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substraction trom the whigs, which, assuming the Man over Niagara Faris.—At about sundown T 4 to make them, they were dissolved. H. T you repre- 0 Teal democratic fr Berg the —_ to be — on the Ist instant, a man was carvied over the Falls, HE FRENCH REPUBLIC mm w sntereated tom i a ewer pees ee eee Se ie eeees Sorarnbny eters: tee for ai Sep pss aly Cet Mow Orlenns, Sent lh “4 i From * Yes,” be cries. uppeal to gil republics, to al @ tium, Wl regular republic, as +4 ~ ae, batten thousand, would leave both parties neariy balance - M. DE LAMARTINE’S MANIVESTO, | courts to uli winisters Un the ambaseadits of the ua | underrtand it, It r the honesty cf the people that you | “WSU 2 6 passema tor Rovton Ame ay te Out of wren tone which | am accused of having openly aseu We bi adverted to the contents of the pamphiot | whilst ore tl 1 one which Bor Mey ige p sontent whilet | recretly deosived. If there be one whic! ood | UF readers a), of the wh ya li have rent in them; the honesty of the people ts its | Gibraiiar. the pamph : in salvation! The National Assembly will rave Frauce. (Date! tens, Sandford. from NYork, for Marseilles, Sept 6, oF e], ESE, 5 wilos, hy fore neee Oa inane onsen. afaiee of complicity. or | Our sole glory lies im having felt thet, Attach your- ‘Ti Piieite, from Antwerp, for NYork, with om ty 8 But, again, there may be reason to suppose that the Osieber lection will revive old party associa- tions, and that many in this revival wall desert the of there attempts, | selves more and more to the National Assembly. It is | ,.™! free soil ticket, and fall into their old party lines our—decked over cn the bow, and | should think | _M. Lamantime says :—* Citi ‘The popularity | if there be ove who dow mot attest the frankness ‘and | your own sovereignty. and is worthy of you. Only | 1st lou 11, Foreign Ports. 4 An eminent “free soiler,” well versed in Penn- | would carry three or four tons.’ From what [ learn of | With which I was urrounded for three months without | vigor of the foreign policy of the provisional govern- | give it time. Impaties always does violence to good sylvan politics, and particularly in all thatrelites | @ sailboat baving been seen below Black Rook, oom- | C#Ufe bas beem withdrawn from me without motive. | ment, | declare myself convicted of feiony intentions A government for ages is not to be insti- tothe strength and purposess of his party, g'ves | ing down, I think it is from there or Buffalo. Noother | At ® sign from the National Assembly | retired from | M de Lamartine next notices bi tuted im three months teas his opini nh, that the democratic cotdi sate | than «person unacquainted with the ourrent above | *Mairs. satisfied in my conscience that I had rendered | rope, the moderetion 1 Accept mip adlowx dltizens! Nominate ten tu: tom t u it ort " will be the Governor; but that Taylor will carry | fhe mR a eigen dye Aye escase ef ber history Witbowt regretting the atop ey appt agin «plied to it with prudence and re- the State in November. This opinion may mean | BOOT COM pang mben 1 frat diseovered t porery rank from whioh | have deeoended—without for the mcd lution which prevented th ‘ ‘ a of Navy Island, spect for the mc derate revolution which prevented the something ; but we take it asa mere oreo. ta, | Bd nenrly two miles above the Falla, ‘There seemed Setseraese against . bopenaies roriisas whie® are | general cepfagration of the continent. in Germany In conclusion, after a careful review of the facts, | to be two in the boat. It war directed toward the vanar. See Pip thins Gidateabinny | Bra Waly. seventeen partial revolutions responded to the evidence, and the probabilities betore us, we | American shore—the wind blowing from thie shore, Pree seat nt ge ont “Ay aie et | 8 of France; but Frasce bad had neither to axi- B: Il Arr [tz ein & We'ckor, Boss, NOrlen: ive it asa judgment, which may be worth some- | and «till the rail was etanding Being well acquainted | BAve long kept rilenee, and would still preverveit. if | | taiv vcr to combat—the uame, attitude, and reserve of Cee ee Pro inehs Irth Pasian Babes eee 7 i the result may turn out, that | with the river, | regarded. the positign of tha beat an | #0D@ Were in question, But you adopted me under | the republic ccmbated. for het, Fri only desired | +ball bear you in my memory all the days of my public | °% : ip BA. Carve tee av? Be Trae: ee te TF erasos cannot get the | extraordinary and Lesordous, abe retchedin vice in: | ltcumstances of the grestest gravity, im token of the | her placcin tne reve acod chee devat te tertzent hae | tee! Every time that I rhall cast into the urn a vote | gom bis Tanne: fee) Doc is fo Baton de” (oF NY¥ork, inlers Johnston is ‘4 opinion, that | teure apxwty Soon I discovered toe motion of an cer, uniformity of our opinions. and therefore I belong to | erp: cinlly when she took her true parc of sympathetic | of good intent towards the people, of firmness against Canviry, Sept ip Jacob Perkius, Baker, for Boston, State of Pennsylvania, and, as an opimion, that j | you. On this ground 1 am bound to give youan ac. | mj u human min ‘on. ily, for pro- | soon. = and from the changing direotion of the boat conoluded a missionary for the progress of the man d by | faction. of good for the country, for family, for pro- n a S Johnston will be defeated. i; it bad but one. While constantly approaching nearer | COUt Of myself, You must not have to blush I} hberty? "To correspond to the situation abroad, he bad r'y, for society. for conscience, | will say to myvelf, | .Camz > Ant Mat reed age eg Brare, Having thus put upon the record our examination | {y4" nearer the rapidr, | could discover it was gaining | *™,¢pckenof before you. You must be able to «ay | d maded three armies of observa'ion from the govern- | | wm casting your vote with my own. | will say that York la cece nitiei la hack Baas real and oir opiniors of Pennsylvania, at the hazard of | the Amer can shore, and by the time it had got nee lank oe vee v3 roach you with having | ment—one of 120,000 men on the froatiers of the | two millions are voting through me for this unanimous 5 our reputation as a political taspector, your repor- | the first fall in the rapids, about half a mile above Badd] Mons of voloes—‘Ifthis | Rhine and tbe north. one of 15.000 men under the | republic which, in your eyes as well ax in ming, the | brie dun, (Nor) Se ene, Neco Lote ter, in his next despatch, hopes to report from | Goat Island, it war directly above the ; ° Ob which is now regarded as the key to the | it was turned up the river, and for some time the wind ard, Matanzas, 21st, fing which we had chosen is lowered, itoan never be | P 7 jadleiphia, 4 Th Teneer, avd one of 60,000 at the foot of the Alps. | interests of all legitimatized by the will of all, and Phil wig Mary, Lucvlus, J pam Tegee Saas be bese toraisbed Xe goes before ue ne ion ue ceo homer wet: be sayé, only aed teonsure’ Of | fended. the Peed palace tests ary pe as Uh Mine get, Jas Androws, Frenchy 3 kept it " fi : hope seemed to ae not hum! us is eaid that there | foresight. the latter was an act most potent of governments "’ a ell, 4 ‘ork; Jas Andrews, Fron: winning oF the erat ot fan patie. RT By treme Hirggy sifeigad, ROR? Sinether 1 | 18 tprend abroad, that there ia being printed for! | “Coming es the Italie aueetion, M. de Lamartine m | Go; <Frmo a. Davy, do, Sailed, lth, Albion, Daly, New York aa tava and the result, in the mountarns a eg. | should run baif a mile to give alarm, or remain toas- | Tefereven to whisperings, that nothing may be left un- | seis forth the instructions be gave ‘with respect to | Ss : sitt, in the event the beat attempted £0 make the | SDswered—it ty aid. then, that I have been ardent the pith of which was tbat, if Charles Albert or the MARITIME INTELLIGENCE. Serpe. Poa Tee mse hao hoy may hl pected to be reported here by to-morrow morning | fiand was e painf I doubt, But soon the boat was | S@Dition, but weak in the ex-ro Por . of er, during | Italian States which showld bave gained their inde- | ~~~... tordam; A F Jenner, Leavitt, from Havana, Antwerp, and in arise of a few inches in the river, We have | again turned toward the American shore. Then it was | tbe tbree months cf my taking a share in the dictator- ndence should demand assistance, France would af. | WO * ARRAS passed Deal lth; IXth, Luise, from Baltimore, Bremen; 20th, to-day, some twenty-six inches in the channel. | certain it must go down the American rapids. Iran | Sip of the Provisional Government—that I hi Korate, mot as conqueror or agitator, but as armed and Port of New York, Octobér 8, 1848, aga Binudlsans face Barere, de. by y+ u as a cignification and not ase man, confound. | Brt7 Ass, Sept 177 Sultan, Savas, Now York. oa Donectoatnliaste sacar tisele representatives, | 3 (hag ry te wy ig deecended from power too high for my ambition, back 19t, witu 4 and desiring that | may never again ascend to it, for- S—Arr Adelaide Drinkweer Baceari; Mt get me, but do not accuse me. Perhaps there was one ‘ etl, Cronvtait, Sid 17th, Jas Porking, Hall, day in which | merited your suffrages—it was the day Obio, Lewis, Phil 0, - in which I sacrificed them to concord. For myself. | 3 pt l—Ship Easex, Welsh, Boston, Ww ; . : ee ees io a | truckied with terrorism—that I have d it disinterested mediator. Europe, he says, would have poled Sica 4 ‘ Ee Lg ae spore cea Tus Doctor. Has tod ines ae lana but they Laman unatie muniem and intoxicated the People by consenti respected her right to do so, aud its negotiators would + €21 | moow azre.. lag: Walyole, Bie ate beg oue, at got Miosiacelans ale adel Se . to reply or move. I rallied a mam at the tollgate— | ®2¢ promising them the org nization of labor—that | have accompanied her troopr. + 599] mich warmm........+ barks Irabelia, Merril; Baring Brothers, Henry; A yuilla, N. we ran to the main bridge in time to see the boat just | | bave plottcd with the principal factions who wished to “ The responsibility of our policy in italy,’ he adds, . hateanaamatdl bere, Warwiok; Lenox, Howes, aud Brontes, Weston Pirrsruren, Sept. 30, 1848. Defore it got to the first large fall in t! apids. Then pepe ate erdiynes A hb a I ate ane pot rest on me after the 24th of June; neve: ‘ Cnenege e. =, A ar gn, Bos m Hino, Baus oe i ss ne 4, febig we ding at the stern with his | CoD*Pired wi prisoners at Vincennes.andsupplied | theless, I have confidence in the coup dail of the go- | _Shipe—Heury Clay, (pkt) Hovland, Dae) tees hs Sent men el Dig ac te bie lis sags pg Dest One Sa the boat down the current, | Sobrier with arms with a perverse int ntion—that | vernment-apd in the wisdom of thetwo great cabinets | turn Co; Mediator, (pat) Stark, London, eg cord ge marc ak oe rete Poy ng 5 , Funck, Liverp ol, Taylor & Rich; b bave mixed myself up with attempts atan armed prop- | of Europe. I believe that negotiations will make up | Witt Clinton, ean Tega te Co; Thos Wright, Fs York. agandiem on the frontiers of governments to which I | for the want of victory. ‘To bring Europe to treat the | Sh¢ppard. 4 Dr at, Sept 20—Arr, Manchester, Jarman, Rotterdam for Phi ee upon the State of Maryland, and the promised peace and fidelity—that [have compro- | state ef Italy in conjunction with the new Frenob re- | Beil eer tar Calet oxie, do, Sami Thompson x | Mp\Ph e ane He ame GAY, Os room Antwerp for NY Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Election. me to the next and to each succeeding fall he | Mist the vafety of the Republic by not at once throw. | public. has always appeared to me from afar the pers- | Nejhew; Sturdivant, birmingham, Savanah, Nesaith & Walsh; | BUYAR: Sept20-Juniats, Chil, from Antwerp for NYork, Your reporter, detailed upon the missionary en- | sat down. and then would rise and apply his oar in the | ‘28 Our forces over the Rbine and the Alps—that I re- | pective of this affair, a pledge of alliance and peace | Doitherner. (s) Buda, Charleston, Spotived, ‘Tilleeton & Co; Mo | Ertinsum dept io—eogotty, Beacbo rm. (Inte / litical F rth Intermediate current. Still there was hope that he | t#¥ded the electionsin order to prolong the dictatorship | for the world.” | MHpsoRts Frost do, Nesmith & Walsh. oy, LW Ackerman; Cla | {FCrerst-dy 1d-h acre, ‘oli, Cronstads tur B terprise of a political reconnoisance of the com | Jonid'come mear enough to the pier to jump, but ins | Of the government of which | formed=part- that Iwas | The cbarge of having delayed the elections, in order rence (Br) bouslia, Galtay, 1; Patan i Bockedioninn (Basan | {itrA le; Athe » Jone, & 1s Maret monwealth of Pennsylvania, having to some ex- | moment it wae gone. Another, that be might jump a jeaaiod han Mobgtge sy tords of oy ae men pl neces ses istatorial power uf aa Fredericks, Bremen, Viotor & Duckwita; John season, Wel ten, | TLE i ~ , : i 4 a1 7—the' was hesitating an: ing no in spect referred to 5 Bi 8 & Co; Philah, Bi New Orleaus, J Elwell a ii tent discharged the duty assigned him, begs leave | Bho rear dr ender the bridge, breaking “tha nmuer | mesttres en April 16—that after the, mooting of the | declarce't to bo cbsurd: endive shows from his pecah: | Eien corm Om Fame Burton, New | Sp aeevens cunt velwea Ln ooeeeeiea” ez oe respectiully to submit :— ‘Again be rose on the opporite side. “Taking his cer, | National Assembly. I refused, through pusillsatmity, | e# and proclamations that he was always anxious for | | Brig—Knickerbocker, (Brom) Stoge, Buanos Ares E Gunoa, Sept 16— Barks Sela “ That, including a late special trip’to the Pennsyl- | and pointing his boat toward the main shore, he cried, | the unitary power which the National Assembly, as it | an early meeting of the Assembly. He adds that the | st.d& “bumacker: Aune & Ju ia, Pratt, Chagres, H Underwe anys ‘hat, ? “Had I better jump from the boat?” We cculd not | 1%, *8/d. was disposed to offer me, avd for which two | delay of fifteen days which did take place, was neces- vania free soil State Convention, he has spent sev- | newer, for either seemed certain destruction Within | Millions of suffrages designed me—that, by this refusal, | sary to enable the elections ot officers of the National eral days at Reading,several days at Philadelphia, | @ few rods of the Falls, the boat struck a rock, turned | ! Induced the National Assembly to form a committee | Guard to be completed. vip Veacy, frm Havanay Arcelina, (Braz) Fersieva, tara,’ HK Corning: Shamrock, Fris- | Napcle 1 (Bard) Bollo, from Mubile, Sid 14ta, bark Russia, Leg- Grande, L H Aitken; Marianna, (Brem) Brinkman, yee ; . <7. conten i of government, without unity of opinion, and without | To the accusation of having been an accomplice of . parts of two days at Lancaster, parts of two days at | over, and. fos A leap ad ery from wndor it: | Semness in managing the difficulties of the moment-— | the demonstration of 17th March, M, Lamartine re- norte, Gould, St Augustine; Supine, Powers, Newbern; Hen Farensted a Shuma: Chik ‘ork (was off Dover 20th. ) Harrisburg; one night at Chambersburg, parts of | the precipice, Without the power to render any | het! made an alliance in this committee with men sponds by saying that that demonstration was, in fact, illetts, Darien, Ga; Sol Rosevelt, ‘aylor, Edentou, N tdewn. | was t ona: odd ellen, 1, Jorger son, N York \. Laist, Isth, Mormion, Jackeou, Ke Mary Le Haguet, | Cle, 12th ult—tark Carib, T for Mi oo George, Walker, Oharioston, ALTAR, wboat 12th wt—tat irk Lexus, for Malaga, ‘o--Kate, (Br) Hulden, St dehn, NB, Marcns& Son; Del- beg ea pda ieranlatrneegr em rahe G 1% Ii. sailed a um, Turner, Senator, Kuapp, Alexandria; Seguin, Swan, By !t mor 2 : me whose opinions were at variance with my own. and | directed against bim, and that he had warned the | Smater, Knapp, Aloxandzin; coguin, Swe Ry three days at Hagerstown, in Maryland; several | Seuctineg with every nerve: for liter yet Seneed cith | averse to the moderate Republic—that the wotice of | obielsof tie clube that such things were dangerous, | Suth,ie: Einw Ryder, Paromionth: J Trueman, “uth, nile hours at Brownsville; and that, by thelight draught | almost the certainty of destiny to an immediate and | ®Y inconceivable alliance with these political adversa- In reply to the accuration of having neglected pre- | Co, aie yt M— Are Tr Blidge, . steamer Baltic, via the slackwater navigation of | ®"{l death, still hoping with every effort for his dell- | Ties,1sto be found in the absurd and disgraceful re- | cautionmy measures. and shown indecision on the | Davis, Fail River; Adventurer, Lewis, Provid Pon roy, Bi ld 17th, & . Phila: | Sordeuson, Galveston and Dav : Janel lo; Martha Maria, Smalley, Sulem: Horatio Ames, xLV0n7, Sept 18—Peru, Harris, Stonington, via Flushing Ras, om Murevester, Jarm iadelphia ( co Dost ) Bx Sd 18th, ai st ports of interested relation: between them and me, in | 17th of April, when the ultra clubs got up a demon- Arrived. ay 1 16—May fl wer, Cen tree, Loudon, Sid 20th Onei- the Mononguhela, arrived ut this city at 2 o'clock | God never again to experioace, ‘The Builaie Comeany | OUF common depredations upon the public treasury, | stration, the object of which was to oust the moderate | _ Ship Marts, Meany, Livespeo! 40daya, with mdse, to order.— iwc, NGerk; Bom’ e adsle, do, ' this morning, and took up his quarters, for a day | cia! s/dverriver says it has been ascertained that the | °F iD an infamous venality under the last government | eection of the government and establish @ committee | tLe Bi basexpenenoed continanl westerly gales: duriug the pas: Bt Ce a a fur Aueyern, iis: . eee "1 n c8Y | Dercom who was carried over the Falls was Richard | —that these pretended adversaries had in their hands | of public safety; M Lamartine enters into details to “*Ebip Se. Lawreute, Brown, Liverpool, 87 days, with maie to | Yitke naitin Berntare’ (oon , Rimmcacas, fas, as, dg; olillon or two, at the Monongahela House, with a view shoemaker of that city, aged about 38, He | the proots of this venality, and that I was obliged to | show that from an early hour in the morning of that | powind& avpluwall 00 sicerage paavengere, oP Wvrase | Asgnsis Bam, totocis, Gamprell, kouisenn, Atweed, Ged te to further information upon the general aspect: family. é purchase their silence by conceding to their opinions | day he took most active measures, that he had some | g('o. Aug 2th,camoin contact. with Br sche Commopelitan, | retia Fish, Gager, diag: Sarch Atm, Skoificld. orge or onaster: wes 8 ae ee he that | have paid my debts with the money of the | battalions of the National Guard called out and sup- | and landed her crew at Kingstowa Harbor, Dublin; on the 2’sh, | Burnham, Mc nttort, ding; Pl. zabeth [, Gullogher, iindelohia, and the prospects of the coming gubernatorial and | = Fienr with Revo.vers.—Yesterday evening, apie hat etd he quae to eye @ fruits tot with ammunition, thet, in Seta oo ee br | Seaman terres tartar tahoe tee) BU op Sheena thy: ster |) Sie Ae ra Occ nats Rene ltl tee cht 0" of my malversation—that I maintained the Ateliers | Minister of the Interior, he caused the rappel for the | repeiring. afele ; om Preadential elections. : about eight o’clock, whilst the public room of the | ff, R¥, malversation the National Assembly, andcous | National Guards te be’ beaten that ‘at dhe Hotel de | Sup furlington, Cook, Loghorn, 51 days, with mndto, to) Sn outpons, $0 load eee Within the | f 1th Pearl Street House was occupied by a great number of W Hi Howland. 20th Ang,’ Cape de Gat, bearing N VE. 12 mil Monree, do; Delswar halt, uno: T st; ithin the line of travel thus detailed, and at | tne" boarders, « young man. by the name of Wagner | Vert them into & disporable army of insurrection—that | Ville he prepared for resistance; and he appeals toall | gicnuiized an American hark showing ‘white flag, red. bord jeCormell, a . Savannah and N the various towns and cities indicated, as well as | entered, and approaching Mr. &. P. King, merchant, at | °2 May the 15th, | wilfully left the Assembly unpro- | who saw him whether he showed any hesitation or | piack letter H, stecsing E. 2sth March, lat 35 44, fon 58 18, boar. Bell, Carde: pt 2 Columbus, M‘verren, Declaration, of Boston, disinasted and abandoned, The An y Yorks Miercken, Philadelphia, en 6 days to the westward of Fire Isl L tected, and saw with a secret joy the invasion by sedi- | weakness. among the passengers on the way, your reporter | th% corner of Main and Second streets, who was seated | ‘'01'o¢ the National Represeatation followed with im, | “'M. Lemartine defends bimeelf for not having, on, atwian ud 1 Peual : “ at the back of the room, presented a revolver close to Darey, New Castle Eng, 48 days, with mdse, 284, Liverpool, Eldridge, from New York; Colam- has endeavored, impartially, to arrive at some | hi (King’s) head. and discharged three balls, Mr, | PUnity—that I did not know, or would not provide | the meeting of the Assembly, taken alone the direc- te cla teen’ aay, Cail, Bing, te days, penn ‘Tuscarora, Turley, Eniladelyhia conclusion in advance of the electi pg, throwing up his hand at the instant, saved his | *&sinst the events of June 23—that neither I nor my | tion of the government. by saying that ifhe had done | Snatewith brig anon Maria, of Boston, sidering Ee Ath inst | Also off port 23d, Enterprise, Fock, fromiN York, lat. enn ehiah ant | ections so near at pee but lost two of his fingers. Wagner retreated | C°lleagues bad prepared the military forces necessary | 60 he would have had to rely on the men of the lende- | ‘yfmilee SE of Sandy Hook, spoke brig Curry Comb, of Quiney, | Sailed 19th (not 18th), Gen Parknill. M‘Kown, Sew Orleans; 4 ig |, as ried a8 possib! St may approximate precipitately to the street, followed by King, who, in for preserving order, or going into mortal combat at | mem, which would have made all the if the veille | tor Boston. | Independence, Knight, Boston; Jessie, O.iver, Aj Yhicole; Re. tothe results when they shall have transpired. | furn, ‘drew & revolver, and mode too or three Testes | the moment of the dissolution of the Ateliers Nation. | ruspicious of ‘the republic, and made them unite all | “Brip American, (US traneport) Stuart, New Orleans, 23 days, | public, Bliven, and Liverpool, Kalsbeck, New York; 2ist aited the opinigne of some at those reety eli; | tual dhote at Wagner. "Wagner pursued his way up | $8*—{Bat the want of troops arose irom our fault | paities againat it-the dviogatca of the Luxembourg, | wievernmen, sores (abe U Sauirir Maar tht, | Eoin From hranadow mc de laine Gani X Olean cited the opinions of some of the most intelligent | Main to Second street, and when opposite the Galt | thet the conflict was prolonged through this want of | the 100.000 men of the ateliers nationaux, the Bona- Tihs In SMW gales lout forceall, fiectarmsase atenett | alle Eirias Noe Yeoh; 200, Frasoie Depew, Beualapaae koe men of ali parties, in Pennsylvania and in Mary- | House, turned upon his pureuer, and here several shots | frethought—that the blood of this civil war rests porate the Terrerists, the subversive Socialists. &o.— 1, and eplit all the other eai's, some of them blowing | burton, bunting do; Geo Evans, Couillard, New Orleans. land, and will now proceed'to a recapitulation of | were fired by each, without taking effect oneither side, | UPOD our hands. These are theinculpations. I shall ‘his would, he says, have caused flerce divisions and fter being fastened, 3d while repa‘ring the In the river outward boun¢, Osceola, Piokham, for Charleston, the peculiarities of th A Wagner finally sought the protection afforded him by | 2Otice them one by one. Instead of refuting them, | | conflicts, which would have prevented the ertablish- Jand, seaman, a natiy land, fell from | Cid 21rt, Osceola, Chari Amelia, Agry, Boston. Lee is campaiga, and toa judg- | otto. aeorer tar tenure ae ts shall only state facts There is not one of the circum | ment of @ peaceful, constitutional. and almost unani- e yard overboard, and was drowned—hove ship too, cleared | Eut for ig 10th, Gipsy, Verili, for Now York: 16, Shor wood, nantes eed Ghiike beRAETETC King are etbs ball paasing ihe frinen Para stances of this recital, that has not for its attestation | mous republic, which he desired. He also defends him- | sway the boat, but could not sueceed in raving him, Croshy, Philadelpi Lawrenoe, Bows ——- t either ni whig barbecue, which concentrated at” that | Kester: who was attracted to his door by the report of jumerous witnen | New York; 18, Ua- *, or ir-efragable documents, | relffor entering the executive commission. by saying | Bark Ardennes, Sampson, smyrna, G5 days, with mds, to the | tharine, Robertson, Bosiom; Meuntaineck, © of Charles ood bh fire arms in the street, It is truly surprising how so | 0 the testimony ofa whole nation. | ask not faith or | that he thereby acted as a tie between different par- | “H..% 4 i q e place many of the most distinguished politi- | many shots could have been exchanged without effect, | COMfidence in my own assertions—| undertake to prove | ties, and prevented the formation of a government of EE Mf the bia, Furter, Hamburg bark Adolph, Rynaas, Hamburg, 51 days in ballast, | Baltimore; § Milledge, Lynch, N York; Ellon, M'Lenn, Savan- tow i c1 ignser. nah; Lady Constable, Mason, Norfolk; 21, Paulina, Percival, Med ot 2G Tee as re oe number of the or 3 Pearl Street Houre it could be seen that three eee: tas ie hacen online soles which would have led to antagonism yeamburs bark Bertha, Ode, Hamburg, 51 days, in ballast, to | Boston, 2, 2 Vatos ity, Atkins, Alexandria; Helona, Sutherland, active friends o' ass ani utier, = iT a b 7 1 ls to answer in deta al jscord. ser. a | . " e fal conclusion regarding the Presidenti eS ville, Ind.— Louisville Democrat. Sept. 20. to the first, he says :— the ultra-party arose from their having obtained | “pary gloctra (U States), Brent, Pensacola, 19 ds. Sept th, | Ki pler, Pearson, do with promp: deepateh; Br tann bi Marl ee 4 eee al elec- » pel ins tesla acct hla “ The first accusation is, that I have been ardent | proofs of his having received money from the secret | js: 1-25, Jon 79 12; feil in with Br brig Ocean Bride, from Bay | New York Sept 20; Vietoria, Briggs; Intrinsic, M'Far 100 in Mary’ Coa From all that he could learn, ArtEemrt To Commit a Rare.—A negro named | in ambition. weak in the exercise of power during the | service funds of Louis Philippe’s government, and of | Honduras, for London, witha load of logwood and mahozany; | Jemestoun, Trask, do 2th; "Ada aie, Outer, do. zdtny "West e Clay whigs in F 3 nterregnum and Dictatorship! I answer: The revo- | having just after the revolution defrauded the public | was diswasted an of water; took from her part of the | Point, alie ushing. and Gipsy, Heckling. there is no disaffection among the Cl: h Alexander Fletcher was arrested on Sunday for | ! iP ig. 1d the blie | dismasted and full of wat ik hy f Point, Alien; Raj k, Cushis .d Gipsy, Heckling. do Probaf, Devries, snd’ Jno Campb-'L, h 7 " ; Rappshann: that State, extending to any dangerous hostility to having attempted to outrage the person of a white girl | ution of February took me by surprise, as it did eve- | trearury, M. Lamartine says that the first part of the | crew; ber captain and 6 men were dashed overb ho frst | 20th; Ambesedor, Radley; the Philadelphia nominee; that the whig party ap- | Ramed Ane Wiereit etree te ars of age, wh rybody. The republican system. the government of | charge arose in this way :— In 1844"he wrote a tragedy | Mate perished on the wreck; one of the crew died after bei: g D, do Sth: “Americn, Dune; 00 imi Alas; Adeeee as aves 2 . 2 ki board of i the ad ok of StL » Be 3 33 try, Toompson; York shire. Ba loy, pears to be well drilled and united, it not enthusi- | employed om board the canal boat | M. Hubbard, now | Ure Teagon was tome the deal, more or less distant, | in favor cf the emancipation of the blacks, and in 1345, Hredays without provisions) enn ne Wr Crab BEE | ot Uwd Unspuanm Bilten, do Get, Bereeede etme tar EAs tic ; that i ‘ } ofthe right, the sovereignty of the people. It never | # month before the revolution, M. Buloz, director of |" “Brig Confidence, (of Newport) Mercer, Havana, about Sept 21, | lndelphia, Sept 26; J P Harwood, Andros, do 28th; Robt Fult wns ape er ane ae pete a HES Aeuahsaust cate eee eee Co Sueetion, | Was a conspiracy Thad mo aversion to the Const | the Theatre Francais, proposed to him to purchase it | witsoncriea a hole: AM en "Suntaye Bain Sort abd on | forBalurbone Bath, Holyoke, Day, and Courtenay, Geri. New ding Tack of zeal among the ae! ats tt and the negro ceme on beard, and, as is alleged, bru. | tutional Monarchy, no perso animosities against | for representation at the theatre, and for publication | Monday night and tcrng 4 morning, ve ll Jon 79 a Ww, hi) a et sake hibeys — {ord mg > % ig cemocracy ; but that | on, injured her in the cabin. He was foiled in his | the Dynasty. I kept myself from ita favors, and | inthe Kevue des Deur-Mondes, the price on | experienced a severe rom South to shipped a neavy lan. do 26th 2 ag Hy Barolay, do s0ch; Anna, Buchenany no signs of any disturbing desertions are manifest; 7 3 led in his | thet fea; stove round house and carried away bobstay, but received no | and Liscard, Cooper, do Oct 1; Quoen of the West, ——, do thane eerbelee 3 | purpore by the approach of a person connected with was all, If its reign, of which I esteem some of its | being 140.000. But as M. Buloz told him, when the | Pyistgre rea! with quick despatch; Gipey, Thompeon, du Oct ¢ so that your reporter believes, that with all allow- | Phe boat, and promptly arrested. — Buffulo Courier, | Principles, that of peace, for instance, had not either | agreement came to be drawn up, that the consent of Brig C W Kendal}, (of Boothbay) Reed, Turks Island, 20 days, | | Entinwird at London, [Sth (not 16th), Horatio, Boutelle, ances for the superior popularity of Clay over any | Ocr.3. contracted or cerrupted liberty, I should not have | M. Duchatel, as Minister of the Interior, would be ne- | with salt, to Tacker’® Light from Huvava and Matanzas and ail other whigs that could be proposed in that — hesitated toserve it. The monarchy and the dynasty | cessary, on account of the theatre receiving a subven- Brig David Pratt, (of Portlind) Wilson, Pictou, 20 days, with et reed Switeeriand, Ai State, he is warranted in the conclusion that Mary- Wuorksa.r Mvrver.—On the 16th inst., the | being abandoned by the people, the National Guard, | tion from the government, he (M. Lamartine) “refused Brig Gipay, Kenney, Halifax, 10 days, with fin, to Bache & | Bagi Adirosacer awa ‘Sir Robert Poel, for New York; Devon, bevts, for New Orleans and bark Lan: with | ae land is gooa for Taylor, by from 500 to 1,000 majo- | bodies of two men were found floating in the | the Chamber, and the army, feil from their own fault | to conclude a contract in which the funds of the go- - Venue ies rity. if may be iey ar can eres be lees | Fiver. in the perish of St. Bernard, with aif the ‘ap- | i ome half-sitting. All was at an oni with royalty, | vernment and the ministry should be concerned in MTom avid Duflell, Gokdemith, Wilmington, N C, 12 a rk, Venard, for Boston, than'the mininiun we have assumed, uci earances of having been murdered. One of them | D4 nothing remained but to pity it, and supply its | any wey whatever,” in order that there might notex- | yavalsteres, io ES Powell, Lien ick, Sept 19—Ocean Eird Hall, New York. Sailed, 19, ten jipareit umed, unless we | Porarceived a thie in the back, the ball passing | Place, The people set us the example of this honora | ist “even the appearance of the most distant relation | “Breehr Eliza, Thorburn, Pictou, 18 days, | Souvenir, Doncaster, do (since put back to Tarbert have mistaken the evidences adduced. le pity. ‘fhey fought they let royalty fly—they did | of money between him, a deputy, and the government’ Fr schr Lucy, Lassontaine, Rochelle, 37 days. LycHorn, Sept 14—Ship Clinton, Doane, from Genoa, to load e . y | 3 York: " In Pennsylvania, the questions dividing and dis- pee mee ate prbenls pidaie Hoenn not inénit it remained isolated, silent. and pensive | | His explanation on the second part of the charge, | Schr Lamartine, Turner, Philadelphia, 3 days, for NYork; Genesee, ——, chartered for Havana; bark Saatse, turbing the (wo gieat parties, are more complex | forty years of age. and five feet eight or nine inches | °% My beach. contemplating thisieatastrophe, which | hps already appeared. oe rete na ad | “Lr, Sep ti9-—The Marcellus, Lirsay, which arr here 17th, and difficult of analysis; and the further your re- | high.” He bad a full set of teeth, was bald on the front | W580 sudden as to leave ne time for measuring its | M. de Lamartine enters at considerable length into | 8hFAuselixn erate: | ad jenced comtinval gules from SW to NNW, porter has pursued his researches, the more inex- | part of the bead, and wore # long beard. He had on | {mmense depth. Moved with commiseration forthe | the history of his connection with Sobrier. Blanqui, nwa wits onmkd end Tet “Z out two huncred esil of shipe put into Nor plicable have appeared the difficulties in the way. Ces eionaan p nd white shirt, with a belt | Misfortune of age and youth and infancy, driven by a | Raspail, Barbies, and de Flotte. This connection, ba a . | IMERICK, Sept 19—Tte Souvenir, which sid for NYork, has sirce yut back into Tarbert. MALAGA, Sept 12—Arr ahip Sophia Walker, Wiswell, for! @;tom next day; harks Maria, Baker, une; Clarina, Rich, from NY wrk 5 Wright Jr, Pittee, for Boston 15th; brigs Nereus, Ma- fury: and Geo F Willisms, ‘Paine, for Bostonabt 18 hy Sea Engl Setti 3 aro his body, with ited wil revolution to fly from a throne, my heart and my rea- | which. he says, took place befere the meeting of the . Salled, eck Sour aa Are well? Parte Bein | eae! rocherainn Subd uanterea diy beaten onthe | #8 were in confilct with each other ‘The people aud | National Assembly, is) he contends, so far {roa being | Steamship Northerner, Charleston; iaihiende the spoarent Gir ikes tae elle head, apparently with a club, and had his feet tied to. | 8me of my colleagues, who now perbi ape mar have for- | @ crime, one of his best titles to the approbation ofhis | Ocreuen 7—Wind, at sunrio. q fees t ig the Presi- | gether with a strong rope. He appeared to be between | S°tten it, came, and taking me by the arm to rouse | fellow citizens; and he declares that the object of it ential result, in this sovereignty ; his inquiries thirty and forty years of age, of ordinary size,and | Me, energetically urged me to stand forth between | was “ to influence by private political conversation, | le, have been more particularly exteaded to the as- ue cotti avarchy and the country, ealled upon me by name, | and endeavor to rally to the republic, constitutional, Herald Marine Cerresponden iams, f.rdo unc; Marshall, Taylor, from NYork ar 3th, to certainment of theit organization, their strength, | also'biue” Francois Danes! who reeides ta the partx | Pushed me tothe tribune. Af Basrot dosoended from | honest, moderate, and practical’men, whowere cape: | _ Enoanvown Oct teamvet<ing Wis, May i | ea de Bares Coen, Roan atone their purposes, and their expectations. : of St. Bernard, yesterday came up ard made affidavit | the tribune, overcome by his efforts to save the mo- | ble of serving or ruining it.” In connection with bis yt ey ome led—Schrs Splendid, Ingalls, New | af abt 10th; Reindeer, Winsor, from and’ for NYork, ar prev to ‘ S 5 hates Baceks ser narchy inits fall. A musket was levelled at me—an | these men, M, de Lamartine gives angccount of, and Macuias, Sailed—Sohes Splendid. Ingalls, New | TE Totiend ‘from do do; Globe, ditlert, for New Dricans Here, as elsewhere in the Northern States, the re Recorder Genois t facts stated above. York. Jacob Longfellow, Barton, do; Baltimcre, Nevey, de. 30 jer (Sw ) do do; Globe, ditlert, for singular unomaly is presented of an unprecedented | Mr. Danos further states that the bodies were taken | U8Xnown hand threw up the muzzle, | declared myself | defends, the part he played on the invasion of the | Hq'haa' Non hometellist, Barton, do; Beltimcre. Nevey, do. Md, | Abe'iGens and osners, ‘Sid prev Go lithe’ bark’ Mary Dale, Lalsty fea rapes ; ne two oreat | fm the river, and buried on the banks without any | 128 few words in favor of a provisional government | Ascembiy on the 15th of May He also shows that he eee . x | Philad; brigs A M Jones Baymore, do: Saltador, (Sp) Charles: ecncy of enthuse between the two great | ss ‘i N. 0. Pi ‘Sept. 24 which should seize the crisis at the moment, in | did not cause arms to be distributed to Sobrier bnbatin age heavens ton; Industria, (Sp) and Prudente, Py at Sans parties in the contest; while a third party. ina | Bdvest or im a eayune, “Pt | order to control it. This government gave promise to | As regards the charge of not having foreseen and in dirtrese having bcpmaranth, Bist from Boston for Liverpool, | Holbrook, New York; James Roach, Hrown, and Alles, King, hopeless minority as regards its own success, | Tu CorELanps.—We had been misinformed | the Republic; but it reserved to the National | prepped to resist the insurrection of Jane, M. de La- daya out, which threv the veesel on bee bease ede gttog cans | eapiome de Sept M—SId, A No, Hoodless, (from Mobile) for tovand Sultana, for New ‘Orleane wherever they can muster an organization, exhibit | when we announced the kalling of James Cope- | Assembly that which I indicated by my very first word, | martine cries—‘ Citizens! if [ had merited this re- | but righted with los of topmasta yards and sails, and with P a spirit of zeal and confidence most strangely in- | land, three weeks ago, but we have now information | that which no faction, no seduction, no acclamation | proach of my conscience, I would, in order to expiate | feet water in the hold threw overboard. SW) seks of ween” | | MaDrimA, Aug 15—Smyrna, Ssott Boston, and ald tlat for Sick- consistent with all practical considerations of the | wbich may be relied on, that he is lying very low of a | Could deprive it of—thefull and sovereign sanction of | it, have got myself killed on the first barricade. But 1 | Sm Ieaneina Sreans-—Late accounts trom che Isabella | Iv, Sid 244, Wellingsly, Parsons, Windies Pap case. As far, however, as we can comprehend | ®vere wound, and that Tom, his brother, has been ar- | the definitive form of government suitable for the | have not a minute of this want of foresight im my | Stuart stete that the salt had all leon dissolved, and. the bags | fh my sr bong eSiag ae map igo ag or ee , 2 ¢ 4 oe 4 acceptance of the nation. The voice of the multitude | heart. nor a drop of this blood on my hands’ Andhe | Were floating in the hold, She had uot oP angod her position, and i Leghorn, Pendleton. Bangor, 16 dx; 19th, bark Jubilee, Good- rested. The Copelands state that they were crossi P y im this “free soil’ movement in Pennsylvania, and | teeted. ‘The Copelande state that they were crossing | SOu'Ce'the depution who remained in the Chamber proceeds to show that, when examined before the com. | jl sasangers had been landed safely. The I's cargo consisted of | (uf Portland, 19 do. Sid 19 hs, bark SL Crowell, Clark, N York, in the North, they desie— were met by 8 man, whodemanded their money -that | called upon meto mame the members of the provisional | mittee on labour, he declared that, in his opinion, if | 30s xaof sult Tee eee eee ee eet eee ee ae scat Sink Hany 1058, 1. To defeat General Cass, Jim Copeland fired at him, but his shot failing to take | €°vernment. Irefured M. Dupont (de I’Eure). the | the Assembly did not consent to the taking of the | buord sidesmidshipn, aud twelve fect euler here eae, | MiKay, de, 2 To throw the election into the House, and to | afiect: he was beat down by the robber with the butt | Batural dictator from public esteem. was. in spite of | railways. and thereby enable the government to break | Excolsior and Parmles had reached the wrvok, and prepara ions | _ PORTSMOUTH, Sept 18—M Evans, Minker, London for NYork depend upon the strength of the free soil question in | end of hisgun. Tom fied at the commencement of the | Bis modesty, piscet in the President's chi He read | up the ateliers nationaux, by drafting the men off to'} were, making to Iay the anchors and get the steam pump on | Rd sid rame day. is, from Stoningto the North for the defeat of Cass and Taylor. rencontre, Such is the story ; but the most probable | the names pointed out by tumultuous acclamations to | diflerent departments where work could be secured ne hopes were entertained of getting her off. She ts GS eapeated to led he Boston Dak hele ee peenal ey 3. To build up @ new and predominant party, | statement of the case is, that they undertook to rob | form the government. , at that time, attributed to | them, a battle would ensue on the dissolution of the ee if fer Boston, 1d ? which. in 1452. will secure the administration of the | some one, and met with resistanee. Old Wages and this nomination no other authority than the authority | ateliers. He then states that as far back as the 20th ‘Lae a esdaber rR tah areal of ee Confidence NF, Sept 27—Brigs Rose (Br). Smith, for Boston, government, and divide its ofices among themselves. | his wife have left the country. A report-reachedthem | Of ADger and devotedness to the country. This | May. the government decided that the garrison of | {7s Tons Bb W, spoke bark 8’ Le Cowell Ciark, ixew | %eaayi Billow, —, for do lag: Virginia, Cooper, for Ris In thi State they have resolved. in convention, | & few days previous to the day they left, that a party | 7ik*t and this devotedness formed our sole title. | Faris should, wita the Garde Mobile, the tarde Reé- | Manranzas for New York, under ju Teported having on | “ “Rwynaa, Supt5—Arr, barks Tosco Devens, not commencod i from Perry county were on their way down, to awi 'y forbade our surrendering the rer it gave us. | publicaine, and the Gardiens de Paris. amount altog: ight, 24th, experienced a st fore and > 4 to withhold any separate exhibition of their y 'y y p IS | isregular as it - disct g Catelpa, Wateon’ dischg; Oamanli, Gardner, uo, No vessel . r hae: them to the first tree, and that night some forty or fift Treg’ as it was, into the hands of anarchy. ‘1 | ther to 54.650men. He shows that orders were given to He hada number of light rails and spankers st, | y ould lea icc ite ates before Oct. strength in the election for Governor, so that that | Fogiane were stationed around the house aaa guard, | 8ccept it by right of the blood which is flowing, and | the Minister of War to take the command ofall the nd hs waking goul way with a fair wind. Capt Mosser, of | Tmigers, Sept i—No Am vessel. Austriam ehip Rlodie was ldg election will be no positive test, as between the | From thie, it. would appear that the clan are still very | Which must be staunched at any price.” These were | armed force in the event of anything rerious occur. wield bea et talk eee oak Ay, Passed neat » | for NYork. Parties in the Presidential balloting. The late move- | numerous. ‘No one, living remote from the scene of | MY Words; for I find them recorded in the Moniteur. | ring. to provide for the protection of the Assembly, to | Week pense, yards’ ae it ard jib boom standing; f . Uns, Sept 7—Arr, Florence, Malcom, Antwerp. : ; rt . Ne Ww id tothe Mitel do Vile, ut tho hont-ot «| teorns a ain topmast, y ¢ it and j ym standing ; Tcvion, Sept 17—Bark Fanny, Sampson, Mobile, via Falmouth meat, however, of the Cass democrats in Wilmot’s | their depredations, bas ay idea of the dread in which | “Ve marche: a “ press nocturnal assemblages, and to send every day | o' water: and decks too; the remnants of hor sa a Eng. dischg. district, in the nomination of a democrat in opposi- | they are held by the surrotnding country. Persons are Cotas “ oe people. ern borne along under a | a SE of the state of the army. He also shows that, i Lows away Main sopeeil sheeted home, and bi Wireatory, Sept 18—Corvo, Paine, Messina. tion to Mr. Wilmot may operate toincrease the vote | continually disappearing in thelr midst, and the houses Py ot pres pikes, and bayonets: into the halls | on the lst of June, on his proposition, the Executive | than the rope remaining: bad a Wicrtr, Sept 19— Talisman, Horsman, from Antwerp, for New for Johnston, andto give (4g a prospect of success, | of men who red ps abuse them, have in several in. | *t#ined with blood and encumbered with the dead and | Commission resvived to create 300 battalions of Garae |g eee pape gg Spgort se pe Poop deck; iron tiller | York, : in form of acrank, &c.; painted pot ippoeed her to be Eng Home Ports. We hear that the whigs and barnburning tree soil- an Aa Was orgsnized. At this very hour commenced dutside | on the 5th of June, on his proposition also, the | ‘i No rertom visibleon beard, 2 Bnistc1, Ri, Sept $d—Sld brig Dr Hitedoock, Elwell, Ba'ti- ers of that disaffected democratic region have | ( hoe the conflict between the two republics—the one | committee decided that 20,000 men should be | ¢ fi ircruay anitecamey (rom Norfolk, 2th ult, for Water- | more; schrs'R Borden, Bearve, Norfolk; 4th, Champion, Hatch, agreed to fraternize in the election—the whigs to | Sinavzan Cask or Aspuction.—Yesterday, twe riolent, sweeping, dictatorial, and terrorist, in lan- | brought within reach of Paris, in addition to | weather on th W esd wustdined costiserstle Gaoaga'pe:| = meaner, Ost thir Be woaiiihty Cambie; Maklioaitlver- support Wilmot, in consideration of the barn- | young men, named John Giberson and Jonathan | 8¥age, im gesture, and in oolor; the other, moderate, | the Garriton of 54,650; that, at midnight, om the | buck for Norfolk; and whilst in the act of returning om the 4th, | pool, 224 ult, Halifax ( where she arr 4th inst, 10 pst) 6th; ship Geo burneis supporting Johnston. If this be so, Long- Teas, were brought before Justice Kretechmar, for | P&cific, legal, unanimous, and constitutional—between | 22d June, in expectation of an outbreak, the mi- | abrexst Cape Henry, struck, the brig missing gtays, Some por ii her, Crowell, Cadiz; schrs Francis Baker, Baker, Norfolk; f , pe f streth will lose trom 6 to 800 votes ia Wilmot’s | examination, upom a charge of abducting two German | the republic of your wishes and that you would not | niters and generals were assembled at the Luxem- bbe hey cpreo bed oma overboard. “A steamer was | Havana, (of Philadelphia Mershon, Georgetown, DO; Mary Pat- district, on the average democratic vote. And | girls, together with their tamborige and hand orga. | Bave. The firrt'act of this terrorist republic was to | bourg. and all needfal instructions given thom ; that, | deupaiched toler, Shuvorable, will be got oft Capt Pedlins, | (oor ede ere ene sere Pod sp Mao Saanp: there 18 ground for the suspicion that this attempt | It appears that an old German hired these girls from | Mg out its banner, whose color is the color of biood. | at six ‘clock in tle morning of the 23d a new meeting arent for underwriters, went down in the stesmer; * | two brigs, one of which went. to Weymouth. Cld ship Adrian, by the Cass democrats to supersede Mr. Wilmot | ei parente in New York, with their musical instru. | During two days and two nights.armed men repeacedly | was held. at which the commandants of the civil and | “Dixy Panera nents ve he the Bump | Scott, Mobile; barks Success, (of this port, late of New York} arill be reuleted by the Barct Stas etal ments, for the purpore of travelling about the coun- | inundated the square, the courts, the halls of the | military forces attended, and at which the Minister of | Bi} PA" Newburyport, is supposed to have arrived at town | Rio Grande and et; Helen Maria, Crosby, Balti- i arnburners in other dis- try and grinding out music for “five cents, if you | Hotel de Ville. They insisted upon our instantly | War was inverted with the general command M. de | ‘in 4 . fs i \ Sy ‘Paulting | %@¥ounded, to a small table. at which thegovernment | Mobile in tee Departments (300,000 men) ; that nd a mie rrimac, Bangs, Philadelphia; ’ Adeline, (Dan) Ip- tricts, who would otherwise have supported the | Pilace sir.’ At giving to the republic the character, the attitude. the | Lamartine them briefly notices the events of the 23d. woe pe Verds Islands sien Bark, Wii democratic nominee for Governor. aera ian coneeete ci anes andering | Cmblems of the first. revolution My colleagues'and | He says thet at four o'clock of the afternoon of that | schavnCymD—At Thoms T7340 tale aoa One (oa ig ale oe ey rege Bee mrnnege parla hg The whig candidate for governor has put him- | induced them to believe they could make more money | MY#lf resisted at the peril of our lives. “Twenty | day.tevera representatives called on the Executive | JR Warklea Be kad Caan cys communes. by Capt Vermont’ Waite, NYorls Bits Hand Corel dpe ait skip TB self boldly forward as un advoeate of free soil. | by goirg on their own hook, and visiting the cities of | times, during there seventy-two hours, I was | Government, which had assembled at the National | Sarah Hlizabeth, of about 180 tons, to be commanded by Wales: barks Beij Adams, Helen Maria, Gov Briggs; brigs Cure He will secure the abolition vote ; he will secure | St Louis and New Orleans, at the same time promising waarve! barat Tat ie tae SARI ated OG ee ~ Weds low, Pearl. Bark Mary Lowell started, tut anchoredin President : “ S ead ot the staire f . 1 Jonrsrony, 7th wv af the information of the compounding in Wil- Rg trier Beas apeone yey for Ne Eris: HAt- | the courts and the muare, to address men of sacther tated hel bs went up ths Hoaleverd ev tte lied of © Teil the PA Per : Br urmon Oot 7—Art brig Olive Thompeom, Pate, Portands Mot’s district be correct) a portion o: the de- . ) | epoch, who so failaciously interpreted the will of the | column, and went among the people, who received him sehr Emily Jolinsom, Johnston, NYork, Cid brigs Ejisha Doane, mocratic barnburners ; he will ge the s of | Via St Louis, stopping he: x the purpose of enliven- 'y PI ni ng the people, Notice to M Loring, ssosto wn, Sp jalveston, Texas; Sealer, ie-natives, The Gov 4 ponte mass 0} g our citizens with their melodies of “ Merry Swiss | P*® le. and to hurl down those emblems of terrorism kindly, and appeared to listen to his exhortations rt Dill, of bark Wyman, from Baltimore, requests us to fe) earney, St Joh VF; actirs Sam Slick, (Br) Lawrenoo, yovernors election in 1847, Boy,” k&e.. with the aforesaid accompaniments, and with which it was attempted to dishonor the republic | Some battalions, he said. might then have restrained late tha’, on the 28th ultimo, whem coming into Broad Sound, ‘ert Indies; May cline, Bonney, do, Sid brig Fredericks, rairing a little more change. The guardian of the girls You must remember the last words which decided the | the people, but they were elsewhere engaged He says and running in the course di (Ger) Beckusen, for Rio de Janciro; schrs Gen Wort Atwell sevivel Suecday, sad Nes the Geimiantn aascted ieee ils ao of cite honoree Ser eeey were on that he was present at an attack on brrricade, ad | Posed 7 Binns Coset Flo ae ung flog having made 6 or | St Johns, NF; Baltimore, Sleight, NYork; Richmond, ¢ ami} upon a charge of abduction, At a late hour last even. colleagues; ‘as called up at M. P. Bonaparte, who was side, e ate . unford, dow ing, the casrhad not been concluded St. Leute fe, | Pronounce them:—The red flag, citizens, which you | horre kilied under bit, end (hat ode Trevenue and | SMP. Cyannel, and paseed over It, the keel of the bark rubbing | @CHARLsTON, Oot $—Arr mall steamship Southerner K shows the following result :— Plurality of Governor é Native vete for Reigart. . Abolition vote for Lemoyn , Barry. ¢ bark Zion, Captain Reynolds, from Baltimore | NYork; schr Warsaw, Burdick, NOrloana, (ld brig ‘Aleat, (Nor) present to us, has never been anywhere except round | M. Lassant. who were also with him, received balls in i a ——~ | publican, Sept. 28. gin astern of the Wyman, drawing about 1 » North of ; Ketch Commerce, Soubiates, Havana, PRE MEINE «0 0.9:0:4. 000,05 + «900, BOR ee er eect eae . the Champ de-Mars, trailed in the blood of the veople; | their clothes The next morning, he states, the etrugzle ‘ls, ‘The Wyman, while in command of Captain | Sid ship Julia Howard, Bulkley, NYork: Deigs alort, (Nor) Kreg, Deducting the abolitionists and the natives trom Imvontant Axnest.—The Mayor received in- | the flag which we wish to preserve to the republic has | was recommenced with energy, but that the part of the | Hows ebiuary Ist, then drawing 123 feet, having stru: Cowes and a market; N, eapliay (8p) Carron, Barcelona; polacre formation, day betoie yesterday, of an extensive | M8de the tour of the world, with our bravery, our glory | Executive Government in it was taken from them bythe | the # me ledge, laid three hours and suataine’ rome ‘rest (Sp) Venus, Barcelona; echr Wm Thompson, Parker, th ocratic plurality of ° ig en pt pol al foe ao bogus money manufactory, on the ‘side hill over the | 894 Our liberties Was this the premeditated ambi- | decree of the National Assembly pide epi a ee the Whiss hive i | Miami canal, and yesterday sent officers Logg, Davison, | tom of @ port into which chance had thro Cavaignac, “We rejoiced,” he adds,*-to remit the gov- | {ong rurning from N parties an same, the whigs have to | gia Hayman to look into the matter. The officers | the breach made in society’ Was this weakn ernment into hands which would make an abusive use | and to have abont 9 ¢* water upon it at low tide. Captain D | | Houmes Horr, Cot l—Arr brige Ann Maria, Baltimore, for evercome, to elect their governor, a majority of | went to the house designated, om Baum street ana | this @ compromise with terroriam? Decide" neither of laws nor of the sword.” fofupinion that a wey. placed at each end of the ledge might, | Portiand) Merrimack, Ehlladelphia for Bostow: sobre Ghawinet, 5,000 against them. But Shunk was, perhaps, a | there arrested James Field, alias Dr. Rogers, and took | In answer to the charge of having entered intoa | M. de Lamartine concludes as follows Dey AGVMNE re ee cae ee Geet | MADRE ren BEBE ee ee ne ine eee Pea more popular man than Longstreth ; then there is, | « large lot of articles used in the manufacture of bogus | compact with Cormunisin, and intoxtoated the ople | “From this moment, citizens, again become a simple aia eae schr Pomfret, Kenney, ——=; Klin Hupper, Rob- as set forth, the defection of the harnburners, and | money. «uch as dies, crucibles, chemicals, and galvanic | with illusions, by promis them the organization of | representative, | offered my services to General Cavaig- there are some desertions in the iron counties on | batteries, and about two hundred dol the stuff | labor, M. de Lamartine denies it, and quotes from the | nac, as the chief who worthily represented the Repub- | gay, the light off ihe Tongue Spit of Weare Point, ealiod Weare | _N®¥ By’ ron, Oct 8 —Arr schr Gwoncmma, Perty, Savan- the tariff question. And it is these incidentals | itelf mong which were American half and quarter Monsieur a speech which he delivered to the Social lic. ‘J am not,’ I said, on leaving him, ‘one of those Fofo( Light, on the north aor ofthe hazbor_ and ihe light off he Rah, Sh 4th, bark Norma, Smith, NYork sche Willian, Wixoa, eo alarm the Peaneylva * old and new stamp, Spanish quarters, five | workmen when they presented themselves en masse at | who take refuge in opposition on falling from power, | CarrSpit, he Carr Spit Light, on the south shore, being no | Novi Goo strenuous “working meamamy, and ‘lead to | rane plecen, ke , neatly all i the rough | The Ameri. | the Hotel de Ville: and insisted on the issue of a pro- | but of those who surtain the Republican Government | lneerreiuired vr hor MaJeaty'» paket, they will be aisson- | caves wre Oregons Cooks Petoyiicer anpoavue Carver, Nort whigs. ; can coins are generally light. and it is supposed that | clamation promising the organization of lator;—in | in the hands of their successors asin theirown. Count youstle Gul be ramet Gem thelr tate “i wy folk. There is, on the oth d those which have been in circulation for #ome time | which speech he declared that if he were to be placed | on meto-morrowasto-day. My friend General Negrier : New Onueans, Sept 28— Arr ehip, Bertrand, Hi a Bs lg er side, @ counteracting | past in the city are from the “Baum street Mint,” | at the mouth of twenty pieces of cannon, he would | was there soliciting the ceder which was to send him to Whalemen. ger Jollaneme, Achiey 84 Marks, Cid. brig Adams Gray, seliee> ‘on among the democrats in the | Officer Stephen Hayman this morning arrested Simeon | not sign the phrase organisation du travail, because, | a glorious death. These were the last words he heard Genco epeatensed., PA a te Hi tain Roe bomlaca mak mass, Warranting the presumption that neither any | Lowell, a confederate of Rogers, at the river. Thix is | after fifteen years’ study. he had not been able to un. | from me, Whilst I wept e whilst the Arebb shop of | _ Sid from NBedford, Oct 5, ship Minerva, Smyth, Childs, Paciflo | Tiny" ya a nor all of these combined elements of subtraction | by far the moxt important arrest that has been made | derstand it,and because he would not take enga Paris went to offer his life to God, as a ransom of peace: Q of the Newnenn, mG, Seve 27—Arr echrs South Carolit Davis, N and defection will further than the immediate loss | for some time, breaking up. as it does, an establishment | ments towards the people which he could not fuldi, He, | whilst to many venerous victima--generals, officers, York and araage. Hie Jodgur the ledge toa about’ 130 fest | GA Sept 2—Arr Carter Braxton, Lane, Baltimorty udgon the ledge to be ubsut 120 feet |. GA on, . W RSE tone feo t5 tos0tece wile, | Lamattine, Reed NForks u ; Captain Dill way on the look. out fo inting General ent at ng he rd Microrn Haven Licure Disconriny nn—Mariners are hero yee by to take notice that the two harbor lights of Milford, thatis to | Vins, N York oan, ‘The New Bedford Mercury has the following particulars Joss of Ga Hope, Wilcox, of that port, a Teported wrecked He jancy, Groen, do; 20th, Ann Hyman, Totten, N affect the unity of the party. It isevident that the | slmoxt ax extensive as the United States Mint at | however, he eays, then admitted that the people were | soldiers, citizens, children of the Garde Mobile, went | at'New Pouinnd’) cor tained inaivect iene Mee a eee eee rk gcd Zieh, sets South’ Caroinian, Davie, York; Julia fight is on the side of the democrats to hold their | Dablonege, Ga.— Dispatch, Sept. 8. entitled to fraternal assistance by labor, on conditions | to be decimated by musketry—calumny, already pos- pound oeneey Of ee ln, tiated Bay of Ialands, New Zealand, | “Bony Aap, Oct ond Sash Ouasbertate, Weteeuty, ‘Htava. own, while the object of the whigs and theit yoo Supvan Duite yhom tae Excasnve Usa or vhich should not enter into mortal competition with | sessing iteelf of my name. accused me of complicity | May 20, 184. On the 16th April, we stood infor the Bay of va Sid ehip St Louis, Marblehead; big Potost, Matasas, aad : . - free labor He aks if that were the language of # po- | with thore balls, ali of which [ could have desired to | Itlends aith » strong NE wind, and raining. Rounded the large test of coasters, Put into Cape Poipoise, for a harbor, Pectations are to mcrease their vote to a majority, | CLoves —An industrious and highly respe litical endormeur? won actT || regeite, 1.ordee ¥ spare the blood of a single citizen, | Waiting forthe bout, the win heeted tho NE GAN W andowne | 24, bra Hanover, York. fmt Philed for Portland.” Giving to Johnston the native and abolition vote, | girl, named Ann Emery, about 23 years of age, reaidin, M. de Lamartine then the ' jutions 0 M Portsmourn, Sept 20—Arr brig Taledo, Grant, Philad. Clad we have shown that he has but 5,000 murity co | stthe lower part of ae wove. en bon tae ae e arti proceeds to state that,on the | or a single soldier! Behold what revolt mene oi blowing heavily, with bad wea, so. that the ship | 1° jeen, MeFadden, Phitad;, $d Get. ship Tarquim, Most i sixth day after the revolution, he had the idea of abo- | ‘Their greatest phenomena are not their crim wre. Wind stiil increasing with thick an’ overcome; and if the desertions from the demo- | {our sisters. died very suddenly in the Globe Mi!l. on | jishing the penalty of death for politieal offences, and, | their crore’, I couse no one, because, when rainy weat iis split all to pieces, we found we were losing wTH, Oct 6—Arr schrs Exact,Folgor, Nantucket; Lu crats on the tarifl question, and upon the Wilmot | Monday. at noom She bed previously made no com- | he says, ‘the same inspiration descended at the neer is over the whole world, no can be blamed for | ereund at ex ~~ are tack, oad jana Ma baal go o7 ighan, Glowocster. iy Ley rupture, shal) but subtract 3,000 votes in all the | piaint:4nd exhibited no appearance of being im ill | time from heaven into the breasts of his colleagues.” | not veelng clearly, Citizens’ bebold the light! Re- pe a REE OX Tot Leo chaning’ oad Ta Bilas neaen din ‘Nox, Oct 6-—Arr schr Union, Bangs Baltimore, Sid State, from Le > ‘ enlth. The sisters and associates of the deceased | He adds, that after the abolition of death was unapi- | cognire your frievds Thore parties who have a pass- | Qverat ti hesvtin’ dies aikioet or bh Ai brig Nancy Prait, Stevenson, Wilmington. » from Longstreth, then the whig candidate OR y several times very ly. she di r, and in al . testified before the jury of inquest, that she had been ously voted, th bes f thi jonal hi blic try before all 4 soumond, Oct O—Arr wht Mery lor, Nickerson, Boston. will be elected. Bat our opinion is, thathe wil | yuere,” u , moutly , the members of the previsional govern. | ing reseniment against the republic try minutes filled with water. We had time to save some of OOF | cut tet ti Rtewcay Bostan; Veoniitien’ Boner eee not get these 3,000 “7 Py » be, deo d.|h ¢ habit of chewing large quantities of cloves, #ud | ment fell into the erms of each other, and gave each tbings to calumpiate the moderate republicans; know- | cloties, the chronometer and afew o her things. She soon fell Sarem, Det BOM Globe Small, NYork, sid brigs Mermaid, re 3,000 votes. We may be deceive ad Leon known fometimes to consume xn ounce in a | other the hiss of life’ He demands if this were a | ing full well that the republic can triumph only by | over on her beum ends. The Evglish sloop uf War Calliope sent 23 | A" Ri Genade and mkt Mary, Helo rene eee fuses, unanticipated and not provided for—causes | ay. This was. no doubt. an indirect, if not » direct | coneession to the executioner or to God? mederation: that the roll of France will hot be suftered | Meh toaustat ein getting cut the stonvvand oil, Cutaway tbe | {i Greogetown, DO et silently operating upon the minds of the people— | cadre of her death — Newhuryport Herald, Oct. 9 He next ttates that he fideo cantly propored theor- | to be parcelled out by communiam; that the soil of | UN Var ont the casks. of provisions ead oth ecw ee deck ‘2—Arr brig Petersburg, Cooper, NYork. Cld an increase 4 ri a from the thousands pf Axornen Disareranance. — Elijah Chandler. eee Z be Mobile, whieh #% Paris and | trance will never allow — gan fe fA hoe ing of 224 April. On the 3d May, we finished get ing out pepe Charles, Phillips, Norfolk, Sid young men who will cast their first votes this fal " P' G rf * | Franee onthe 23d June. and arkeif that were want of | upon it fora fortnight; that the soil o nee wou! ‘About 6H 70 bhin were’ lost by ataving cnaks fs jebre Char and a@ relative Joss to the other—a rainy dév—all eeeses Py, pales h, N. H yesterday, and took foreright staron, | Limit forth the blood with which the plagiarits of ‘he Ww yg ame the a oh ye, And Anweiin, NYork; 24, Oscar, to; 4th, Sarah, 4 m wf ‘e have got ne ol \- pete yw een sgt cB of tt may affect the | mirsing man. After he left home, it was discovered when the faders 6f the rene snus bend ree t Fb sevnien spot of sevege qresivas tveneseria ach, where we = Hving 's fente made ci ‘aig Tae ee Ceieneen Chen Bint frgre vine flict oom one side | that be bad. previous to starting, made his will; and | crowd, thrust themselves into the Hotel de Ville. wad | ena crime, not knowing how to find it in measured and Sissorered, tags sbesy o0 id u1Uhiy Genl Taylors Kalen, Nevo, or the other. Bnt, frgm the ligiits before us, from | thir. and otber circumstances, caused his friends to insirted on an adjourment of the elections, he declares | virtuous deeds! These are the worst enemies of our HAUNGTON, Cot S—Arr ght E 8 Powell, Powell, Now York. the testimony of preceding elections, and. fre follow.— without. however, being able to find him. He J ‘i f Cid sehr Alario, Williams, N York, trem that the provisienal government formally refused to for the vole danger of the republic is its | fr E tome, York. the apparent temper of the people, to the extent of | i# Gereribed as 68 years of ogo and was dressed in a | deliberate under threats, and ackeif that were » cow. d the recollections of 1793 which these | whieh if found j Asuinoron, NG, Oot S—Art sche Delaware, Frank from N York ld tehre Diay, Durnell, Moston, Anacor , incessantly endeavoring to revive, whil Tecan now dole to Kom "Abbot: Comet, Pogh and Butaw, ries ith an old fashioned plaid cloak. The two ady, are as Tce from ab ip Herald, Macomber, of NB, roporte her at St | BF Hanks, Ireland, Vhilada; Alex Chonire, Nassan, our observation, we suspect that Longstreth will | black rui left band are gone. of the ardly concession to numbers and exigene' be elected Governor; though our estimates and | Mat fingers of hi multitude? He also reters to his answer to the parti- our evidence will not allow him more than 3,000 Susvension Bripor.—We learn that there was | sane of the Polish cause, who one mght summoned | tedly doing all im their power to efface, But 1703 wns | ¢, apt bth, with, bse ep ofall well " . ” or 4,000 majority another fight on the suspension bridge on Satur- | bim to declere war the next morning for Poland, under | not the republic! It was the revoluiion Are afew HARBOR, OotS K iH ule, Sate, fhe, the Const of ol tated i 0 orm in Y The Preside Pe y . | day. in which clubs, stoner and guns were quite the threat of upretting the government, toshow that | months only in our history to be allowed to calumniate Ra v0 rp yn he—ob hao 1 gl urcd. One mau was severely injured, and ¢ portion cr | be made no conecesions to war. Ile Ikewise notices | {or ever the reign of liber) amopgrt ue! ts this blood A Passenge morning. and put to sen with Livenroo1—Pht Ship Henry Clay—Mr Betty and lady, Me 4 Testy, Mr Triegs, Mra Marharg, Mastor Marharg, Honry Russo : , ; ‘Up. It woul I fe . | bit refusal to render armed assistance to the Irish, and | destined to remain ® stain upon us for ages’ No (he tren to4 ry from its connection with the free soil movement, | the bridge was iis Gat biatonrvany 0 saeil tae dak, | Comendout thet were eonevsslon Go divtl wart | We will show to the world that we know at once how Hust Oenasrin sil nant gocks | AUT greets FW Morris, Marylang, ‘Mr Stevia, Mr Wolly an all of which we shall attempt to elucidate in readi- | Sich or the lew premises, and not resort to vio. | On the charge of having encouraged attempts of | to conquer ond how to restreim the republic—that p 4 ; Daniel Webster, Ann Mary Ann, aetna ness for the next eastern mail, River, twenty- hich can only inereare the difficulties already | "med propayand rm against and | seiguof all The republic inapired by Washington and bark Columbia Passengers Arrived, ne enine —— It hasbeen drizzling We retand there is much excitem M, de so sob ‘ elke Kot eball triumph over _ be i" of rt basse 4 ba eek “A fran Sh Tecwons=Sbip burl gton—A MeDon che tor twenty-leur ho: » vever, | i proclamations issued, to prevent suc jierre and Danton! Im «ther er, ether ideas, other ip Orphan, Williams, leans, tor Liverpool, Aug | tteerme uoure, however, aad there 19 hope age alah y * mo edlch llad A that when todiesct mwa weressoubled | fhoughts, ottwe mon! This is the truth with fegard Pp Orman Mbp the Thee Huater, at Liverpeet ) Weta no—Bark Bertha A oa rise from the mountains Tur Doctor the whole structure. —Bugalo Commercial, Oct. 2: