The New York Herald Newspaper, September 27, 1848, Page 4

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LL LLL now lying in ov) he bor, have ordered these pzmps, and he is also prepa cng to sopply a number of ore ders for ship buierr But the steam pymp is a perfect delve, williake the place of every other kind of p mp tor dey docks, and wherever the roising of Ie ge bodies of water is required. Two wen, 1 ¢@ Michael Mulligan and John, Oliver, Wee vesterdey arrested, on the charge of breaking pote t se of Mrs. Christina Plom- beng mpt gto violate her. were commited fort i Mre Farren avd Mr Jamieson are drawing fine houses at ihe Fioct street theatre ae Mr Owe s ussal, is doing a fine business at the Muse: PuiLavevrmia, Sept. 26, 1848. The Chester Cowaty Bank Robbers—Fire—Ac- cident— The Opera, &c., we. The antic.pation that the trials of the West Chester County Bank robbers would be com- menced this morning, drew a large crowd to the Quarter Sessions et room. The counsel, how- ever, succeeded In ;recuring & postponement until Thursday. Old Hen Pratt, recently brought to the city from Mercer, Penn., Abraham Pence, and Edward MeGowen, were arraigned this morning, on the charges prvd.ng against them, in con- nection with the nefarious transaction. The tnals that are about toensue, will lead to the dis- closure of the grendest scheme of villany, that our criminal calendar, hws exhibited for many a day. McGowen, one of the detendants arraigned this morning, is the superintendent of the Moyamensing Police, and) was previously long connected with the late Recorder Vaux’s office. Another police officer 1s strongly suspected of being an accessory, and it is reported that he has been suspended from hie station until the result cf the trial shall be known. The evidence against those charged with this offence havi: g been gleaned from the disclo- sures made by two cucerned in the robbery, an efiort was, on Suuday, made to throw odium upon the admission ef such evidence in criminal imials, and lead the public to distrust all testimony eheited by guil'y men turning State’s evidence A report Was, theref re, put in circulation, statin, that a convict, whe had by his evidence convicte two accompiices of the celebrated Hampton rob- bery, had m: » confession, in which he cleared them of all particijwtien in the offence, and ac- knowlegged that he had perjured himself upon the trial, This repert was cveulated ata late hour on Sunday event g, and all the papers US peat et) contained the story, artfully concocted for the purpose. Paraculer pains were taken that the story should be known to all the reporters, and, in one instance, 1t Was repeated to the editor of a paper by one of those interested in its being extensively cirevisted. W. B. Reed, Esq , the deputy Attorney General, contradicts the whole affair officially, and the object cf the hoax being tully exposed in the newspapers, the o:iginators will not derive the be- nefit from 1t they expreted. There have now been eight persons airesied in regard to this robbery, ~ifieee trials will pobably take place before the close of the present session of the court. The wholesale drig store of C. W. Appleton & Co., in Markct street above Ninth, was set on fire about noon t.-dvy, by the explosion of a large lamp filled with alcohol, (ver which some_medical pre- paration was ‘nH process of, manufacture. The whole s ed at $8000, was destroyed. It was paltially covered by insurance. Jas. Dougherty was run over by the Neptune hose carriage, during the alarm of fire, and had is thigh tractured. 4 ne parts at the Walnnt street, last night, was hailed with a brill ant «nd most enthusiastic, audi- ence. Mrs. Segiim was not in as good voice as usual, but nevertheless, her principal songs in the Bohemian Girl, wee encored repeatedly. Reeves had to repeat, * When the tair land ot Poland, jhree tins, so rapturously was he applauded. The yest of the ec mpany peiformed their parts ad- murably, and the pro-pect is that the present en- aagement will prove highly profitable to the man- ager. 1a, Sept. 25, 1848. Chester Bank Robbery—Abolition Excitement among the Quakers—Sicamships, §c. Another arrest bas teen made of a person impli- cated in the Chester county bank robbery, apd as the list is now believed to be nearly complete, the trials will, probably, soon be commenced, Benjamin Pratt was brought to thecity yesterday from Mercer county Pennsylvania. where he bad lately been ruralizing for the purpose of evading the pursuit which he knew was on foot. « : ‘The “epirit”’ moved an ultra-abclitionist named Elijah E. Pennypacker, to give expression to his anti-slavery feelings, yesterday worving, in the Hicksite Friends? meeting, in Cherry street, creating somewhat of a sen- tation au cng thai staid aud sober sect He inveighed, With copriderabie bitlermess. against certain Friends, the shelves of whore stores groaned with the waight of goods, which were thy produet of robbery and the lash. Two of the elders. who telt that his remarks applied to them, urged bias to refrain, while others were anxious that he ehoula proceed. The scene was, however, brovebt toa close by the usual signal for a dispersal iven mone propeller steamsbip, Columbus, arrived at Charleston op Saturduy afternoon, at 5 o'clock, in forty-nine hours trom Fhiladelphia, having left her pier below Cheeuur street on Thursday afternoon, at4o'clock ‘hin i# believed to be unprecedented ‘The pew steamer Ualtimore, built here for the Balti- more and Frederch burg Steamboat Company, takes her departure to morrow evening for the South. She will run between aitimore and Acquia Creek, under the eccmmand of Capt. Charles Gunnell, who has superintended ber busiding and fitting out Phe story of a curious development in crime, said to have been elicited trom the confession of @ convict named Russell published in most of thecity newspapers this morning, turps out to be @ false report, It was said that thie convict had declared that two accomplices, Whe bad been copvicied, through his evidence, of the Hempton robbery. were entirely innocent of the crime, ‘and cbut he bad perjured himeeit by swearing against them. x Letter from Henry Clay. peigiiol Hanover, Va., August 22, 1848. My pean Six—Many known and tried whigs, some grey with age. « por‘ion of your school companions, and the dercenduuts of those who were wont to bow in Teverence betire ihe throne of Grace, and hear the authenticity of the Christian religion proven by your father’s word, and *ko knew your devout and pious mother. have couterred on me, the presiding officer of the Convention. thy hover of performing the pleasing duty of trapemittyng to you an account of an assem- biage of freemen, who organized in Convention. at the Slash Chureb Havever.\ a. for the purpose of nominst- ing yourreif as Pre-isent of these United States, The accompanying preamble and resolutions fully explain the object and views of the Convention. * . . ‘ * * The vocation, your sole object seems to have been tote to 00K ‘od. The rays of true liberty, which glow 0 intensely 1n yourrelf, have been diverged for the common god of your species—for your country — to see her prosperoarand happy at home—honored and respected abroad. Cousequently, you are the embodi ment of whiggery. av exewplar for the present and fu- ture ages, ‘Lie hiswory of your life gives the best defi- pition of a whig—" au asserter of the rights and the liberties of the people.”’ Believing, as many gravely do, that the Union isin danger. you will not be sur- prised that whige should look on you as fit person on whom to cart their votes. a» President of the United States; that by #0 doimg the republic may again be faved, and banard down through us to our eniidren, as unsullied ax we recetved it trom the hands of our fathers, and they to their children’s children, for ages of With sentiment> of e+'eem and regard, ; 1 KO. marae THOMAS G. CLARKE. cs Asuiann, Sept, 12, 1848, My Dean Stn—I duly received ,your very kind cfiicial letter, tranrmitting tbe proceedings of a pub- Ne meeting, beid a¢ be Slash Church, in Hanover county, at whieh (bey ad me the honor to propose Ly Leme me a cavoidate Jor the Presidency, in terms highly Batt and complimentary i eeettite Mucus. the persons assembled on that ccemiou, many names with which, ia my youthful days, I was very jaw ilar and extremely intimate —as- fociuter wl sebool, playwuter. neighbors, friends, The slarb Chureb, too, where the assemblage took place, recalls many early aud agreeable recollections, as being that a: which | received # large part of my im- pertect education. Heguraing those proceedings as the affectionate ex- presrion Gf the erters: ail chment, and comfidence of my old companion: or the'r descendants, | have never received any Fumtiar document with more gratification, or with ren limes! presu x ‘ were eeeuediiee ora rericur and formal presentation of my name to the people of the United Sister asa candi dnve for the preeiden uel cfiee, | am eure thet you will not by eurpriced wt my rayipg that it is impossible for me to accept the peeggenens oll was submitted to the ‘ation of tbe Philadeiphia Convention, which Aner bied in June Inst. ‘That body thought proper to Homivate & dirtinguirhed citizen of the United States And nome — lu sew of ie reintion in whieh I stoo to the convention, | de T ought to pass SDy JUdpMeENt UpeH it proceedings It is sufficient for nie to how thai G not derm itexpedient to nominate me Je this decision | have entirely ac quicreed, [ bave quietly submitted to it, and have GIVER BO eHCOUrRgEAT DE OF couLienABce TO apy Tur ther use oF convection of my name with the Pre. 1 have un formiy write ge A aud. Suuividuele who have nude the ject | hope that my goou itiends Of Hanover will wpprove of my adLereuee to this resolution, dictated by my honor, by ® regard to my character, And by my desire of recire- ment, ‘Veil hew under what great obligations they be aud thet Peball cherish the proofs of Ld confidence, whieh you bare rent at precious treastires OF memory tue wihous tendering to you, per= ) acknowledgments for Whe kind b whieb addressed we, y to the vene- a. Cua bonne INTERESTING FROM OUR NEW TERRITORY IN Yee PACIFIC, Gold Excitement, ondition of Affairs, &e., ke, Ke, Continuance of the Extraordinary San Francisco, June 1, 1548. The whole of this part of Califorma is im the highest state of excitement (and the southern part willsoon become se) relatve to the Piacera, or gold regions, rece: tly discovered on the branches of the Sacremento nver. Three-fourths of the houses in Sen Francisco are actually vacated ; even lawyers have closed their books, and taken passage, with a spade and wooden dish, to make fortunes by washing out gold from the sands on the Sacremento. Cooks and stewa:ds have re- fused fifty dollars a month to remain under their former employers. Clerks’ wages have risen to a thousand a year. Carpenters, blacksmiths, and teamsters, who in April received three dollars a day, now refuse ten; a few still remain, making shovels, spades, and pick-axt nd turning wooden bowls, who are making upwards of twenty dollars a day. : ee informed that one blacksmith makes ten to fifteen small picks, and sells them as a favor at $6each. English spades and snovels will com- mand $10 each, and by taking them to the gold regions, yield a heavy profit by selling again. There is ‘not in town one new shovel tor sale, perhaps not atin cup orpan. A boat requires four days to go fiom here to Sutter’s Fort. The fare has risen from $4 to $12, each passenger carrying his own pievisions. Wooden bowls, worth in New York 10 to 15 cents, wouid sell here now for $5. The gold diggers find the ore on the banks of the river as deep as 18 inches; but it is supposed to be deeper, and to extend from river to river overa large tract of country. They are obliged to stand in the river to wash out the sand; the gold remaining in the bottom of the vessels—the particles are very small, though some few weigh one-fouith of en ounce, and it 18 more pure than the doubloon. The * operatives” are now leaving the Placera, to seek for other spades and bowls, and also to construct some more machinery, that bese may work out ot the water. ‘ Report says that the “ gold coast” is very ex- tensive, end can be worked by thousands for years tocome. For this I cannot vouch ; but that they have but ae began washing, and can obtain eight to ten dollars per day, and that twenty thousand dollars worth of pure gold has reached the mer- chants of this port, in exchange for merchandise, I am very confident. Vessels are losing theircrews, and masters their servanis, by desertion, to gather in the golden plunder—for such is the land be- longing to the public. i the quicksilver mines now in operation, has, as yet, used only Whaler’s try pots, and has made ene shipment to Mazatlan, and has now eight thcusand pounds of quicksilver on hand; the works have, however, ceased, the mines have all gone to the “Piacera” where every one works for himself; there pure republicanism is carried out in practice, —no0 masters, no servants—all men are “free an equal” A club of ten to twenty men have, in a few instances, offered one of their number $20 per day, to stand cook—a carpenter the same to build ashed. We now fear the fever and ague may pre- vail among these people, if so, they must suspend operations until October. I am afraid the knife and pistol will also be in free and common use. The “Placera” sand 1s: rich that if exported to England or the States, it would be as valuable as tea, ceitainly more so than the best Coffee. To me it seems this state of things cannot exist long, yet those who return from the golden river say 1t will endure for years; should this be the fact, imagination eannot predict the result; but one consequence must follow—all provisions, clothing, &c. &c., must be imported, and also ready made houses, for no one can afford to pay ten dollars a day for mechanic’s labor. Su Parsano. By the following extracts from the Califorma papers, it will be seen that the gold fever isplaying havoe with the newspapers. The following 18 the valedictory of the editor of the Califorman, on the 28h of May, which speaks for itself :— To Ovr Reavrrs:—With this slip ceases for the present, the publication of the Californian— “Othello’s occupation ’s gone!” The reasons which have led to this step, are many and cogent. We shall, however, only state a few of them, merely to sutisfy those whose curiosity may be aroused sufticiently to gain for us a perusal, and to show the expediency of the measure. ‘The majority of our subscribers, and many of our advertising patrons, have closed their doors and places of business. and lett town, and we have received one crder efter another, conveying the pleasant request, that “ the printer will please stop my paper,” or “ my advertirement asl am about leaving for the Sacra- mento’? Wehave also received information that very many of oursubecribersin various parts of the country, have left their usual places of abode, and gone to the gold repion, rhowing that thie fever (to which the cholera isa mere bupgler in the way of depopulating towns.) is not confined to San Francisco alone. We really do not believe, that for the last tem days, any- thing in the shape of a newspaper has received five minutes attention from any one of ourcitizens. This, itmust be allowed, is decidedly encouraging — ver; ‘The whole country, frem San Franciscoto Los Ange and from the sea-thore to the base of the Sierra Nevada, resounds with the sordid cry of “gold, gold, gold,” while the field is lett balf planted, the house half built, and ything neglected but'the mai facture of shovels and pickaxes, and the means of transportation to the spot where one man obtained $128 worth of the real stuff in one day's wash- ipg, and the average for all concerned is $20 per diem ;—for such infact are the reports which have reached us, and from apparently reliable sources, In consideration of this state of affairs, and the de generacy of the taste for reading s0 naturally co quent upon the rush for gold, where the word is “ every man for himself,” and u total disregard for his neigh- dor, it would be # useless expenditure of labor and ma- terial to continue longer the publication of our paper. Had we a large amount of capital to expend in the in- terval of dull times which must necessarily result from & total abandonment of all mechanical pursuits, we r' ould still continue to print and publish our paper, nether it was read or not. At the time when we took charge of it, the receipts were not only amply suffi- cient for its own support, but allowed of » handsome profit, but “The beet laid sehemes of rice and men Aft gang aglog,” As Burns once remarked ; and soin this instance,— the “ gold fever’? steppsd’in and changed the aspect of things instenter, upsetting all our calculations and reducing us to the necessity of suspending paper pay- ments. ‘The Californian however, may by no means be con- sidered as extiont, theugh for @ time discontinued, ‘Whenever the people of California resume the use of their reading facuities, we shall be ready to serve them with & newspaper, according to the best of our abilities. After this dute, and until the publication of the pa- per is resumed or other notice given, the public are in- formed that vo business whatever will be transacted in the name of J.D. Hoppe & Co.; those interested will govern themrelves accordingly. The editor of the California Star, however, in bis valedictory does not seem to acknowledge the “ gold tever’* as the cause of his stoppage, though the total breaking up cf the usual routine of busi- nets and the removal of such crowds to the Sacra- me: to must have had its effect. The following advertisements show that all this cry wbout gold has some solid foundation :— Gor! Gop !! Gon !! !—Mesers, Dickson & Hay ore purchasers of Sacramento gold. A liberal price given. Bee Hive. Gop Scare Wericnts.—Accurate gold scales avd weights made to order by the subscriber, at short hotice, Mavy persons appear not to know that gold Weight is diferent from that which is used in ordinary weighiDg—such is the fact. and it would be weil for the tame to be cxtensively known, as the gold prospect is geod Jor & great number of years working, with » force of several tbow-and men Troy weight is that which is altogether used in weighing the precious metals, and *# gruduated iu this wire 124 graine, 1 penn: 1 ounce; 12 ow ole) S pone the i the subscriber, who will take Placera gold in paymene, San Francisco. M y 27, 1846 BR. Buckuew, Goin! Gorw!! Gow!!! vill be paid for California gold by R. Bue! Watchmaker and Jeweller, San Fransisco. But * per contra,” the following price current of the 24th of May, likewise shows to what an enor- Bicus price many articles have risen. We give the jnice current entire as it ig quite a curiosity in ite way — W wotrsare Parovs Cumnunt.—San Francisco, Wed- berday, Muy 24 1846 ~—Aie.—Sevtch, none; English, $3 60 & $4 per dor, Bread. Pilot, $7 per owt ; $6; fine navy, $0, crackers, $3 per tin. les — Tulow, dip, 15% 130 per ib; do. mould, 18% » 18¢.; sperm. 600 ; at Sie Cowl ~ Charcoal, 260 per burbe!. Coe ie per Ib; chocolate, 620. Cof- fee — Mavilla, 16% 2c per 1b.; Central America, 20, cpper — Sheathing, Stic perl Jikee perth ; hemp, 166. Segare —Long wi 6 M.; sbert etx, $6; Mania, $16; ‘Spaniche $i, oie: tcr~ Privte 16 » 20e per yard, brown cotton, 14.8 140; vbite ection 126 l6e.; biue dre. 18 «21 ccthing, very scarce; boots. $3.0 $4; $245. Druge.— Epsom enlte ° Mrcherel. $10 pet bbl ; codtivh. $10, wal $8 60 per dozen, Fieur wn & $10 per barrel; Oregon, $8 roii~ Dried wry rearee, m of26 Ibe. $4. apples, kore and Skips —s r, benver, per Ib, $2, Glase.—6 by 10, per box, $60 10 by 12 $98 $10 Grain. — Wheat, per burh.. Toe, comm $i a $1 25; ents, DOLE, Nd iD great demand teley, $1 8 $150; Dey, HONE, aud im erent deme Herowne Pinte and) rtock look morier leeks, do. $40; dead leeks 60. 00. $6; tpring bolle, per par 5 i He; do tutte per dus rhs. very pienty ii, 14; Cebitormia,’ $8, Roureia, 12, frop. per lb,. 1s 3; hoop, do., do ead ~Pig. per Ib. 8. Uprer. per doz cult skim. $72; fine elk skim, $30; five buckekin, aniston of calf, $20; buckskin, com: barnes: leather $1be row leather, per Lun ber.— Oregon pine. $46 per Mj Califor: $40 w $60; red wood. $40 w $60; do ‘shingles, Mateber.— $1 60 per gross, Molasses — None. ich Isends, $18 & $20 per $b u $8 in demand, Morr—Sa owt. Mustard — Engle Island $3 perdo., Nas — Cot, keg; WOU Ibe. per Ib Naval Storee.—'Tar. $15 per bbl ; piteh, $8; rorin, $5; epirits turpentine, $1 50 Oils —Olive. per demijobn. $6; leed. $1 60 per gall ; whale, scarce, The; sperm, $1 80. Paper —Voel cap, $6 per ream? lever, $40 5° printing pene Paints— Red Ameri- can, none; white do, $3 per keg; vermillion, 500 per 1b: vanish $250 per getl.; biheige 12%. per (b.; cbalk, 6c.; whiting. 124¢. Porter —None. in demand, Frovisions—Beef mers per bbl.. $16; prime, $14; pork, were, $17; prime. $16; Inrd, perib , lie ; butter, 37s fe. ; epee. per dox. 87366.; cheree, p hams, :woked American. 10 ; do. do Rice— Manilla, per lb.. Ti ; American, Sic, Five, per box, 2c. ; coarse. per bbl, $250c. Spioes— Lepper per Ib, Ide. ; cloves. 624 ; nutmegs, per Ib, $8; cinnamon, 30 Spirite-—Brapdy, rc , $2 & $3 50c.; Tum $1 50c ; gin, per case, $9; Avguadiente, per bbl , $40 ; cider, per doz, $6 500 Steei—German, per |b, 20c,; English. 120 ; American.10c Sugars—Brown, er ib. 6 @ To ; Ravana. white, 10% # 11\0.; do. brown, Yo ; loaf, 16 a 180. Tallow—Tallow,' per 1b, Oke Montaga, 9 @ 10c. ‘Teas—Imperial, per Ib. 760 ; gUDpowder, $1 a $1 1230. ; hyeon, 50 ® 750. ; young bysom, 75c. a $1; byson skin, 80c $1 12} ; soucheng, 40c. « 6240." Tin—In platen, per boa, $28 — Tobacco, rc. 30 a 053g0. Wines—Cali- fornia, per bbl., $12 ; port, $8 a $12; sherry. $8 @ 10; ep sto per cask, $1 500. a $2. Wool-—California, per 1c. aye place to the following obituary of the U.S. Vice Coneul, at San Francisco :— Died, at his own residence, in this place, at 1 o'clock, A M, on the 18th inst., after an illness of seven days, of a fever, Wiu1aMm A. Leivesponrr, Eeq., late US. Vice Consul for this port. Having received the conso- lations of the Catholic religion during his illness, he wes buried yesterday. at 3 o'clock. after the appropriate ceremonies, in the Mission Church of Dolores, near San Francisco. One of the largest and most reepecta- ble assemblages ever witnessed in this place, followed the deceased from his late residence to the place of in- terment, and every thing was done on the part of the community to evince its deep feeling for the loss ithas sustained. All places of business and public enter- tainment wers clored—the flags of the garrison and the shipping were ying at balf mast, and minute guns were discharged from the barracks and the shipping, as the procession moved from town. It is not our intention to comment upon the history or merits of the deceased; @ few brief remarks for the information of strangers will suffice. Captain Leides- dorff was of Danish parentage, but was a native of the West Indien, and is supposed to have been about thirty- . six years of age at the time of his death. He was formerly well known as a merchant captain in the ports of New Orleans and New York. but for the la+' oo ears he has been in buriness on this coast, where be gain high character for integrity, euterprise and activity. In private life he was rocial, liberal and hospitable to an eminent degree, and in bis attach- ments he was warm, cordial and con‘dding, even to a fault. As a merchant and « citizen, he was generous, enterprising and public apiriced, ‘and his name is inti- mately identified with the growth and prosperity of San Francisco. It is no injustice to the living, or un- meaning praise for the dead, to ray that the town has lost its most valuable resident; and the feeling evinced by the community i ite as @ man and a citizen tory with that of San Francisco. that all olasses deplore his death as a great public —t. While many mouro for his various social virtues, in Capt. Leidesdorff th laboring classes of the community and the poor ha’ lost a munificent eee and a generous friend. Papers in New York, Philadelphia, and New Orleans are requested to notiee. Influence of the American Press in Eng- land — The “ New York Herald” and Chartism. The following is the examination of John James Bezer, recently convicted of sedition in England :— [From the London Morning Post, August 19 } Examination at THE Mansion Ho} Bexzer was brought before the Lerd tody of Daniel May, city policeman charge of mesnor, Mr. Hayward, from the office of the Solicitor to the ‘Treasury, attended for the prosecution. Mr. James White, short-hand writer, said—On the evening of Friday, the 28th of July last, I attended a meeting at the Theatre in Milton street, in the city. I got there about a quarter to eight o'clock. There were not many persons assembled when | first went, but the number was augmented to about 500 or 600, and increased from that, in the course of the evening, to upwards of 1,000, I should think. I saw a bill lyingon the table, a cr ry of which is as follows :— “Is IRELAND UP?—A great public meeting will be held to- night, Friday, the 2sth ofiJuly, at tho Milton street Theatre, Cripplegate, to take into consideration the momentous orisis in Ineiand. Chair taken at eight o'clock, Several talented patriots Will address the meeting. men, Irishmen, attend! at. tend! Admission, pit and gailery, one penny; platform and boxes, twopence.” I went in ‘without paying, but was followed and obliged to pay. The meeting consisted ot the poorer classes, mostly Irish laborers, and such a class of people a8 you always see at Chartist meetings. There were a great number of women as wellas men. | took notes of the speeches made during the evening in short hand. The pei were made from the stage of the theatre; a chairman was appointed. A chairman was appointed before the speeches commenced. I know the defend- ant. Inthe course of that evening I heard him make a speech there. I took chat speech in short hand, and I now produce my original notes. They are as fol- Jows :— ‘William Bezer said—It is not the fashion of Char- tists to prevent free and fair discussion, It is the fashion of the enemies of the Chartiate to prevent dis- cussion. I love discussion. I glory in being in dis- cussion and simply because | think that dircussion, bared upon fuir and equitable grounds, is the best way of arriving at the truth; and I hope it was a little mis- take on the part of two or three of our friends, If it was not # mistake, it was only a trick of the authori- ties themselves to kick up disturbance Now, then, to the retolution I hold in my hand. * Resolved, that this meeting deeply sympathises with the struggling people of Ireland, and is resolved to assist them by all and every means in their power, and that we consider the physical preparations of the govera- ment unjustifiable, without the proper remedial mea- sures attached thereto.’ Brother Chartists, brother republicans, brother democrats, for I don’t know that 1 can addres you by any better name than democrats, for the principle of democracy is the priaciple of fair play— the principle of democracy is the principle of a fair stage to all, and no favor to apy. ‘The principle of democracy is the rights of the rich and no more. ‘The principle of democracy is the rights of the poor, and no less ‘The principle of democracy is the great- est amount of good to the greatest number. In short, the principle of democracy is the principle of justice and truth. Democrats understand each other all over the world. Democrats are the samo in every nation. The democrats of Russia, the democrats of Poland, the democrats of Switzerland, the democrats of Germany, the democrats of France, and the demo- crats of Ireland understand each other. ‘They are all travelling the sume road. They have all one end. ‘They have allone aim. They have all one object— and that object is glorious liberty. They are all sing- ing one song. not in the same languages perbaps, but the same sentimente— “Oh Liberty ! will men resign thee, Once having felt thy genero: s flame? Shall locks, or bare, oF bolta confine thee, Or whips thy nobie epirit tame?” the defendant said—“ That is part of the Mar seillaise Hymn,”? “ No, it bas not tamed John Mitchel yet I will be bound. It has not yet tamed Ernest Jones I will be bound. Did it tame the men of old when they were bound at the stake? No, it did not. It actually pro- greeted their principles more than they would have progressed, and let tyrants beware. You had better thut up ehop—you bad better put up your swords, and cut and run, for democracy is spreading, depend upon it, and sooner or later will overwhelm you all. My friends, we live in strange times. We live in very queer times, and yetét is @ privilege to live im these times, We have seen a great many things, We have secn lords. and dukes, and princes, and all the rest of the mob in different nations, cut and run. Louis Philippe had to change his clothes and his whiskers, aud to take bis umbrella, and run and cutaway. We have seen great changes, and we shall live to see e.—John James yr, in the cus- jo, 357, upon a ae bys I might say, Mr. Chairman, and all respectable people, and for this rra- son, because every man that worke for his living ho- nertly, either by his head or his hands, iss respectable man, though by bad laws he may be badly clothed, and badly cured. and badly fed; and those who do not work for their living. but fatten upon the labor of otbers, are yt respectable people, but, om the eon- trary. ome thieves, and rogues, and vagabonds, though nd fare sumptuously every y Wear crowns upon their heads, swords banging at their tails—though they may be calied lords and dukes, and marquise, and 5 ro vieccunts. an@ right reverend fathers in knights of the garter, and grooms of the stol lords of the bedchamber, and all the other fi aud mummery, and humbuggery. | thei sddrese you, Mr. Chairman and friends, as res people, for I presume th: tpoukiing here and a there of despite «8 for bivo exception of those atures, we are all respectable people, I hope.— J work for my living. If Lord John Russell wants to know what 1 am, I am « merchant in the olty ot London, J am @ merchant of the city of Lon- dep, and though perbeps I have not much rhino, 1 om pexbep: more respectable than mi other mer- Lavtr. for 1 do goto ‘ket with ready meney I sell firb about the streets. and if Lord John Russell wants to be « curtemer, | will sell bim a pike cheap Or if the Treaeury is almost exhausted, which I dare say it neerly Se—i1 the Exebequer is very low indeed, | ama charitable man though our friena Shaw, the other bight, eaid he would not be eo merciful as | am ; if the Treaxcry i# 0 very low, and Lord John Russell cannot aflord te buy a pike, I will give him one. I was going fo ray thet we live in queer times, I say again hat st isn privilege to live in these times; but let as uot forget that there is a danger also in living 1 thee times Scme of the men that I invited to-day on thir platform perhaps think eo However, ne th ng thet we must not jet before li, nemely, that we hve in times when man expects ench other to do bie duty. There ore the tines for duty. We must perform our duty. ii we perform curduty well, generat ‘ yet unborn’ withers Uf we pertorm oor duty i, generations yet phern will come ne, at is that duty? versferm Stay of inet week rye, our duty is to sym- peel with bewnd The Northern Star says well; cord there’ My triends our guty is to cur duty is to pity Ire. oclp Ireinnd. and | will | hep ber the best way we oan, 1 om pot going tosay in God's name get arms, for that ie redition ; lem not gorng to ray. ia God's name get pihes. for thet is telony ; but 1 am going to say, ia GCd’r nome pet umbrelias. for the rip may fall; Lan LONE [Oo rwy. tm Ged's pame get great coat for the Witter incoming ep. and you might eateh cold, Lot going fo tell you my cpivion of the government of this country; you ell pretty well know that; but [ will give you the opmion of somebody ele; and as ibe man ie a long way off. 1 don’t think t the gover totter of the New Fork Herald 1 am reading from ® Stamped newspaper (ibe Zrmes), the moat loyal Paper in ell the world, ond therefore there is no Qeuson in that, This ‘is what Brother Jonathan thinks of the Brtich government, They say +e we a pADOD,! you and L.'we sre a uation,’ eay they, *provelling in abject clavery ? There is # shame! ‘A bertow ohgarehy ix grinding the masses ef our popu- jation to pow der—it rules taxes and plundere the State for its own tu cond embition, ‘The church the law, d the crown. are kept up only to ise its power, The I don’t say —the lower classes, only rlaves? ‘Chartism,’ rays Brother Jonathan, >is the natural and true expression of the popular feeling; the unconceaied wieh cf the majority of the people it for a republic. and they are only kepl in check by the ter- rors of military force.’ And now,something to the point thet har called us together this night. We will £0, “are eitber slaves 0 quote Brother Jopathan egain, because they cannot | cach bim. ‘If ever there were a people, ecitor of the New Fork Herald, whioh, mark you, is the organ of the wer party party in America is pow getting the ascendency. and tnat is another significant fact, ‘if ever there were @ people who had cause to rise und strike their tyrants, the Inieb are that people. If ever there was a time to doit, the present is it, ‘The crisle may be delayed until after barvert, but we are inclined to think that it will come then, beyond all peradventure. They will gain ap accerricn to their ranks, from Mr. Mitohel’s con- vietion and tranrportation, of tnoussnds who have heretofore oppored their movements; and if, afcer rising in orme, they can but hold their ground for five weeks, their exemple will assuredly be followed y the Chartista’ 1 don’t say so—it is the editor of the New York Herald—and the result will be the downsall of the great tyrant of the uni one of the mest corrupt, tyrannical, grinding. potic governments that Providence ever permitted to afllict a world. In this downfail the nobility aad uris- tocracy- the well-fed puppets of the goverament— they who have lived on the fat of the laud, and rev led ‘in luxury, purchased by the sweat and anguish of a vation, will be crushev to atoma’ If | am not de- taining you tco long, | will read you another extract, because you hnow 1 was told the other night that [ was a very good general-that I should not get into quod; it will be more iuck than judgment, in my opinion. However, the last eventug I spoke, [ only prayed something. }t does pot say in the act ti ‘we must not pray, it only anys that we must not ima- gine, compacs, or devise. ‘To-might | am only reading Gomething. Tbe gegging bill does not say we must not read ; #0 yousee I like to do everything according to law. Brother Jonathan eays again, ‘By the last arrival from England we have some indication of tbe policy which England has sbaped, and which, from all appearance, sbe is determined to pursue, [tis nots direct, open, and honest policy, such as Russia has marked out, but a mean, pitiful, bund system of rigue and Machiavalian de- ception, which Yernment from time immemorial, It is the same system which she has so successfully, thus far, used towards Ireland, and by which she has been enabled to retain her dominion over that island in despite of the wishes of its people and in direct contravention of all principles ot justice, human and divine, Fearing the powerful republic, it increase, its stability, and its future greatness, ans knowing herself to be powerless to oppuse any ob: cle in its way,this wicked, atrocious, and diabolical go- vernment has embarked in a policy which would dis- grace the Thugs of India, She dare not meet the re- public in the field, and there manfully and honorably dispute the spread of the principles of free govern- ment in Europe. The first shock ot battle would show her wickedness and prostrate her. But she oan lay the arsassin. She can stab her enemy in the if she bas done on former occasions. and as she pting to do-again, but it will be seen with what success eventually. The policy which she hay dete mined upon. is to rend abroad her agents for the pur- pose of intriguing with the people,and with the govern- ments of the continental nations, of putting the peo- ple against the government and the governments inst the people; of inciting the masses to rise for eirrigbts, and inciting the govcrnment, when the masses bave risen, to massacre them, as has been dove in Naples There is not only every proba- bility, but it is almost a moral certainty, ‘that the late dreadful massacres im the city of Naples were the work of this treacherous and mean government, through the egency of its intriguers, At the present time there is no dovbt that England has her agents scattered throvehout all Kurope'—of course she has them ecattered in Milton-Street Theatre—‘whose mis- sions are of this character, and who, if successful, would deluge Europe with the blood of her people, and re-establish. amid carpage and desolation, monarchy tn France andthe progress ofthe principles of free gov- ernment from makingfurther headway inEurope. These are the despicable and underhand means which this as- sassin government has resorted to to overthrow France not daring, as we bave ted, to measure lane with the giant republic.” e Times says, in an- swer to this, that England ‘has no more to dread from the navies of France, ‘han ¢be has trom the armies of Auerica, but the will meddle with the internal affairs of neither, not because she dreade the strength of either, but because’—I think so too—but because she respects the rights of nations, and recognises the value of peace.’ Now there is an important question in the bill—‘Is Ireland up?’ Im notin the Cabinet. I am not in the Council. 0. yes,’ know Lord John Russell w found guilty once by a Galway jury, but there have been more juries than the Gaiway jury, sit about Lord John Russell; but the question is asked in the Dill, ‘Ie Ireland up? I think you will all own she has been down long enough; and another thing you will own too, I think, that it ie time she was up, and if she does not get up herself as one man, serve her right for being down, serve any willing slave right, serve any one right that kisses the chains that bind them, It is only a shame that the innocent should suffer with the guilty, and that those who pant for liberty should still be in bondage, whilat some ure slaves at heart, but I hope that Ireland is not a slave at heart; and the time is fast approaching. perhaps in at it; and if she is, God of t the right. In ancient times *ewys the fe asked, ‘How long, O, Lord ! how leng shall tyrants reign? 1 question w: ask that question again. I say,‘howlong O Lord, shall tyrants reign?” Tyrants have reigned in Ireland for seven centuries nearly, and | hope that those that have mocked ber sufferings and starved her, may now meet with the reward they merit, whoever they are. But what would Ireland do if she had her nationality ’ say some people What has that to do with me, as an En- glishman’ The Irish have aright to govern themselves. If they govern themrelves ill, the rod will fall on their own bucks. Why should eight millions of Irishmen, merely because they are Irichmen, be called the ;most stupid peop!e upon the face of the earth? Ifthey govern themselves ill, they will have all the consequence: if they govern themselves well, they will have the ad- vantage of all beiug well, Butletthe Irish nation, as every other nation, govern itself by its own laws. Some people ray what have the English to do with it? The English, | consider, if they are democrats at heart, have to do with everything that is oppressive and un- just; they have raised their voice against injustice and oppression in Poland. Why not raise their voice wh injustice and oppression is perpetuated in Ireland? Lord John Rursell said yesterday, w! jome of the Ineb members of the House of Commons wore told by his lordship to goto Ireland, where they were wanted to make peace, they raid. ‘but will you not give us tome remedial measure, something by way of an clive branch to take to Ireland.’ ‘No,’ ‘said Lord John Rureeil, ‘ you must go, without any reme¢ial measures at all’ I say the government are acting either very roguith or very insane. and therefore Is openly and advisedly, that neither a roguish Govern. ment nor an inea! government ought to exist, But the same gentleman says that do not want avy reform, Why, gentlemen, | am ready here to arsert—and, as I love discussion, | would discues it with anybody—there is something rotten in the political state of England; that, fom the crowa of the head to the role of the foot, there is nothing but wounds and putrifying sores ; that monarchs, aristo- crats, lords, freetraders, special foonstables, and blue- devils, have all done that which they ought not to have done, and have left undone that which they ought to ; and if there is one monopoly more than another in this country it is the monopoly of legislation, One in has no voice in this country, and while that is 80 we are virtual, Af there is 0} bomination in Ireland m¢ re than another, it is the English church as by law established, and I advise you as soon as you have 3d. about you, to read the ‘ Black Book of Eng- land,” published by Cleave, and learn, and mark we and inwardly digest too,and you wili find that Lord Jobn Russell was very foolish, aud told lies too, when he stated that the people of England wanted no reform, But some tell that the great cause is the surplus Population ip England and Ireland; that is just what I believe myself, \d | thiok that bout the firetytime that the government and I ever agreed. Butgro it is; there are too many bishops, there is too yh aristocracy, there are too many drones to live upon the bees, | wish to God they would emi- ce T would not send them to Heaven, though there ‘no quertion about that, tor they would not be let in; nor | would not send them to Hell, for | should not upcharitable enough to do thet; but I would sen: them to some remote quarter of the globe, one go there bat a ene id thore perso! at 8 Fystem Of emigrati & very good thi: the sooner thore fellows igrate, tbe Detter With there few remarks, I beg leave to reiterate the senti- ment that is now in my borom, for | always like to say what | mean, id mean what I say, notwithstanding the conrequences that may ensue jfor the truth ought to be spoken. | reiterate the sentiment that Ireland is justified in rising up in arms against thone who ha’ oppresred her. And grant that she may win Teay, in the language of the poet— ‘Down with aristocratic slavery; ‘Up with republican bravery.’”” That speech was received with loud applause, waving of bats, cheers. and exetiement Cross-ezamined by the Defendant.—No riot took place at the meeting, before or after, that [ saw; but a man ‘was turned out in the middle of the meeting who was interrupting the meeting—his name was Nash —be was itted On the platform afterwards, to explain the circumstances, and that reemed to eatixfy Mr. Nash, You may have stated, after the word © flummery,”? th that they themselves have created,” such vebement cheering, that! can’t positively to it. as | did not catch thoxe words, swear I don’t ray they were not uttered, but I did not hear them. be words referring to Ireland and Aweries were quoted from the Times news pn I raw you reading the Times of July 7 | was sitting next you, and | looked over the paper. The passages also refer- ring to the policy of England and France were quote tions. Youd net tay that those xentiments were not yours inthe manner which | have written in my eter You raid. bere and there,“ Mind. I don’t aay #0;" and then you eon the extract, The de- fendont reid, “1am much obliged to you. Mr, White; | pent will be able to ca’eh bim. aud that is che | it isa very fair report. | would rather be reported by yew than by ® peleeman in piain clothes.”” Daniet. Mav «policeman. said—l apprehended the. efendent yesterday about bail past five o'clock, in the afternoon, just turning out cf Collingwood street, Whitecb»pel, in pursuance of a warrant issued by the Lora Mayor, which | knew was out. I told him L rhould want bis company 0 go into the city. as there Was ® Warrant out against bim, He asked me if 1 bad got the warrant? I told him no. He thea said, “ iben 1 shail wot s he did not think it was legal to arrest avy one without the warraat 1 told him it was useless resisting, as there were three or tour otber officers near at hand [had not seen the warrant, but [ knew of its being out. I took hia to Bow Isne station, aud there the defendant took a ayer out of his pocket, aud | wok it out of his hand, [produce it, It was 4s follows :—* Oppressed sub- jects, whem dr ven to extremity, become the most dangerous and inveterate foes and are actuated by a spit of revenge against their tyrante.—Goldsmith No couptry is worth retaining that cannot be pre- | served ctherwire than by military force Cruel wara | are always attended witb a spirit of enthusiasm, which | frequently carries meu to the commission of crimes, the bare thoughts of which, in their cooler moments, would Gi] them with horror,—Mr, Curwen, M. P.. 1796, Freevem of speech was essential to all real liberty, aud pope but thore who were conrcious of t would attempt to impore silence on the people, The public voice sounded harshly in the cars of bad ministers. whore | resentment prompted them to abridge the liberty of | the pation; but he trusted that hiv countrymen would not tamely submit to such insults and oppressions It was ouly 1m meetings that the real svatiments of the people could be manifested; and if this right should be annihilated, all opposition to mimsterial tyranny, either in or out of Parliament, would be crusted, and the democratic branch of the constitution would be overborne by the crcwo and aristocracy —I should like Cartwright’s American revolution, certideate of character”? Cross. examined by the Defendant —You did not offer any reristance further than saying you would not go without producing your warrant. You took that pa- per from your own pocket before you were searched. I war outside the meeting on the 28th of July. I be- lieve I saw the bills referred to ‘There was a bit of a disturbance outside when the man Nash was turned out, as they considered him a sort of a soy. ‘The Derenvant eaid—I shall reserve what I have to ony until the day of my trial. ( ‘ully committed. ahis man was afterwards tried, convicted, and sen- tenced to two years’ imprisonment. and a fine of ten pounds for makivg the above speech, and quoting, as « did, frem the New York Herald.) Married. On Monday, the 25th inst., at Dr. Rabineau’s Place, Bergen Point, by the Rev. Mr. Romaine, 4 Fitz Raxvo.rn, of Princeton, New Jersey, to Mit Asse Matitpa Eanve, daughter of Justice Earle, of the oy of New Yor At Washington City. on the 20th inst., in St. Mat thew’s Church by the Rev James Dinelan, Cravpz D. Buancnarp, of New Orleans, to Mpa A. ANDERSON, of the former place. 4 At Montreal, on the 20th inst., at the residence of the bride's father. by the Rev Digby Campbell. the Right Hon the Ea. or Exnot, hereditary Graad High Constable and Knight Marischal of Scotland, to ‘a Amevia, eldest daughter of Major General the Charles’ Gore, C. B., Commanding in Canada East, Dica. Op Tuesday, at 1 A.M, in the 87th yoar of hor age, after @ lingering illness Canouiny, wite of Smith Lawrence, and daugbter of the late Samuel Betts, Esq. ‘The friends of the family, and of the family of her brother, William Betts, Esq., are respectfully invited to, to attend her funeral this’ (Wednesday) afternoon at 2 o'clock, from St Clement's Church, Amity street, withoutfurther notice From the church her remains will be taken to Newtown, L I. for interment. . Mr. Joun Wausn, of enlargement of the heart. His friends and acquaintances are particularly in- vited te attend his funeral, from bis late residence, New England House. No, 6 Roosevelt street, at three o'clock, P M..on Wednesday afternoon, 27th inst. Philadelphia papers please, copy | n Tuesday morning, the 26th instant, of consump- tion, Exiex, eldest daughter of John and Johaus O'Keefe, formerly of Doneraile, county Cork, Ireland, aged 21 years, 10 montbs and 6 days. ‘The friends of the family are respectfully requested toattend ber funeral from the residence of her pa- rents, No. 97 Canal street, on Thursday afternoon, the 26th inst., at 4o’clock. Her remains will be deposited in the Roman Catholic burial ground, corner of Eleventh street and Avenue A On Tuesday, the 26th instant, after a lingering ill- ness,Epwin Batpwin, Esq. an old and respected resident of this city. His funeral will take place on Thursday next, 28th inst., at 4 o-clock in the afternoon, His friends and thore of the family are requested to attend without further ipvitation Yesterday morning. after a short and severe illness, Mits M. Macpenine, daughter of Thomas Murphy, aged 19 years, ‘The friends of the family, and those of her uncies, John Murphy, Effipgbam H. Warner, Rev. Samuel Nichols, Chas, M.Naury, and Edward O'Rielly, are invited to attend her faneral, this afternoon, at half- at 8 o'clock, from the residence of her uncle, C. M. ‘anry. 98 Cliff street, without further invitation On fucsday, the 26th inst., Diepenrcn Van Loos Ton, aged 27 years The friends and acquaintances late Good Intent Lodge, of Willi F.and the Order in general. are respectfully invited to attend the funeral this day. (Wednesday) at haif- past 1 o'clock, from his late residence, 20 Reade street. At Salisbury, Conn, last week, Josrrn HoLusteR, aged 95 years,’ He served in the revolutionary war. ‘At Unionville, Westchester Co, N. Y..on the Ist inst., Isaac G, Grana, M. D., aged 68 years. Also a hero of the revolution. At Round Hill, Northampton, Mass., on the 224 inst. of general paralysis. Gro. Rovx, of Mobile, aged 34 vusburg, |. O. of O. years, On the 4th inst., in London, Rear Admiral Dr Starx. On the 4th inst,, in Liverpool, Mr G. B. Mattnews, aged twenty-one years and four months, son of our old and respected friend Capt. B R Matthews, late of the steamsiip Great Western As Mr Matthews, jun., wes one of the cficers on board the Great Western whilst plying between Liverpool and New York, he had many friends who. with ourselves, regret his early decease.” Mr, Matthews was # young man of good ability, kind and courteous in his manners, and his conduct towards every perron with whom he had inter- course that of the gentleman. He died as a christian, and his latter end was pea On the 2d inst, aged thirty-eight years, Frances Exizanetn. wife of Henry Burnett, of Higher Ard- wick, Manchester, Eng., and elder sister of Charles Dickens On the 24th ult, at Scarborongh, Dr. J. A. Cramer, Dean of Carlisle, aud Professor of Modern History in Oxford University Weekiy Report of Deaths In the city and county of New York, from the 16th day of Sep tember to the 234 day of September, 1545, ‘Men, 6) ; Women, 49; Boys, 79; Girls, 73, Total, 261. ISEASES. ery, § asthma, 1: atrophiay 1; bleed ng, 2 ach, 1; burued or scalded, 2, bronehius, 5, can- cholera infantum, colic, Abscese, 1; a) bleeving from at cer, 1; casualties foneumption, ty, 9 26;' convulsions, 17; croup. 5; congestion of liver, 1; debili Qinrtl wea, 7: drorey. 2 dropay in the head, 18; drvp"y im the chost, 1; drowned, 2; dysente ety sipelas, 2; fever, 3; fover bilious, 2; fever Vera ned ny 4 Tremittent 5; fever scarlet, 2; fever ius, 7; fever cougestive, 1; fover nervous, 1; cough, 3; inflammation of brain, inflammation of chest, 1; inflammation inflammation o of she heart, lee ation of my et id 5 » OF y, 4; premature birth, 1; scrot OX, $5 ‘sicensest; opruey 3 rulcide,’ 1; sohirr 3 2; ulceration of throat, 1. rears, 51; 2 to 5, 34; & to 10, 51; 1to 2 82; 80 to 40, 27; 40 to 60, 15; 0 to OD, 14; 0 40, 6: 90 t0'100, 1. Plaven of Nativity—United States, 169; Ireland. 43; England, 8 Scotland, 4; Germany, 11; Denmark, 1; Switzerland, 1; British Poe sessions in North known, 1. erica, 1; West Indies, 1; Portugal, 1; um- From Hospital, Bellevue, 1; Penitentiary Hospital, Black- Island,2; Smal Pox, do. do., 2; Lunatic Asvium, do. d 3; Ward's Island. 2; Ra dls Island, 5; City Hospital, 5, Ci Prison, % Alms House, Blackwell's Isiand, 1; Colored Home, 2 Colored persons, 7. A. W. WHITE, City Inspector. y Inspector's Office. September 23, 1948. " MARITIME INTELLIGENCE, SHIP NEWS NOTICE. Commanders of vessels bound to this port, will oon. fera favor upon us by having all parcels, penal end Sy mptermea fer the New York Herald, for te delivery to our news steamer, the News Bor. She willbosrd inward bound vessels in the vi- ot, of Sandy Hook. Thoce bound to other whether foreign or domestic, will confer an ae 101 favor by forwarding to the Herald, through the mail or otherwise, ship or papers that may be deem- @4 of interest to the emmnunity. We gladly re- olprocate the favor. Port of New York, September 27, 1848. Cleared. — ip—Eeropa, (Br) Lott, Halifax and Liverpool, B Cu. pai 3 ipe—Onward, Chase, Liv ‘L, Nesmith & Walsh; Plantr, Pratt, Rotterdam, E D furibat & Co, eons Bark—Martin W Brett, Whitman, 8t NF, Brett & Vone, McGi Frances, Halt , R P Buok; ‘San Juan fC hitney Central Ameries, H & D Cotheal; Star, 3mii ny Billow, (Br) Davison, Windsor, NS, Soule, Sche—Swan, Smith, Attak Young, York River, Vat Wank Bidens aoetee eek Oo He ard Law, Chapter, Baltimore; Emily, Johnson, do; W E Collis, Sy el nb ferguson, Providence, lotto, Appleby, do; J Arrived. Steamship Southerner, Berry Charieston, 60 houre, with wo fyi, Heaton & Co. Ship Sullivan arrived tt Charieaton op Saturday, at5 rm, Sunday, 9 am, oxct anged siguals with shi; nd to Charleston; Monday, 9 Am, exc igual i supposed to be the Fairfeid, bound to Charleston’ Ship Garonne, «ot Bal\imere) Myers, Rotterdam, 44 days, with mdse and 197 stoerase parsengers, to Joel Wolfe. sh inane at by er. 12, Jom 52 85, epche brig Isabella, of and from Aye ou did net learn -where bound. making 19 mchex water every hour. Bondy Mook learirg, NW. in sight, fn nhenvy blow from SW. ou Hed aay bce, pi ib and yang ib Bark Ninws, (ot Bangor) Reed, Mariel, Cubs, 16 days, with mo sesrsieh be Card, Pi pits ‘ard, Pict . Bune, Whitney wee sdtapicadh theracienget ‘cht Ann Baris, Joner, Newbern, NC, 4 dayn Schr Dolphin, Latham, New bern, NC, 6 days. Sehr Peborsh, Robbins, ¥ ashingion, NC, bdays, SelB Uetebh ies, Ferries Virginia, # day, Bebr Stephen Waterman, Young. Se ame Sebr Little Tem, Hickman, Virginia, 2 days. fehy Eoinburh, Decker, Virginia, 2 days. Sel amp deh em, Te days. nye. Virvinin 2 daya, quae Wo reinin 2 dluye Bir Arn KC alker, Gndentt, Virwiain. 5 daym | Schr I hebe, Bird, Virginia, $ anys, Virzin's, 2daya, 4,4daya mae, ( hilares fr Aled Lawrence ro tan Moy J davan Predmove, Kiohmond, Serr Emtira Cewnres, Ka ninore & Sehr Virsitan Nickerson, snltimore, 9 daya, Rohr Ann Gerding, Homer, Balumore, ¢ days, ¥ eaman, Balomore, 6 days. Retr Gen May Pebr Dewi: . S iile Baitiners, 6 days, whine, Baltimere. 4 doys, ium, Grey, Cherrytisid, 10 days, » Liberty, do; H Howes, Sie’ Atteain, Neg Octeanhy Maat Toetin it ponlind,” Cetppeachy; “Montauk, Gnlvaaton: br ge Prato, t, Corl ‘a: couver, Demarara; Gometal Witon, Motile; Lady of the Lake, Bermuda, Serremnen 26—Wind, at sunrise, NNW; meridian, NNW; ‘sunset, NNW, Herald Marine NAONOS. Fpcanzown, Mark Sept Z1—arnived—Brig Alli Philsaeipbin tor Bosten; sobs Talbot, Brown, do de; Thow) evs. Brow Fre enekeburg: ume! Nauiuche: tor New ¥ 23d—In port, the above, PruLapenpua, fon Berton; b igs Hote kiss; Stat, 8 ‘bow yoon, NYork; Fall River; Jane Henderson, Norw °C tartd—ts rk Laconia, Boston; brign Empire, do: Colotado, carcd— on; ire, Eow Presoutt do, Haucver, Pordaad; sohs Mary Patterson, pred to; Vigilant, (6) Kermuda; elit, (Br) Johnson, St John, NB; m, Th t'3 B Davis; Jutis ceosr; aud Black Ha : orn pron; Co! Julius Cesar; ani i Haw! York; Bucna Vista, Brooklyn. cant Miscelancous. Lyrrer Bags of steawer Europa, for Halifax and Liverpool, Will core at the Keuding oom this day at half past. click. Letters cau be propaid at this uffice to destination. Siu St James, Godfrey, from Savannah, 14th inst, for Liver. pool, put u.to Boston on’Menday, leaky.” ‘The captain, second ate, and pix of the crew were k with the fever, Banx NW Butwee, in distress at Nassau, NP, paid the wreak crs $0UG, ‘The captaimeoveluded to goon to Boston to gee every thing that was Lecessury to refit, Bric MxraMoxA, st Mobile from Now York, roporte that om the 27th ult, in iat 2616, im 70 4U, experienced a very heavy” Norfols for du; Gienroy, Phin ‘ton, 1 aed York for Porth ‘ork, lana, Somes Maroy, Bi gale of wind, Which continued to blow with great violende unt the Hth, Iv commenced ut rousheast, and veer g gradually, ended atnortiwest, Durvg the wnole timo it rained heaviy, and the under and lightning were incessant, The barometer fell to 29. On the 4th inst. spoke a New Provid wrecker, whoxeporied thre ships ashore on the Great Bahama Islands all of wiuel would be sost. He bad a cargo ou board from one of them, but could not flud ont their names, it blowing free at the time, Saw a bark on the edge of the vank, with four wreskers avout her. She came toancbor on the banks during the gale, had cut away everything. Her bowsp.it was aiso go ‘The wreckere report the gale tw have been very severe. ‘I'he houses on. all the Keys were blown down, and the inhabitants were board og Tawi g yesrels to prveure fuod. At Elethura, and the Islands te winward, ali fruit trees were blown down, Bric Oris Norcross, wrecked on the Bahamas, had @ ¢ of fish and lumber, Capt Spates arrived at Nassau, NP, with bi two males aid one man—four baving been lost as stated yester= day, Capt $ bad (is collar bone broken aud his head bruised, and sustained much injury, trom which he was recovering, of the materials of the yesee! had been saved and taken into Nassau. Scum Frances Estuen, Nash, of Philadelphia, bound to Me bile, with an assorted cargo, was ‘Wrecked im the gale of the 270k ult, at Ker,y Islands. Sie bad lime in the hold, which ¢ ok fire when she siruck, and burut so that they were wnable to save An) thing, The ca,tain and ew wore taken to Nassau, having saved nothing but the clothes they had on. ‘The veesel became a. total loss. ibe register and papers were all lost; sume of tho curge and materials were saved and sold. Whalemen. Arrat New Bedford, Sept 24, olup Cowper, Hatheway, Pacife Ocean, last trom Brazil Banks, with 2750 bbls wh 150 do opm oil, ‘and 24,000 Ibs bone (sold 100 bbls »pm otlon the voyage). Spoke May 2, lat 40 45 5, on Brazil Banks, ship Fevelon, Mosher, New bedford, 100 sp 150 wh. Died ou board the Cowper, June 9, 1848, ‘John Beli, seaman, a native of Whytvotache, I Cid - Boston sept 25, bark Com Preble, (late ship) Lamphier, novaw Coc ame Toueded at Fayal, July 28, Geo. Washington, Baker, NB; Pa- rachute. Fis do do jauded 60 bbis oil; Rnigrans, We and from o landed 20 bbis; Aug 1, Kutuactt, Slocumb, do; 2d, Copia, Tuber, do; Minerva 24, Smulley, do, Inuded 50 bbs, 3d, Flocghboy, Fhelon, do; 4th, Lancaster, Cornell, do; 7th, Kuvoy, Walker. 00; Metacos ‘hockley, do; Sth, P Delano} lorae, Pid; Henry, Coleman, Nan; 9th Brookline, Jeffrey, Ni, la.ded ¥4 bbls; th, Elizabeth Frith, Winters, 5H. landed 150 bbls; 12th, Hy lané 10; 17 organ, hay a ded ‘188 Cvahings Wks 19th, L C'Richmond, Norton, di 20th, Marengo, Devoll, eo; 25th, Isaac Mic Shepber Benjamin, Mystic; Gen Williams, Forsy Tanaed 00 tis, Spoken. A number of vessels spoker,, will be found under tho Telograpnie head in another part of the paper. Ship Panama, Griswold, from New York (June 23) for Canton, July 20, lac N, lon 23 W, Ship Shanungs, Bailey, from Calvutta (May 21) for Boston, Juve 18, iat 5, fon 98 B. Brig Newcastie, Swift, of Boston, 15 days from New York for Forty Rico, rept 6, lat 24 20, lon 63. Brig Allert, of Philadelphia, 9 days from Wilmington, NC, for Boston, Sept 11, lat 3440, ion 71 3U—all bands being sick, was sup plied with medicine by the brig Keying, from Newburyport, at Charleston, Foreign Ports. Buenos Avnea Ang 2—(Seo Telegeapase in another ecluma ) 001 Sop: 7— Barks Velocity, Atkins,from Nortoik, via Joat ham, Ms just arr; Punlina, Percival, tor Liverpool, to discharge part cf her cargo, Ckonsravr, Aug 30—Ships Walpole, Richardson, une; Arios to, Perkins, for Kio Janeiro, ldg; Medora, Kand, for Bostoa, 6 of Zep barks Marcia, Wilsén, tor do to commence log uext days arren, Simpson, for Bordeaux. lug; Koonelle, Harmoa. for bert, Melcher; Quinucbaug, Jones, aud Mary Kenda, Crocker, unc; brige Emi y Farnbain, Breiubolm, do Athens; Joves, do,’ 2-th, ald barks Merlin, Welsh, N Yoru; 2th. Buitic, Alven, Boston; California, Kobinson, Wyburg, to load for Bordeaux; th, Saone, Holm, seston. Caviz, Sept i—Ship sh, from Genoa, art 27th ult, to finish Idg for Bos'on. Canpirr, Sept ‘Sid Br bark Ellen, Pettingill, N York. CaraniA, (dicily,) about Aug 20—Hark Joun Casiic, Rozors, dg si seed for NYork; would proceed to Palermo, to compote her carye, FaumouTH, (Jam,) about Sept 7—Schr Hearietio, Nason, for Balumore, sth Genoa, Sept 1—Bark Stomboul, Kendrick, for Smyrna, 2 ds. GIDKALTAR, Avg H—Shiy Mattakeeset, Comings, wo i Pairs the nex: week, reload part of her cargo, and sail fur ibosvous brigs J Koach, Brown, and a MJones, bay more, for Mulagasame oa; aflord, Robson, from Palerme for Boston, arr 20ub, obably sid again 27th, * GLascew, Septt—Ship Marcia Cleaves, Wilson, for Buston, ready (hus been prorrectly reporied sid 5h ) HaAtarax, Sept 10—Sld kchr Ornament, Hophing, Philad; 2%, brigs Acadian, Wood, for Boston, 23; Halifax, Laybold, for du, re (Jam,) Sept S—Bark Emily, Cope, for Philadelphia; brige Fairy, Hurper, trom do, disg for Port au Prince; Cawucian, Waiter, for Balumoro, Il; Edward Tillet, Keed, from NUrieans, for NYork; schs Howard, Buckingham, from do, for do; lows, fa Wiluongton, juet arr. LecHons, Aug l—Bark Santee, Marston, for Boston, Idg. Lison, Aug 26—Bnig Pulaski, Smith, divg, for Malaga, to load EAL Aca, Aug 20—Ship § pia, Walker Boston, ALAGA, AUg iP Sophia Walker, Wiswell, for abt Sept 12; barks E Wrght, Jr, Pittee, for do do; Apphia Maria, © Bilsings, tor do, uno; Stiswrence, Warte, from avd tor N¥ora, arr 24th; Columbis, Beecher, and Helen M Fieider, Willis, fordo seve; barter Vak, Swith; Lowa, Bearee, Wakulla, Mulford, and ani, bearse, for do Une; Corvelia L’ Bevan, Baraham, for do phia, une; Maria, Baker; Cuba, Blauchard, aud Mary wig fgt; Suwarrow, Sleeper, for Pslermo; Sarid uond, from and for ‘Cudiz;, brige Nerous, Masury, 3 Boston, jaet arr; Joseph Baleb, Wright, from Genoa arr a] Toeimg ge he Globe, Hillert,from Dublin, arr 271 for NOrieans: Gev # Williams, Paine; Sea Eagle, Williams, an Otteman, Hannum, for Boston; Henrico, Paine; Santiago, Hol- brook, and Allen King. Manson, for NY. tk; Gulnare, Dodge, for for Phila; Crom-tads; Gus\avus, Smith, wtg fit; Islam, Loflanc echr Mary Eleanor, French ‘for Baltimore.’ 25th, ald ser Mon. tegue, Moutague, NYork, (mostly laden with lemons and wine.) AiusL. Cubs, Sept 9—Sehr —, of Thomaston, just arr. Nassau, Sept i2—Arr trig Galveston, Bradford, N York Rewronr, (Wales), Sept7—Ships Bengal, Bray, fom (Liver. Burk. (yhence ate was incorrectly reported sld as if dirwot for Boston) tor Boston, Idg; Rose, (Br) sor do loaded; Mary, (Br) Ficrow, Sept 1G—Arr. brig Mayflower, for Boston, ldg. Sid Hreviously, schrs Sarah Sevey, aud St Patrick, do. tiv Gkanve, July 2-—Schr Hanuah, Wovdman, from Monte- video. Sx Joun, NF, Sept 13—Brig Rose, Simth, for Boston, ldg. Home Ports. Baxcor, Sept 21—Arr schr J.P Bent, NYork. Cld sohs Jane A hersey, bariow; and Cadet, Carle, Baltimore, Sid about 20th, ‘nig Leva, West Ludics yBRrol, Sept 28-Bld sobr Barton, Waldron, Key West and ie Besron, Sept 5—Arr ship St Jamos, (of Boston) Godfro Savannahs baths Ida, Hallett, Baltimore; Vesta: Piraa greig i; ederihsburg aly Be, Elliott, panies uf te US Aruile: Indep ndenee; Patrick Henry, Packard, Wilmington, Wim Davis, Morton, Priladelbhiua; Pauling, Flinn, tlooner Charles @ Stiaiton, Stevens, Sevanaaliy in, Crosby, Fredericksburg; Flying Arrow, Collamer, Talbot, Brown, do: Bflurt, itines, NY; Cornelis, Faulkin, do. Signal for a brig. Cid ship Thorndike, Childs, Ha: Yona: barks Com rable, (late ship) Lamphier, Indian Ocean, Whailog Sumi & Thomas, Soper, Leghorn aud Genoa; brig Catia. rine Storer, Sydney; schs Grace Dar ing, Aldxandria. Bava ia. Sept o-—Arr shige Switzeriaud, Lowell, Boston; Maryland, Berry, do; bark Pioneer, Elarsdge, do; brige Harp. Kite wan, Gunyar i joane, Loring, Bostou; Elmira, Fer-tant Portland; Milton, Yerk, do; echt Mary kmoling, tome ney, Kingaten, Jam; Walter Merchant, Pue, Chatlestous Sarah NYork; Kichmoud; (3 masts) —, theaea Providence; Lady. Ciintun, Craromer, VY Conveotiont, Elwood, do; EH Adains, ley, ——, Bath; Mary Teresa, Swalley, Port. ‘orbulo, Reever, SYork: Liveotor, Hickinan, do. Steaner Gooryia: ‘off James Poi hark sapp sed ‘the Raiabvw, rim Kiv de Janeiro. Teiographed one herm brig. cld bark Smith, Cork und amkt; brig Francis Jane, Gard- mtuome nee, PL eT ey) oe aie a ™ ALANS, Sept IS—Arr brig Albert, Hodedon, Now York; ache Harp, Walt, Baitimore. Boston, Torrey, NYork. $id 130h, brig Ravrom, Murshall, N York; sehr Esther Kliza, Clark, do; Luh, me Vevona, pg ey Sd Welcome keturn, Lol do. MARLESTON, 2 Joming up, & brig inown. Arr Keying. Brown, Newburyport. Cid ship All bi verpool: brig Woval (ia Geaenet, Net kuroper von EE Danvers, Sept Bey eee Sept 21—Arr Dirizo, Lufkin, Machias for iu 2] wo, Bast) re Phil M yati¢ chill, Hingham for N York, amr Lunes for do,” pt 22— AI Mitoheil, Providence fur N rr In Hawes, N York for Thomaston, 21—8id sobr Susan, li, NY ork Rew Satroam toys ‘23— Arr achs reon Nawtuckar, and Henry Clay, Nye, Alvany: 24th, sloop Jupiter, Hee, NYork. In ulin Cove, £84, of doh Bariog. Rew York. from boston ow Beator Nowrorx, ‘cpt 23—Arr schs Wm Burke, Lawrison, Port Wat- thal for Wareham; Time, Chare, Newport Sorat & Emeline, Lam. son, NVork;3 G Ferris, Garricn, do; Charles Henry, Ryan, do, Cd rhip Macison, Foster, brewer N eA 17—Are ship Manco, Fish, Roston; brig Adows Gray, Setmeider, Havana. Vourt.avh, tept 21-—Art Trig Creole, ———, Georgetown, st avo preceeded to Brunrwiek, Cid 24th, fark Sara Warrea, Vue tis, Cuba; eehir A ie, Phovirencn, DS ATr noha Finest, Slooga Tecumeeh, Gard |, Rondout; le y opitol, Brewater: aué Jan LLong donee Rs Fann envi, Sept do~ Are Wg Neivua. Dolby, sche Fawn, Day, Portsmouth, Paciio, Yates, Stahl, Calais; Good Intent, (Br) Atkins, Hattax CHMOD, FeptA—Art ache Chaner, Blakenan, Now Yorks Splendid, Bowrell, do. Bid Patrick Houty, Creser, don samt wick, Sept 16—Arr sche Annabella, Gibbs, Phils, (anit beg om om) bark Bi rd Ki ror Arr hark Rdward Koppiech, Upton, Bavice Ayre UE. B10 20, bie Gatland, Patan OP Bavannan, Sept ¥1—sh ‘urkalsinnd; vaton; Allegan, Passengers Arrived, secon ANT ESTON—Sicamehip Soutberver—Unpt Pedrick and indy, Mrs M 8t Arnand. Mowers JTS rne, WC , Wan Burner, J 8 Graver, Thonat ‘bear ge Higgitbotoan end WA DuvieneRehoae Henrie Korine rav—si ip € Biss Penrietin Ven Conte cut, of Amutesta, at Peri e Foccenie Mra Johnenae Boskhout, Miss a-stuve Ji. Mr and Mra wine and € childreg ak Nine W Meiie—147 in the eteernge a ee

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