The New York Herald Newspaper, September 24, 1852, Page 3

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Rrra land, 10 THE EDITOR OF THE NEW YORK HERALD. New Youx, Sept. 16, 1852. _Sir—As I have no expectation, nor, ‘sire, that any Irish newspay lace for it in the columns of eae journal, uropean circulation, through whi share in Great ter bas extonded. your most obedient servant, Aw Inisn Sussecr or THe Berrien Crown. TO THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND. Fellow country men—The acts of the British gov- ernment withia tho past year, and particularly ‘those more recent ones, in reference to the Catholic religion in the United ‘Kin dow, have once more ‘aroused the spirit of agitation—which had slum: bered since the famine—into life and activity amongst you. With the recollection of almost thirty rears of agitation, under tried and potent leaders, and with the kuowledge of its results, I would ask, what are your prospocts in the present contest with the powers that rale you? And, if ‘ou succeed, what are you to gain as a recompense r the strife, the bitternoss, and sacrifices, which must be paased through? Can you now boast of such- leaders ag directed your former struggles 7 ‘Can qe indeed, ever oxpect their like again ? And does your cause furnish “the motive and the yeue for action” which that did, and the same incon- tive to self-sacrifice? We can now judge calmly of the past, for we know its fruits ‘And what have been, Coe whee mays the plete os ae arent stry; of int; ears Sim, the eligibil i of a ‘on Catholic noblemen and gentlemen to sit, and to: legislate in part, in the parliamont of the united kingdom, and to fill afew minor situations in the courtsand public ‘offices. Can any man point out a single bonefic hich has resulted to Ireland from this? Can it bs shown that any improved law, or section, or clause, 4n any act of liament, since 1829, is the result 0: Catholic legislation? Has patienient been more ure, and have Catholic members boen less under the ‘influonce of the minister than those who take tho oath of abjuration? No one can, truly, answerin th» affirmative, Again, has Catholic emancipation ex , tended manufactures in Ireland, advanced her agri culture, eularged her commerce, increased her ahip- pine: dopant and protected her harbors, improved er fisherios, promoted the expenditure of the imps- rial revonue im the country, placed her in a position to cope with any unexpected national calamity, or in any of her material interests been of the smallost benefit to her? In fine, can it be shown that the mensure was the means of giving the Jaborer an additional day’s work, the heagry food, or the naked clothing? Alas! no, it has failed in a!l these; it has been for the mil- Hions an abstraction, whilst it has gratified the “pride and ambition of tho few, and given places to the unpriasipled and corrupt. Do not suppose that A undervalue emancipation— it was your right, with- out which you should not have been a single day content, and was worth an effort to obtain, but was not worthy of a thirty years struggle. Brople, of your numbers aud in your position, would ave wrung it from their tyrants in a year or less. The wrongs which now agitate Ireland I feel as jaave. Bat when I look at the past, and, turning “over the history of my country, find not a page from which the eyo will not avert itself in sorrow or in ~ahamo, I ask myself what aro its hopes for the future? [seo none, unless you throw off the in- fluences which have hitherto misled or ju, and unless every Irishman acts as if the re- lemption of his country depended on his single exertions. You have too frequently deceived fioed life, liberty, family, fortune, country, all but honor in your service. No Fitzgerald, or Emmet, will again pay the penalty of your cowardice or weakness; nor will a Mitchell, an O’Brien, of a Meagher, become victims to your disunion, treache- ey, and abjectness— “THe that trusts you, Where he shoud find you lions, finds you hares Where foxes. geose.”” Henoefas:h, none will encounter peril in your eause, for you have made your country a by-word m, and abroad, of contempt or Rtv. You must not think of war as a means of de- ‘iverance, for you have been too long schooled in the doctrine and practice of submission to any ex- ‘tent of feceag si 80 much so, that I am convinced if the English government issued its mandate to de- prive every man in Ireland of his right arm, it could be effected with scarcely more than the po- lice force of the country. That some individual cases of resistance would be found, and some very loud complaints heard, I have no doubt; but a combined and general opposition would not occur. ‘Then, as respects parliamentary exertions. When, in the lifetime of O'Connell, they were futile, and when you had clear majorities of your members, as in the caso of the Irish Poor Law quoetion, and others, without it availing you anything, what can he expected now, when the anti-Irish and anti- ‘Catholic majorities are so powerful in both Houses, and when, after Lisboa @ years of emancipa- tion, you have permitted the return of two members for your metropolis who would disgrace the eae borough of Bandon as its representatives? No matter how talented and hew unanimous your mem- Jegislature, where they are swallowed up by the numbers, and overpowered by the national and re- ares prejudices, and the opposite interests, of the glish and Scotch rey mntatives. As to the farces of agitation, associati Conciliation Halls, frequently and are too expensive entertain- ments, toamuse any vhs apes benefit the coun- te, they always failed. What, then, are you do? Strike at the life of England —her wealth. It was a true saying tion whick England rules, for it is through it juires that which gives her omnipotence—weal! ‘0 the same proportion as she is strong, th. d’s wealth is her manufactures, from which her people derive riches, and her government in- come, from the entire world; and, to digress for a moment, I would sey, there is no reason why the cotton, woollen, and iron manufactures, for near- all ‘ind, should be concentrated in Lanca- shire, Yorkshire, and Warwickshire. Every being throughout the universe, who wears or uses any article made in Great Britain, promotes the pros- that country. entire incoie. ion of your forcign im ‘England, whore the duty is the income tax derit the Ce gps of wi ployed not make herself, and ¢] mous, so much so as to be to ostimate at nt. uite beyond my though I do not offer my head upon the block as a age for the fulfilment of my prediction, I never- | produce to England for a market, through faetors 0 theless aver that if the poy which I shall here merchants, because at home the people are unem sketch be act ‘on for three years, | ployed, and cannot buy it, and, by so doing, they (England's downfall will be complete, her ruin cure- Joos the difference between what the merchant gives lees, and the most detestable, the most abhorrent, | them and the 6 it sells for in England, which he most “abomination, unequalled in its | price could be obtained at home, if the employment own kind in the history of the civilized world—the | given by Ireland to the British operative was bo- Puree of 0 much bitterness, of so much iniquity, | stowed upon her own people. Thus do ¢' class “of #0 much tears and blood”—and which ‘ there is | in Ireland cause that poverty and ruin, which they no abuse like it ea, discovered parts of Africa, in all America—notwit! standing the defiance of humanity, civilization, an Christianity in the slave-holding portions of—in all -we havo heard of Timbuetoo”. law-created, law- sustained, bl English church establish - ment of Ireland be hurled headlong down tho abyss from whic) Even in this country, it " and in Canada, the ovlls which lishment has sown broadcast Jent operation; for it the most opens meet and live in reuasions ony, erated and fostered rumption of everything from which Wngland de- | through which the dopopulation of the country can tives revenue, either through the customs * be arrested, and the paly moans by whisk, the excise, must bo established, and rigidly adherod | country caf acquire I. for. waile, poue, e to. 1 know many will object to this, oither | will be ever weak. Remember, that for every loom on the ploa of inability to do without ba | cof. ou set in motion at home, you one in Great foe, sugar, wins, spirits, ale, tobacco, an be ritain; that for every one of your own le you many other articles in general us from which | employ at home, by #9 much de. you diminish em- the public revenue is obtained ; and others Oy Peper in , thereby” strengthe . the ground that their business would be inj by |- and a brother, wi an enemy, di- the disaso'of those. To the first Iwould say that, | minishing the British ow, you from porsonal ¢ eT Oe Lanes will act rorolutely pte the prion ings sablo » | of n reaps or for I have lived in Great articles the next Brit a8 health as over I enjoyed with- | step to be taken should be to en! nations out using‘any of them, and had tho satisfaction of | in your league; and here Mri dh ha ir a ror Knowing, that with the exooption of postage { did | in which to interost thoir sympathies and claim ‘THE DELIVERANCE OF IRELAND, | ®t size The Declension and Final Ruin of England's Manufactures and Commerce—The Means moals, Accomplishing the Deliverauce of Kre= | and it ie within tho knowlodgo of all, I bave the honor to be, sir, very respectfully, revenue, country cold water or milk at their ino) ii ry in from wines, ita, 9 bacea, anuff, &3., to the infinite aivantage of therr health and strongth, their happiaoss, respectability indeed, de- | and moans. During tho agitation of the moa- ir proprietor would in- cur the risk of publishing the enclosed, I cm ie ich it will obtain —if not all the epllalty I could wish—a very large sure for the emancipation of tho Wost India slaves, the non-consumption of evory thing raised by their Jabor was common in Great Britain and Troland, which caused the disuse of sugar, and by consequence, tea and coffee. The injury to the itain and Ircland. The high im- | wholceale and retail dealers in those articios is not portance of the subject, must be my excuse for the ‘Yreat and moat unexpected length to which my let- worth a thonght, for, as a class, shop-keepora, though @ convenience, noyer add to the wealth Of a coun- try ; besides, they can engage in some other traffic. Coutemporonoons with the non-consumption of aif dutiable articles, should be your disuse of British manufactures of every description; and sheuld you not adopt the recommendation of Swift,to burn every- thing coming from Bogisad but hercoals, youshouid form a league, bound by solemn oaths, if necessary, not to buy snyitiing the produstion of British la- bor ; and you should look upon all as common ono- mies, and treat them as such, who would trade in, purchase, or use, avy manufactured article not made ia Ireland. The principle you have hitherto adopted of employing the labor of England and Scotland to supply your wants, paying for it in provisions which should be the food of your own people, while you leave rary Me those people, as capable of manufacturing for you as your foreign enemies, to starve on the high- ways, or in the garrets or cellars of your towns, or to drag out a lingering existence, at your ox- pense, in the workhouse, or to seek in distant climes that employment which home denied, has beon the prime cause of your degradation and ruin, and is policy so insane that it could h: be credited of the Hottentots. Do you not know that labor is the source of all wealth? Tho multiplication of capital by ite employment on labor can only be com- pared to the growth from a grain of mustard seod Contemplate, for a moment, the circulation of a ain- gie sovereign, expended on labor. He who receives 1¢ must produce that which is worth a sovereign, and, in turn, expending it in the purchase of what is created by labor, it quickly reproducos and multiplies itself, and so on, and on, and on, until the mind falls back from the contem- plation of its multitudinous increase. This in- crease is unknown amongst you, because your labor is unemployed; but it is the knowledge and practice of it by Engiand which has made her what sho ir. Your employment of British labor, to the noglvct of your own, has swelled the excise and ous- tomsof Hngland—bas enriched and pampered her manufactories and merchants, who do ail in thoir power, in and out of Parliament, to oppress and do- grade you, while the operatives, who, through your means, enjoy constant and profitable employ- ment, when the opportunity presonts itself, ax in tho recent case at Stockport, shed the blood of your countrymen because they are Irish and Gathoiic, desocrate their altars, and ruin their tevplos. What country in tho world but Ireland would sub- mit to this, yet more, encourage it? ft is ridi- culous and untrue to say you cannot do without Hoglish manufactures, and that you cannot manu- facture for yourselves, or that if you cease to import from England, you will no longer have a market for your produce. You can make fabrics of wool, cotton, and flax, good enough for honest men Any other keenly as you do, for I have the same interest in her rosperity, ber happiness and independence, as you aralized or di appointed those who have perilled and sacri- and women to wear, superior to what your fathers knew of, aud what braver and bettor people through- out the world have worn and yet woar. In cutlery, potiery, and the mapy other domestic requisites, you have skill enough to supply Your reasonable wante, and should you require aid, thousands of your own countrymen employed in English factories will be able and willing to give it. Your ports are as open as those of England for the importation of wool, (of which you would want but little, as you grow, or can grow, so much yourselves,) cotton, and other raw materials—all now duty free, I be- lieve ; and your linen and other manufactures will, upon the ordinary principles of commerce, be an ex- change or an equivaiont forthese. As respects your agricultural produce, your country being now a na- tion of unemplosed paupers, because of your en- couragement of foreign labor, you are, of course, ones to find a market for it in Eogland, for which you aro paid, mind, in goods, not in money; but when you cease to employ Haglish labor, you will cease to pay for it, and the market for your produce will then be amongst your own employed people. Such surplus as you may havo, if you sell as cheap as other countries, England must buy from you, and pay for in cash, or give indispensable raw materialsfor it. I may bo told that the want of capital, the absence of legisla- your people at home objects of monster meetings, and so forth, they have been too £ 5 y of Napoleon, that “Imagina- verns the world;” and this is the power by perity of the people, and adda to the revenue of all Asia, in all the that accursed estab-- at home are in viru- hedee tna that persons of ma all countries can ay seaginffettnn al ae Great Britain; they, un! continue those feuds g saat foster by tho English State church. * Firat, then, @ total abstinence from the con- tive protection, and the cheapness of British manu- factures, will be iusurmountable obstacles to the suc- coss of this project. I auswer that if any want of capital exises, it arises wholly from the suicidal system of employing foreign labor while your own is unproductive und supported in idleness iu work- houses, or on out-of-door relicf, and that oach hour the system lasts the scarcer will gapiial become. But I devy the want of means in Ireland forall ob Jects of national prosperity Looking at tho capital of your banks, at the vast deposits thereia and in the savings’ banks, awaiting profitable employ- ment, at the investments of Irish money in the English funds, and in railways, and other joint stock companies, I ascort that the capi tal of Ireland is not, in proportion, inferior to that of Scotland, or the United States; but her system of credit is defective, and requires considér- able enlargement. As to the absence of legiela- tive protection, it is anevil. The labor of every country ought to be protected, and grain, and other raw produce, alone should be free, or next to it. But whose fault is this absence of protection in Ireland? Your own, assuredly; you allowed the annihilation of your parliament, which would have ‘bers may be, they never can serve you in a British | chielded your manufactures and commerce; and, in 1825, you permitted England, by the abolition of all duties between you and her, to try “‘her *pren- tice hand” in free trade upon you, and bankruptcy, uperism, famine, and self-exile, have been your jot since. Such is the result of free trade in Ireland. Free trade! Did that embodiment of more than human selfishness—the British nation—adopt the privciple till she had attained an ascendancy in manufacturing skill and power, by her wealth, long ade low wages, so as to defy all competition, and did she establish it as ber national policy until she had proved its terrible she ac- | destructiveness by its operation upon ill-fated Ire- land? But the absence of protection may be met because by national zeal and enthusiasm, and by the con- poh vo are weak, because poor. The source of 4 viotions of si terest. As, for instance, in the ease of Scotland. Some rixteen years, or upwards, since, manufacturers in that country, turned their attention in a very limited way to woollen fabrics, known as Tweeds, for men’s wear. The articles at first luced were most ouére in style, and in price much higher than English goods; nevertheless, her nobility and gentry at home would wear them, and Lord Brougham and other distinguished Scotchmen, made them fashionable in London. Your miserable squireens, paltry attorneys, and petty shopkeepers, ics. ithout @ revenue England could | would turn up their noses at -such fab: have neither army nor navy, and though her in- atinct would bo, as ever, to oppress, her power to do -6o would be gone. You, people of Ireland, poor and abject a4 you are, enrich the exchequer of your tyrant to the extent of over ten mil- lions sterling per annum, or one-fifth of her The Irish oustom house re- urns do not show this, because the largest por- tions are through paid, without credit to | Manchester, Dublin, &c., &c., became their best yeu—and you do not get credit, either, for the duty ‘paid on the various foreign raw materials used in the manufactures of England for the Irish market, vet from the profits of those manufactures, or the exciee revenue obtained from paid to operatives em- in thosé manufactures. The gross profits acquired by English manufacturers, operatives, and people of Scotland would presently have them and nothing else, and in preference to handsomer and cheaper goods from Yorkshire, ’till at length this de- termined support ofnative fabrics so encouraged their manufactures, that increased capital was quickly invested, and skill and enterprise stimulated. Soon the Scotch manufacturers met the Englishman in competition in his own country, and with such suc- coss, that in a few years London, Liverpool, Leeds, markets. If Irish love of home, of self-interest, and common sense, would but make it follow the exam- ple of Scotland, how happy for its people would be the result. There isno shallower pretext for pre- forence of foreign over native manufactures, than that most frequently put forward—cheapness In the case of Ireland, it is peculiarly ignorant and land, and decay and ruin for house proporty—for both, uncertain and insolvent tenants. Profes- sional men of every kind create that want poverty cannot fee the: alike suffer from, and all) complain they daily impoverish themselves, way. to be perso: capital for the the general destitution. contribute one farthing to mogetic is nothiog more common in this than for tho better olass of femaloa to use rning and oven’ instead of tea or coffee, on tha ecore of healtle stupid The man of eetate ensures for himself, by merchants, in supplying Ireland with what she does | his preference of English manufactures, low rents for it is almost everything she uses but her agricultural produce, must be enor- wer Il this should end, and | of moans which they are the first to suffer from, for Farmers must send their of. They create that destitution which they are taxed to sup- “port in idleness, because they will not employ it ; and and their coun- try, by paying for foreign labor, the price of which can never return to them, or benefit them in sny No man in Ireland can be so isolated as not ly served by the expenditure of native ve labor, be he proprietor or annu- itant, professional, commercial, farmer, or laborer. It must increase, and make certain, the valuo of property of every kind; enlarge commerce, enhance ices of agriculture produce, and of labor of all deecriptions; and free the people from the op: pression ca rates and other taxes, caused by It is the only means thetr . You will have in your favorthe na- of some countries, the Sees e cou more, the antipathy of all. In. sort, without some motivo of dialiko, self-interest, r jen lousy, to promt & im aiding you in ty orusade against Engiand’s bigotry, in the effort to overturn hor hitherto invincible ‘pow- er. You will hevo but to sond tations through tho prinoipal oountrioa of Porope evoke a univer- sal sentiment in your favor. You nced hardly givoa history ot your wrongs, for they are world-famed; of your sufferings and endurance, they are known to be more than human, and borno because you adhoro to that faith whioh you inherit, from your Redsomer. You weed only say ‘that you eanndt cope ‘with your oppressor on the battle field or on the ocean; that if it wore im your power to sink her fleets, or to slay hor legions, it would avail younothing, whiio sho had the means which her revenue gives hor, and the wealth of her people affords hor, to replace and reciuit them; that you have sued te her for centuries in vain; that she has takon all from you but your faith. Give a biatory of “human nature’s broadest, foulest biot,’” the State Churoh Kstablishment in Ireland, and tell them that. your only hope isin lessening tho wealth, and imporarishing the rove- pues of your pitiless tyrant, and ask thom, in the namo of humanity and religion, to assist you. If you boldly and unflinehingly set the example yourselves, by the practice of the precept you thus enforce, | know nothing of human naturo if it will mot be followed, and your appeal heartily rosponded to’ Tho countries of Europe will have the strongest motives to aid you, eithor from roligious sy: ashy with your poople, indigna- tion at tho accumulated wrongs you have groaned under for agee, community of race, or from avor- sion to bs areal jealousy und dread of her’ power, and manouiacturing and commorcial competition. In this country you will have everything in your favor—millions of your own people, or thoir dos- cendants, whoso hatred of Hngiand is as intense a6 it is undying; Americans, of other races, whose deteatation of England is unbounded and unreason- ing, amounting almost to insanity ; and the Eu- ropeau emigrants who aro adding millions to the population, aud who bring dislike of Kngland with them in coming into the world. The two groat parties in the United States must support a move- ment against the importation of British manufac- ture, if offectively agitated by the friends of Ireland; for the democratic, the most powerful of the two, by reason of its numbers, though partially free traders, yet have been always the most hos- tile to Engiand, and will support any measure calculated to embarrass and weaken her; and to thie party—all fuvorers, by the way, of for- eign intervention, with scarcely an oxception, do tho Irish by deacent and birth belong. Tho whigs, though leas hostile to England than the democrats, are to aman opposed to free trade, andin favor of home manufactures to be encouraged at any sacri- fice, aad therefore the movement would have the i plsqramrente undivided support of this great party. | t will not be necessary to enact laws im Congress imposing higher duties to favor this movement. If | the Beopie tuke it upit is carried, ome of govern: | ments, homoor foroign. History tells us of the | ‘handy mode” adopted with the tea in Bostor har- bor. “The same fate awaite British manufac- tures of this day, ifimported contr to the poo- plea’ will, and should they be landed by stealth, the torch would be Spplied, and nota fireman could be | had to extinguish tho flames. There is no levying hero on the township or parish, for losses by inoon- diary fires. The British consigner, or the owner of the property should bear all tho los. The Amer- icans, as you have seen by the newspapers, can be very excited upon small occasions, and for very un- deserving objects. The most recent instance was where a small knot in this city intorfered with the course of justice, and with eae success, in behalf of a worthless vagabond richly deserving of the halter, if guilty of the crime with which he is charged. I have now put before you the views which experience and long and deep reflection upon the conditions and prospects of yout country, have established in my mind as the only means by which you can escape from the grasp of that power which as held you in worse than ay ptisn ondage for nearly seven hundred years. Sngland was capa- ble of governing you well, she would surely not re- quire seven centuries to instruct her in the mode. Sbe oppressed you as much when of your faith as aince she apostatized. Your state isnow worse than at any former period ot your existence. You are more pluadered than India, and unless the soil be removed, and your island left a naked rock, I cannot see how your condition could be lower. The entire isfranchisement of the Catholics of Ireland I see is threatened by tho satanic press of England; and to reaist that measure, in a-legislature of six hundred and fifty-eight members, there aro but forty-three Irish and one English Catholic representatives, thus leaving you at the morcy of a majority of six hundred undtourteen. You are at the wrong end of England to receive justice from her. With the instinctive cowardice and meunness of the overbearing and cruel, she permits her petty pos- aessione of Jersey and Guernsey—becanse within sight ot the l’rench shore—self government, and almest total immunity from British taxation and control. Inthe instance of the Church of Scotland, she has displayed equal meanness and cowardice But Ireland, in her western isolation, has been made the field for the truculent policy of the Saxon oppressor. Every resognized rule of governinent has been violated in your reg have al- ways contro}led the many b fication, for church establishme een igve ed. Your nation has to bast expenses of huild- and clergy witbout being plundered’ of your noble cathedrals and other temples, now ‘aned to the uses of @ sect without a faith. The ial revenues to which you contribute bring no benefittoyou All the great establishments of the empire are concentrated in England. — There Irish taxes are expended in the dockyards, arsenals, and other vast government workshops. Not a wherry, or a musket, or anything else for the public service, is constructed, or contracted for, in your country by the British government. Your blood aad treasure have been expended in the acquirement | and preservation of India and the colonies of the empire, and Otaheite has as much interest and pro- | perty in them as Ireland has. And so with the | navy, the doekyards, and other public works, and | the whole material of the public service. An | Englishman would laugh himself into convulsions at the idea of Ireland setting up a right to property | in any of these, and yet nothing could be stronger | or more equitable than the claim, Asthe happiness, | the liberty, and religious rights of the Irish nation, have been always trampled on by Hngland, her | ‘ople, when recently afllicted by famine, though | rming « portion of the richest empire that ever existed, were more neglected, and perished in greater numbers than if they were a | dependancy of Horie), or of some petty | German State. Her liberties are voted down, | as in the case of the suspension of the habeas cor | act, in 1848, within an hour—a shorter time than | would be considered decent to decide on a clause in a turnpike road bill ; and when any questions con- serning your religion, or remotely connected with it, are the subject of legislation or of adjudication, what savagery is displayed in parliament, as in the dizcussion and decision of the Ecclesiastical Titles act, andthe Maynooth grant. What satanic fury, demonical malice, and fiendish exultation, do not | the most noble, right reverend, right honorable,'and | honorable, of that body exhibit; and in the courts | of law (not justice), you find your Lord Chie Jus- tices and special jurors quickly transformed into shameless perjured partisans, as in the recent case of Doctor Nowman, in the Quven’s Bench, London. With ail these facts as patent to you as the noonday sup, and occurring within the last five years, | what can infatuate you into expecting justice or humanity from Eagland? There is ‘no pro- | position in morals more undeniable and truer than this: that no country capable of produ ing in abundance, as yours does, all the necess: ries of life for its people, can be in the condi- tion in which Ireland is, and always has been since the union, except through the ignorance or wicked- ness of its rulers. It has boen one of the fatalities ef Ireland, that, in the tide of her affairs, she has never taken advantage of the flood; and hence we | ing and maintaining church coy gregations, besides e seo opportunities, which other countries would have | seized and improved, allowed to pass away, nover | to return. Thus, the various feuds and divisions in England, the revolutions there, the alterations in the succession, the frequent, changes of —— and the many and protracted ods o! bi oace wars, have never been taken advantage of by Ireland, no more than the favorable incidents in her own his- | tory. ‘The Volunteers” could have wrested her with ease from the gr by any other people as sent by Providence for their deliverance; for there can be no doubt, had O'Connell taken the stand which his influence and justified and demanded—had he said ** The soil which God has given you for your habitation, has yielded sufficient, notwithetandiog the failure of the potatoe crop, for your sa It is yours by every law, divine and human—keep it. Let not the tyrant who fas trampled on and piundored you for seven con- nating your race through famine. Resist hor, if needful, to the death!” Wngland would have shrunk back ; the world’s shame would have been too much for her to face ; her army, I t would have fal- tored in executing her commands, if she urged them against a people driven to fag ese by the fear, ¢ certaint} es. + Pose de et nell’s ies in England would, for I know it, a ied his act ; the world would have honored him for, and rted him in it; fal resistance it) Ireland. to the athoriey of Eng. land would have been achieved, the freedom of native land would have followed, and O'Connell @ title whieh personal risk ; hence, was he unequal to it—and he felt it, no doubt, for Y | ples it has had of your forbearance. of England. The famine, | must be your fate frightful as it was, would have been looked upon | visited by ® similar calamity while under hor do- sition, and the circumstances of the time, , ‘turies, now consummate her designs by extermi- | (nmodistely after he sought gravo, in a foreign land. Thus, tho pusilenimity of much rolied on, led to 0 tone of sail Now is a timo, if proporty availod of, a of the pot- abe exe favor- le. in ; wide sproad, provails in Ireland. Louis Napoleon, dvidindly tat tendcd for a hig! stiny, of which ho seema tally conscious, and porkaps under Providenow designed to repair the faults and failures of his mighty kias- man, holds France with his steady hand in tho leash, ready to be slipped for a fight and desoont on pertidions ‘Albion, andden and startling as the ‘irst Congul’s on affrighted Italy. The Newfound- land fishery question, or some other, may aoon afford @ pretext. Austria aces in England tho fomenter of revolutions in her a6 8H wad holds her in distrust and avorsioa. ltaly and Spain kuow ber to bo tho cromy of their seourity and religion. Germany and Prussia fool hor manu- facturing power a check vo their indust-y and enter- prise, apd find her influence in every-day conflict with their commercial and political interasts. Con servative and powerful Russia sympathizos in the feelings of her Austrian aud Prussian allies, and is concetous that to render the balance of power in Europe suitable to her views and interests Kogiand mast be weakened and reduced to tho level of a continental kingdom. America, with her manufao- turing interests, and the ‘ lodged hate” of hor poo- ple to promote unfriendly and hostile feelings to- wards En wd, which sho is not slow to evince, asin tho extradition case, hae also the fishery question, which is full of difficulty and danger for England, and out of-which war may, in all probability, arise, if not immediatoly, at no far distant time, for should she not follow up the views of the colonista, it will be the pretext and justification for their re- volt. if she does, it will, beyond all question, in- volve her in ® war with the United States. Then, there are the long ponding questions in Central America, the Cuban and Moxican questions, and the probability that England will sustain Peru agninab the threatened but most unjust aggression of America, any of which may be productive of hestilities between the twe powors Hence, a time more favorable for a general and si- multancous assault on tho fiscal, manufacturing, and commercial intereats of tho British empire, could not oxist. The initiative, of course, devolves on you, and patience, perseverence, and indomitablo resolu- tion, are all that are necessary for success. You require no Conciliation Hall weekly assembly, no monster meetings, no timoe-wasting and hollow speech making—no noisy agitation, no rent col- lections, to promote and render successful the policy I urge. Its principles can be disseminated in tho femily circle, in social gathorings, in ordinary con- veraations, and through the post office, the length and breadth of the Jand, and every man, woman and child, cam become active aud practical aposties in the cause by Preceps and example. Omnipotent as is the power of tho Britizh parliament, it cannot make laws to enforce effectually the consumption of exeisable articles, and the use of English manufac: tures. I may be told by petty cavillers, with whom, unfortunately, your country abounds, that your government, unable to raise revenue by ordinary ineans, can have recourse to extraordinary. Well, I think it may have occasion to resort to such; and when it does, and that we seo the pro- posed means, we shall know how to meet them, and it will go hard if we cannot drive a coach and six through tho enactments. Only once let the moneyed intereat become uneasy, let the savings banks be drained of their deposits, the great agents of British tyranny and bigotry, the Banks of Eng- land and Iroland, be called on'toredeom their issues in specie, the funds become depressed or unsaleable, and Eoglish mill-owners closing their works and discharging their hands, and wehave England at our feet, ready to accede to any terms we propose. Tam as great an enemy to war as ‘O'Connell was. I abhor it per se; but did I not, it would be the last re- source I would recommend to a people weak, timid, and disorganizod, without the possession of weapons, and experience and skill in their use, unfit in every view for an armed conflict with even @ petty power, but with such a force as England’s rovenues enable her to bring into the field, the thought would bo in- sane. Besides, your want of enduring valor where you have shown bravery, your incapacity to main- tain advantages when achioved, your foolish for- giving spirit of national injuries, add your readiness to fraternize with the enomiesand opprossors of your country, creed, and race. I, therefore, paint oul a course at once effective and free from danger to any. Iknow the laws in relation to interference with the re- venues of England, but they are such as in this case would not apply, or that children could not evade if they did. The foreign agitation, which forms a great and efficient feature of the plan, may be carried out without involving those in [reland who may be willing to undertake it, but who, being obliged to return to their own country, would be teld reepon- aible by the government tor thi oad. Ire- 1 out the contisent o those in r filelity to her, eat confederacy ma pend with the co: aud cond forth the various publica- d in every tongue, explanatory of the nd objects of the ass ion. If nd, do your part in eustaining the t at home, there can be no. obstacle to the spread of the league abroad, and it must soon become irresistible in its effecta on Brit power. Will you not, then, strive to achieve something of which your country may be proud—something to which your people abroadinay point with exultation—something whi h inhistory may make amends for those records of disunion and isaster, of shame and sorrow, of poverty andcrime, of submission to outrage and oppression, which dis- figure and blot every page of your annals, relieved on'y by the single trait, bright and glorious, [ ad- mit, and enduring. I trust, as the existence of your own green isle—tidelity to the faith of your Savior. You may now retrieve the past, for the means are within yourselves to humble the pride and crushthe power of England. “Do this, and tread upon the Greek and Koman glory!” Then may it be truly said that, “Though long in the shade, Thy ftar will shine forth, when that prowl one's shall face. You know not the numbers in this country—arti- ficers of their own fortunes, with means from ten thousand to many hundred thousand dollars, re- spectively—who long to spend the last years of ox- istence in the land whish gave them life, and, finally, to ‘‘set up their everlasting rest” in the bosom of their first and dearest mother. The re- turn of such men would be more valuable for Iro- Jand than the posession of Australia’s gold mines. With their experience, their enterprise, self-reliance and independenge, they would soon change the con- dition of the districts they settled in You want men without the ambition to be landlords, but above being tenanta on your soil. You want occupying owners, and, in your cities and towns, energetic, in- dustrious, aud persevering men. But not while Ire- land is in her present state will such retum to her; not while the accursed State Church Ustablishment of England can levy tithes and rates from Catholic occupiers No man who has lived in America would pay tithes to a church he dissents from, and shame upoa the Irish Catholic who does so, and thereby mai @ church in which he disbelieves, and sup- ports a clergy whom his conscience tells him are propagators of a damning 8y, for without tithes neither could exist. The Cimes has recently said, that ‘Ireland is past hope, past ridicule, past re- mon:trance;”’ aud well ma s0 from the exam- But, [ trust, this may bot be true of the future, for that you will atlong:h awaken to a full, a practical sense, of your rights and interests. In the carrying out of the pro- ject here placed before you, Tam as well aware as any ob; jector or caviller can be, that inconveniences and sacrifices must be encountered and submitted to; but what are these compared to what other na- tions have had to endure for liberty. In this plan is involved no Joss of life, no shedding of human lood, no personal danger; nothing is required but calm- ness, perseverance, and resolution, in bearing some little changes of habits, and the slight mortifications ents; | and reetraints which may attend an alteration in our pursuits and mode of living, for, at most, but a ie years. What would thote sacrifices be in com- parizon with a single day’s suffering during the fa- mine to which England abandoned you, and which again, and again, and again, if mivion. Remember that God grants all to the firm will and the determined Ere If you are not | capable of making those trivial sacrifices necessary to insure your liberties and ness, itis well man- kind should know it, and that those whose ‘ pon- cored thought by day, and dream by night.” have been for the independence and prosperity of Ireland, uld awaken from their cherished hopes of finding. jn their native land, “a home anda country,” and seck ‘*a world elsowhero. your fellow countryman and faitiful servant, } Moensrun. | Vosr Orrics Operations.—Hstablished--Knox- ville, Steuben county, .N. ¥., Geo. L, Davis, postmaster; Grafton Centre, county, N, Il, Isaac B. Martin, postmaster; Gu Polat Notflk county Masi PW. MA q lumbia. Tuolumne county, Iifornia, A, H, Hummer Postmaster; South Yuba, Ne- yada count; Ng oa Henry Draper, postmaster. Namer changed— “Gunton eounty. N.Y., changed to Rouse’s Point Vi Hoyleton, Clinton county, N. ¥., ‘to Rouse’s Point Antioch, Cen- tre Costa county, California, changed te Marsh's Landing. Thomas E. Payson, Feq.. of Rowley, is to deliver the mi the Witchery Agvicultural Society, at its exhibition on the 30th inst. Jam, my friends, with true devotion and rogard, ommoutan ‘TO 0OGLBOTORS Ovr(oums OF THR CUSTOMS. oa i 3 Tho,attention of the sis ote oliovc of te Gesaurd . oy following insted. Tie of the aanosed ont of Congres, appedvod visions anno. act approv Bib, A t, 1 titled ** An aot authopiai imported’ goods, waren and marthandiso, seid imported goods, warea, an an. bended for waroheusing in pursuance of law, to bo exported by certain routes, to perts oc places in oxico.” 1st, Direotly by water to ports or places in Moxi- oo lying on the aea coast or Rio Grande 2d. By taad or water frou Point Isabel to Browns- ville, or Laredo 5 thonoe by water, to places in Mox- ico lying om tho tio Grando. No goods under tranapoctation, to by atiowed warohousing privi- leges at other Brownsvilie or Laredo: ‘he firet section of the defers mantionod aot modi- fies 30 much of the uct allowing drawback on goods exported, to Clibuahua, &e , approved 3d March, 1845, und likewise so much of the act to ostablish the colivotion diattict of Brazos do Santiago, ag re- quis Sho duties to be paid prior to exportation thereof, and authorizes any imported goods ia the original packages, which shail have been duly enter- ed and bonded in pursuance of the Warehousing aot of 6th August, 1546, to be withdrawn from ware- house, at any time within two years from date of original importation, for immeédiate oxportation without payment of duties. The soction’ mentioned alao modifies the provisions of the act of 1849, re- specting the transportation of goods by land from Point Isabel to Fort Brown, and authorizes thoir transportation from the first mentioned place to Veta and places in Mexico, by land or water, or partly by land and partly by water, or by such routes a6 may be designated by the Secretary of the Troasury. Until otherwise directed by the Dopartment, the exportation of warehoused goods for immediate transportation, from Point Isabel to Mexico, will be by tho following routes, to wit:— Goode, wares, and merchandise, proposed to be ox- pee to San Fernando, Passo del Norte, and Chi- hushua, by the routes indicated in the scoond seo- tion of the act, must be entered for exportation in conformity with law at the port whore the same is withdrawn from warehouse, and be traasported by water to the port of Lavaca, in the collection district of Saluria, Texas, and bo transhipped inland thenoe to San Antonia id from tho latter place to the beforementioned dostinations in Mexico, cithor by way ot Eagle Pass, the Prosidio del Norte, and San Elizario, all on the Rio Grando river. On arrival of any such goods at the port of Lavaca, they will not require to be re-warchoused, but, after proper examination and inspection by the offi- cer of tho customs at said port, will be ailowed to | protect without delay to San Aytonio, and thence, hy the routes indicated, to thoir destinations i Mexico. At the port whore exportation entry is made, bond will be taken in double the amouat of tho duties, for the safe transpostation of the goods | through the United States, and their landing in Mexico; raid bond to correspond with form BH, reapecting oxportations to Canada, attached to Warehousing circular, No 34, dated 17th Fubruary, 1849, with a change in the condition of the instru- mentto conform to the facts. The packages, boxes, cases, &c , containing the goods, must be secured and eealod in the mode prescribed if the twenty- first section of the before-mentioned circwar in- structions. On the arrival of the goods at Lavaca, they must bo landed under the permission and inspec- tion of the Surveyor of the Customs at said port, who will duly examine the same, to see that the cords and seals ure perfect, and if found correct, will give a permit in writing for the transportation of the goods to San Antonio, and thence by the rescribed route to their destination in Mexico he Surveyor will be required to keep a proper re- cord in his office, describing the goods, hy whom owned, the name of the veasel with date of arrival. Further inspection of the goods will be made by the Inspector of the Customs at San Antonio, and like- wise by the othtr inspectors stationed on the route by which the goods may be conveyed to Mexico ‘These officers will, as required by the act, respec- tively m: “report semi-aunually to the Secrotary of the Treasury of all the trade that passos uader inspection, stating the number of packages, di scription of goods, their valuo, andthe names of the exporters.” Under production of duo proof of landing of the goods in Mexico, as required by law, the exporta- tion bonds may be cancelled Wa L Hone, Acting Secretary of the froasury. The L or Law. About a dozen ba partially full of liquor, were eeized at the store of Sheidon We i id, on Thursday. Mr. ined of for selling Ji n Westfield, was gallons seized. Lo ae The Fire Da 1 the Wth a ging F ad of Liquc night house. The car 1 f liqnora and a qua which, with the car, were destroyed. fire was doubtless the work of a zealous iucendiary A club has been formed in Boston, which has for ject the repeal of the Maine Liquor law in Massachusetts. On. dred and eighty-one gal- lo: Springfield last week, was poured into the gattor by the City Marshal, on Saturday evening, in accord- ance with an order from the Court. In Kast Bridgewater, John O. Hudson, of the Hud- son House, was fined $100 and ordered to recognise in $1000 more, for selling liquor at his house during the muster days About two hundred gallons of liquor were seized at Portland, Me., on board of the boat Albano, and confisented, on Wednesday last. The skipper of the boat was fined $20 and costs At Worcester, on Friday last, a freight car upon the Western Railroad, containing about thirty bar- rels of New York gin, and five or six of ale, took fire, the greater part of which was destroyed. The liquor was from the West, bound to Boston Destructive Free ar New Orceans —At abou quarter to two o'clock yesterday, a fire, which destreyed @ considerable amount of proper:y, broke out ina kitchen in the rear of w one story house owned and occupied by Mrs. Dameron, on (ireatmen street, between Mystery and Esplanade street. Third district. The flames soon reached the front building, and extended both ways un- til they were arrerted near Mystery strect on the one end of the row, and within one house of Esplaande street at the other end. There is a brick store at the corner of Keplanade and @reatmen streets. at which the fire was arrested, but it spread in the rear. and several kitchens were burned down Thete were destroyed. a one story double frame building. owned by Mr. Giraud, who. we learn, was not insured ; a double one story brick building belonging to Mr, J. Sel, whois not insured; a large double one story brick house, owned by Mr. M. Dodart. who isalso insured ; and a single one story brick build- ing. in the rear of which the fire originated, and belonged to Mrs. Dameron, as stated above. whether this lady is insured. These buildings fronted on Greatmen street. A frame kitchen im the rear of a house owned by W C C. Claiborne, on E street, and a similar structure in the rear of a pg to Mme. Talle, also fronting on spi street, were burned down, together with four other «mal! frame buildings in the rear, and belonging to the pro- perty fronting on Grvatmen street, which wasdestroyed. | ‘The loss by the fiw is estimaled at over $7,000.—New Orleans Picayime Sept 1 nate old lady nearly ro ahideous spectacte covering. leaving vieible the raw bleeding flesh bene her bosom was alto severely scorched. and her limbs ap peared as though had been baked inan oven. ‘fue wofferer, who is be a very temperate pious old lady, is a cripple. and resided alone in the litile tene- ment. Upon retiting for (ho night rhe imprudently left, it ix thought, beride the bed Line lamp. the dame of which communicated to the bedding, causing the ter rible result above recorded. ‘There prevails bub little, if any, hope of her ultimate recovery.—Baltimore Argus, Sept. 21, SINKING OF THE SteaMex Pawner.—By the arri- val of the steamer Sonora, we are furnished with some of the particulars attending the disaster which occurred at Oow Island, on Tuesday night last, by which an immense amount of property was destroyed. but which fortunately ‘was not accompanied by the loss of human life. ‘Che Paw. nee left New Orteans for thi cargo of dry goods an of which was variously esti dwt $75,000 to $125,000. ‘The bont met with no unusual detontion till she reached Cow Island, on the night mentioned, where sho struck 9 snag concealed below the surface, and immediately com mienced sinking. By great exertion she was rua ona con Uguous bar, where ele went down in aix feet of waler The Pawnee is owned by Mr. Renshaw Jr... wnd apt. Maurice Langhorne, and in insured for $25,000 in this city, and in offices in Louisville The car, almost entirely inaured here.—S¢, Louis Union, Sep. 1 Ono Srate F im —The Ohio State Fair at | Cleveland, last week, appears to have beet highly suc- | cessful The number of entries, as ven by the Herald, were as follows, The receipts were $15,000—eneurly dou: year:—Hortioultural, 521; mechanical ; machinery miscellaneous, 393; pro. 4 dairy. 175; agricultural implements, ; horses, 425; cattle, 375; hogs, Severe PonisnMent ror Cutting ‘Wines —At a court held in Mariboro’ district ay penne Kah was found rch nine Inahee on the bate back, publicly, to lene ii ty trict inten days, and each and every time fn the district, to receive thitty-nige more lashes further trint of liquor, seized at Sheldou Webster's store in | We have not learned | hb; | y, on the Ist inst., witha | A merchandise—the vaive | the offorts made to catablish in this oity a tobacoo, and in connate. ae tracts from an ordinance passe: City cil, ** To establish i inthe et Cincinnati” We also noticed the fact ry tobacco i peing ogtatructed on Pearl strest, and glancod brie the advan- 5 tages of this oity as @ market for this ata: of Western and Southern States. Wolatun to present a few remarks en the latter point, in which we expect to show by fsotse—the accuracy of which canuot be disputed—that Cimoia- nati ie by far the most desirab!e point in the Woat for a tobacoo market, und that, with proper ware- house facilities, and isfactory municipal regula- tions, Cinoinn: ust, within a few years, become ~ leading market weat of the Alleghony Moum- ULE In the first place, this city is the centre of « very extonsive tobacco region, whore greater variotiesare produeed than in any othor section of the.coui ls In eastern Ohio is grown the “yellow leaf,” is in great favor with the Russian aud Fronoh gev- eromenta, and German States. Tho ‘ seod ” ia raised onthe Miami river. Tho ‘‘Mason cow leaf’ is produced in the vicinity of Ripley, Obie, aod Maysville, Kentucky, and this is a quality al- ways in active request. Tho “ hoavy leaf” is growm on the Kentucky river, and in the vicinity of Cae- rolton and Warsaw. Tho sections in which these descriptions are produced are all adjacent to Cinoia- nati, and a considerable portion of the products pass through our city, and this trade may of course be controlled here, if we can only ostablish # market. Besides, wo may secure the greater portion of the tobacoo raizod on the Big Kanawha, in Indiana, aad on the Green, Cumboriand, and Tenneseo rivers. Thus it is soon there exista all around us the mae- terials with wh ch to establish a most importemé tobacco market, and theroby bring Lo our oy w large and valuable trade. Tne planters who have been acoustomed to soll im tho interior markets, convenient to their respeotive farms, or to ship to Now York vin Now Orleans or Louisville, will uaturally inquire, before onvorsain- ing an idoa of recking a market bere, what our ad- vantages are, and if Cincinnati morchaate oan offer greater inducemeuts than those of other Westeru or Bouthern cities. 4 In order to meet the inquiries which may bo raia- od on this point, wo will remark that we olaim vantages whioh will enable a purchaser of tobaese in this market to pay a higher prico than the same article will net tho seller in any other markt From the moment a hogshead of tobacco is pask- ed, until it reaches the manufacturer; every day it is delayed during tho transportation, and overy time itds handled, adds to the first cost of the article; and this, with the freight, insuranes, and other charges, all have to ho paid indirectly hy the pro- ducer. This is » plain principal of political economy. Now, if by ae bie tobaoce from Tenaessco, Kom- tucky, Ohio, and Indiana, to this point, and honee distributing to New York, Boston, Philadolphs Raltimore, and European countries, it can be de- liverod in less time, and at less oxpense than when forwarded via Now Orleans, or to Louisville. thonee to be shipped to this city and the Hastern soaboard cities; is it not clear that the first cost of tho artiole may be reduced, and this would, of vourse, inorease tho profite of the planter, while it wiii not diminiala thoes of the dealer? To this there can be bat one reply. But cavit bo done? Let us soe. The following is a close estimate of the eoat of the transportation of a hogshoad of tobacco from ow Orleans :— Louisville to the North via N Drayage in Louisvilie Freight to New Orle Insurance to New Oricans, Charges to New Orleans Freight by ship ...... Insurance to New York The time occupied in this route varios from forty- five to sixty days. The cost of transporting by two of the Northern routes from this city to New York is as followa, per hogshead of 1,200 lbs. :-— By railroad to Cleveland, lake to Dunkirk, and rail- Toad thence to New York, time—six to eight duya. Drayage I .. $9 Freight 8 18 Ineuran 16 Showing « eaving of six dollars and fifty-six conte per hogshead in treight, and other expenses, from ove to iwo months in time. ‘The figures which we bave set down as the cha: from the Jude the Commission of the Fer- wading 8 here, so that thore cannot be any a rge to shippers or consigness. , o the Lake, Steamer to Buffale, to New York, expense ig us tullows, and time teen days omaad Being abont one dollar fess than by the othe ‘orthern route, an seven dotiars and Sixty-sevem 8 leas than by New Orlea Rvilroad to Cleveland, Steam to Ogdens- and Railroad thence to Boston, the expens) burg Draysge in Cineinnat Freight to Boston... Insurance on the Lake — The foregoing facts show that, taking Louisville as the starting point for the Southern route, and | Cincinnati for the Northern route, the saving im actual expense in favor of the Northern routes is about fifty per cent. In addition to this, we mast take into consideration the time occupied on the several routes, and the heavy damages that ald tobacco sufters while being Sransported to the North, or apy other point via New Orleans. Thisisa point which planters fully understand, as they de also the adventages of the saving in time, and we need not, therefore, dwell upon these fe But, for the bulk of Tobacco raised, iucoas want amarket near home A producer » ver baw been a shipper to any great extent, and, we sume, never will be. The intervention of the mer- chunt is required between the producer and tho com- sumer, and the interest of both these parties will induce them to seek the ground upon which they can come nearest to each other, and trade upon the most favorable terms. Obituary. Vied, near Newmarket, Ohio, on the 30th August last, Margaret Robison, in the van Tee of her age; and on the following day, Thomas Robison, in the Sith year of his age. They were natives of Poma- sylvania, but emigrated to Ohio in 1806. We Jean from the Highlans, (Ohio) News, teat John Matthews Nelson died on Sabbath morning, Gth instant, in the 62d year of his ago. He was in good health on the wort previous. He wase worthy citizen, and for forty years a resident ef Hillsborough, or the vicinity of that place. John Gebhart, baa the whig candidate for the office of Associate Judge of the Court of Quarter Qgesions, died on the ISth instant, at his residemee iW Allegheny, Pa. SICKNESS ON THE River—Grzat Moxrantry ow 4 Boar —The Luelin, which reached port from the nois late on Monday evening singularly unfort nate on the trip. A’ Lusaaile she r i 9 nuraber of | emigrants, who bad come to that pla 1 Chieage by the canal. Soon after the boat got w Peoria, the | cholera broke out among those passengers, and ceveral of | them died The after an filmes of only a few hours duratiom la wae permitted to remain at our levee til en o'clock in the moruing, when. it besomi known that Fata. Resucr —It will be recollected that om the evening of the 4th inst.. an Irishman pamed Jameq Mahoney, while Iaboring under delirium tremens, rushed trom his house in Charlestown and with a carving knife attacked nearly every person whom he infileting severe wounds opon their persons, Among the number thus injured was ® man named A Me' ho Feeelved a dnugerou ‘ound in the grotn. ‘Mr Me. Laughlin was conveyed to his residence im Wesiey Plage, |: Boston. where he lingered until about, § c’ologk Inet aves ning. when he expired. Coroner Pratt was called, amd summoned a jury Co investigate the care. Mahoney is im Vast Cambridge jail, owaiting the resultof his murdee- | ous freak,—Boston Journal. Sept. 20, ANOTHER SEIZURE OF A PORTION OF THE CaRGo OF rhs ScHoovne Miseumer —Mr Fite, the Surveyor of this { port, seized, yesterday, at Deep river, Saybrook, anothee | instalment of the ¢argo of the British scliooner Mischief. | It was ima building belonging to Ar. Paul Beckford, of | that place, and was landed some days since, from the | sloop Constellation, a part of whose loud was landed here ; 00 Saturday night lat. in the Valeon, The goods seieed | at Saybrook consisted of some thirty or forty toms of wine, fruit, spelter, white Lead , and will aerive bere | to We do not learn how the’ informatioa resol the Custom House. or indeed other particulars. — | New London Chronicle, Sept. 18 Arrest of a Pver On Monday night, Cicer Seed. of the city police, arrested a young mam named William Waller, who ts said to be a fugitive from justice, from Boffalo, in New York State. Waller, te seems, is charged with robbing s man and throwing bia held to await a requisition. Its clecneys Te arroated a short time slece, im New York State.—P/iladelphia News, Sept, 22. A bany TunngL.—The enginoers connected nie atet een mena ‘ing into the feasibility, Pie La py . P. i {he aftersoom, but ase number had not ved, ad- ourned ttl 7 o'cloek on Wedmestay eveniog,

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