oa of science nod philosophy and of tion elevated aad at the same time to make of any worth for the promotion Mr WM by the Mr who the in- fluence of what he saw and heard seemed in imagination to have converted the with its into a veritable grave of Parnassus and w for our noble Rock River nothing would but it must be turned into the old stream it self ATI this however did not hinder Kim from giving a very good common-sense speech on tome of the reasons whv the education imparted at our college should be thorough He a little at some of the remarks of the first speaker about a Western education as though education were not the same thing world bver The questions and retorts which followed in the of mutual only gave tn the scene while it brought out both agreed in the mam points The speeches were worth listening to and the audience most of them literally stood tor the hour wilh exemplary and interest After the conclusion of the speeches concourse repaired to the waits of the fice just commenced The wall had been substantially laid ot stone nnd with the of the corner which was now to be filled waa all ready Us superstructure of brick Rev D Clary of thi Board then deposited in the leaden box the Char tfr ol the college The history of us 011 gin and list of Trustees the names of the donors and of the archi of the of Wisconsin of the city of The First Report of the American Home Mission Constitution and Confession of of the an arid Congregational Convention ot A of the of Beloit large number of the of the region and some specimens ot currency and box was sealed and put in its place and some verv suitable re marks by the Rev A Kent President of the day the si was set un- der the direction of Mr William son he architect of the building and the benediction closed the exercises The of Beloit open their doors in the manner foi the ble of their friends from abroad This literal of Col wilt be remembered with luely inter terest by all who were present and is 1 ti ost Ibe precursor scenes of slill deeper interest to be witnessed in the ture as year a of noble sons shall go forth from these alma walls to commence their w oik of lite on this Western field of I understand it is designed that the building shall be completed tor the tion of students ill and lh it competent instruction wilt be provided for n claSp Ills the determination of the 1 to make the standard of ship as and the course of tion as thorough and exact as at any of the older institutions C Christ upon the Cross been introduced it would have been stigmatized as a Popish enormity It seems to be thought that when some popular politician does some such ordinary net of duty as is re- quired of every Christian man that is to be regarded ns an especial compliment to Almighty God We object decidedly to all such inferences as degrading to gion 1 he same despicable spirit was dis- played by the clergymen of Washington when they caused to be printed a large tion of Mr Webster's speech in the Gir ard College case in of the Christian religion when it was generally believed thai hit practice was very far from being in conformity wilh his professions and that a larger fee would have produced an ment equally able on tha other side We doubt exceedingly whether it adds anything to the credibility of the Christian Revelation that either Mr Clay or Mr Webster g ve t the influence of their name SALF OF CHRISTIAN WOMEN AS SLATES by the Gim ral at Public tion far to cairy on the War against Mexico ol Hie Boston Whig Washington D C July 1847 MECHANICS INSTITUTIONS is a want too much lost sight of in our i tc of the privations of the humble classes though it is one of most incessant ings of all our wants and n actually power which in a vast majority of cases urges man mlo vice and it is the want of amusement U is vain to disclaim against it equally with any other principle in our nature it calls for ils al indulgence Hnd men can nol be debarred from it without souring the temper and spoiling the character Like indulgence of other appetites it only requires to be kept within due bounds and turned upon innocent and beneficial objects to become a spring of happiness But to a certain moderate extent it must be in the case of every man if we desire him to be cither a or talented member of society Now we would nsk what do we find for the cheap and innocent and duly ment of mass of laboring tion of this country What resources have hey to call up the cheerfulness of their spirits and away the cloud fi om brow after a hard clay's work or the monotony of a sedentary tion really very litlle We hard Fiom the LATER FROM MEXICO t aurn fwh MR received a short note lo appearance of a this morning without informs to P UP by how 0 The want is n beautiful and social and friendly association among the mechanics themselves a cultivation of affection and of self knowledge along with more vere study of the sciences In Great Britain there are at present f me that two females have been for some time confined in the United States Slave Warehouse in this city and in whose wretched condition I had previously taken soma would be sold at 10 o'clock for the benefit of the United Slales I mi mediately procured the Union and found in it the following advertisement Sale In virtue of five hundred institutions of this kind ing eighty thousand members and possess volumes The members raise annually about and occasion the exact portrait of our She did nol sit for I delivery of lectures Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia for of fyg Here is an Washington and to me d reeled 1 shall own better half expose to public s lie for cash on Tuesday picture hut somebody just like her did We find the painting in the London Quar You SPC Hits lady turning n cold eye lo the assurances of shopmen and the of milliners cares not how original a pattern may be if it be ugly or how recent a shape if it be awkward Whatever lius fashion diet lies she foi lows laws of her own and is behind Ft am the National Pi MR CLAY'S BAPTISM Mi Clay's baptism has given rise o a great deal of comment It was list IB ported that although be bad joined the R church lie had im- as the proper form of baptism 1 his is now demed Had it been true we suppose thai in the opinions of many it would have finally the tion as to H Inch vi as Apostolic mode of administering the ordinance The tol lowing of ceremony is from a correspondent of the Episcopal When the minister entered the room on this deeply solemn and interesting occasion small assembly consisting of the un- familj a few fimily connexions and wile rose up In the middle ot room stood a large table on which was pi iced with the cut vise pre- to Mr Clay bj some gentlemen of Wheeling On one side of the room hung tlm arge picture of the family of Washing ton himself an Episcopalian by by education and a devout communicant ot thf Church and opposite on n side table stood a bast of the lamented with a chaplet of withered ers hung upon his bead who was to have betn confirmed in the church the Sabbath after he witness of such n scene Around the room were suspended a ber of family and among them Uie of a beloved daughter who died some j ears ago m of that faith which her noble falher was now about lo I embrace and the picture of the late son ho fell at the battle of Buena Vista these silent lookers on at tha scene about transpiring have spoken from the and the canvass would tily hava approved act which ted the great man to God There was a deep emotion pervading that small bly at the recital under such ces of the sublime ordinal of the Church and every heart thrilled with a solemn when the merciful and glorious covenant wat sealed in name of the Father and of the Son and uf the Holy Ghost It n not stated whether the dent was engaged specially fur the pui pose of the though the prevention ta in favor of the supposition The account would have been rendered more if it bad been illustrated by a representing the scene An artist no doubt could have been procured at a reasonable expense to have taken a daguerreotype of the group at the most in- point of the ceremony and we wonder that the enterprise of the Recorder did not suggest it We this account for mere of expressing our contempt of the sickening toadyism which originally ted it pious correspondent cently talks of the pictures of and young Clay being fit witnesses of such a and as no doubt approving the act Had of the Virgin Mary or of inst at the south door of the of snid county at the hour ot 10 o'clock A M the following iz OIK negro woman named Ibe age of sixty years and one gro girl Caroline about the age of twenty years and upon as the property ot Henry Miller and sold to No 22 for October term 1847 in ot the Postmaster also al Nos and 4 to June term in favor of the United States and against said Henry Miller Marsh il ot the District ol Col I repaired to the Man Auction but found mj self a few utes too late to witness the sale I was however i that was a good deal of competition among the and quite n nun ber we'e A noted dealer known to colored people here as Rtv Mr was one of the most spirited bidders I was glad lo learn however that outbid Some kind ed became the purchasers of two and the United Stales receives into its treasury What hat the North lo do with Slavery Is the seiz ire and s ile of these women pro for in the The voters of I lie Frt e St ites have long helJ key lo the slaves house in Washington but they have told I heir Representatives to turn back Iks boll It is the voters of the North who hive made this fan City the man market of the Nation II is Fie North 111 furnishes Satan with his sentinels to guard and deferd these de-cds She wears very beautiful things people generally suppose to be 1 OR'S are authorized to the following rewards for the described Five for Ibe Whig voter in ler Countv w h dot's prefer Coi w in to lor fur the Presidency Ten dollars for the Wins who rather vole for Taylor ihan any other man Fifteen dollars for the Whig who be- that lav lor ought lo be nominated if there was no of thu election of a Whig to the dollars for the Whig who election eers for Taj lor and does not feel as had stolen goods in his Does the Newt man confine the tition lo Counly If ha does not can find of such as he offers a reward for Cm National Puss rv good deal has been said of e in quire if it is any proof of it that he de- will not run except upon unanimous invitation of whole people He must be a modest man indeed who supposes the American people will lay out of view all consideration of ibe s on which their government should be ad ministered for the sake of being ruled by a short legged old gentleman has fought several battles with lives upon the unpaid labor of about two hundred Herald them which fetched from Pans or at least made by a Fiench millint r but winch as often are bought at tho nearest town and made up by her own hands Not that her costume is either rich or weirs a dress but it is always pretty and many an old one bul it is ways good She in no gaudy sion of docs she a leJ but she either refreshes you with a spirited contrast or composes you with a judicious harmony Not of tinsel or trumpery appears upon her She puts no faith in velvet bands or gilt or twisted She is quite however that the garnish is us as the dress all hei inner borders md headings ate delicate and fresh and should anything peep out w Inch is not in- tended to be seen it is quite as much so as lint which is After all there is no great irt either in her fashions or her The secret simply consists in her know ng the three grand unities of own station her own age and ber own w bo does that is by the costume will not be disappointed in the wearer She may nit be h nor accomplished but will answer for her being even tempered vvell informed thoroughly si bit and a complete lad Adio cute not uo woman cati dress well After this we need not A CREDITOR Thero was a certain lawyer on the Cape a long tune tbe only one in those then and for aught I know at present He vi as a mm vvell to do in world and M bat was somewhat in a limb of law averse to aging litigation One d ij a client cairn to him in a v 10 knt rage Look a heie said he that eie down to Pi gum Cove has gone and sued me foi tbe money for a pan of 1 owed him Did the boots suit Jou Oh yes I ve got em on fust rale boots Fair price Oh jes Ihen jou one him Ine mot ey Well why don't you pay him Why cause the snob went and sui d me and I w ant to keep him out of the money if I km II will cost something 1 keer a cuss f lhat igm How much do you want to with The following is an apt illustration of the relative of the United Slates anil Mexico A Fair Hit Hallo You great six footer you what are you beating lhat poor crippled nigger for 1 Why Lor bless your soul massa I is trying to conquer a peace Ye see dis old nigger kep up a fuss all de tune bout me taking his later pach lax de ole fool if he didn't know twas my destiny an if he hear bout de Angle Saxum as how dey was take ebery ting dat dey could But be jus go on saying it Den I jis take half patch from him and told um to help if he could Den he did git mad an tole I better not Den 1 gives a an be kicks back an now I a to con- quer a peace as Massa Polk says an take de hul patch from him for his sass It A good Oh ten dollars wil do h tint all Well here's an X so go and tbe client went on very satisfied with the Our lawyer next called on the nnd asked him what he meant hj commencing proceed ngs against kept on hi ndm to him for money t got tired I he was able lo I was to make him the longhand short ol it beea a good customer to jou and I think you act ed too hastily There s a trifle to paj on account of your 1 think you'd better lake this five dolUrs and call it you say glad to get was the answer So the lawyer gave one V and kept thp other In a few days the client came along and asked him how he got on with his case Rapidly the nonsuited bun he'll trouble you Jerusalem that's great cried the I'd rather gin fifty dollars than e had got the money for them boots Distilleries annual con- sumption of grain in the English amounts on the authority of Lord Stanley to quarters or The excise on trie manufactured amounts to nearly The New Orleans arrived g having Vera Crue on 17th on ami St on mat Capt Gen Pierre Vera Cruz on the morning thf im with 2500 men nnd is trarn of 150 gage be N O pico on of the inst the captain by Co Oaten that Cul will a of Volunteers inul part Capt of Capt with one y of infantry in all lo 115 or 120 men and lelt by the way of river on the 8th IMI the purpose of rel I He American SO miles up mrr Irom Mary mers without an boats Tampico at 3 k F M on the 15th r it An express it Tampico fiom Col that they rmti been to move on until they got into a nil row past when lluy were surrounded by 1200 or 1400 men under Giray Col had loss with of Capt aril lery tiny hail cut their way to the river ami wailed for re- cements Cot Gates dispatched back lo Vera Cn i with a nn Col Wilton for four companies ol infantry li had also sent the sli liners am Miry Summers up tin user with 100 men to Col Di Hussy s assist mcr 1 be armed lit Vera un ibe at 2 o'clock p M and found tho city in n si He of t Gen fierce had out us d encamp il about ten miles from 1113 when tbe cime in and a force ol tit Ihn Budge who were for action The between the and trm city den reinforced command with TOO men making ID all 3.210 men In consequence of this tion from Col Gales on Wilson could not he complied with The had on board 23 manneis from the U S sloop Saratoga on the morning of be 17th nisi and willed for lo which Gen had ed out lo meet The New on the morning of the A detachment v hicli hail yone up the liver Imd returned nnd ed as follows as near as we could l un Ibe roops under Col had of on the morning of when the n on them fiom all directions Capl Wise got bin piece of artillery lo bear on when after C or 8 rounds of grape bich cut n lane through tin ir line way and fled to tbe Americans continued fighting llu ir way b ick along tbe road towards mrr at i until the morning w her they were by a of to 1 p co at a late hour on the with a lota o twenty killed ten wounded two missing Among the number was who fell in the Cist charge willi three bulls through his also his Lieutenant who fell mortally ed and was lelt dying on tbe field Col bail set enl mils through bis coil Capl Wise had tin horse fiom under him J IIP men ind fought 1 n ime of the officers from Louisiana accompanied S} are not recollected i be Mexican loss by a Lieutenant to be 100 killed and 1 be- Americans lost 12 or 15 horses and GO pacU mules WECKLY ABROAD The and li have it Chini J he attacked b Chinese md spiked ly a thousand cannon the latter slew ant of pool people of the of cor- ruption in b gb pi ices hive m de in France General erts Pi and bet n brought ti trul Ine of Peers 1 hf cause of const liberty is in Prussia bul loo fast fjr if e the King has promised agniti in four Baton bis from 1'w o each oilier in duel ID Jinn an the JUl of Moy Mr Cobden w is at on the 22nd of June t honor of his v ISM at w hit consul of United anil tho consul lor the Porte were J sloup has one an American brig i with 520 iUves on board bound lo Rio has paswd foi continu anc 3 of the free importation ot substances into Fiance until the January be n following on t per annum family Leigh Hunt children of Hood of thr m Liverpool d in business during month of May memorial has bien lo tbs Queen signed by 100 000 women of England praying that trading m ma be suppressed by he Grand Duke visited on the accompanied by SMI Robert Vrt Sir Graham and several personages Sir ert Stopford Governor of Greenwich pital died on the June 80 Ho had been ID the navy of 60 Jk   

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