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a ge were alike. In come, blank amasement step | QBSEQUIES OF MRS. HAMILTON. ub our treepaasoe, aa we forgive those who, tregpase Our Calisernia & leediog publishing honse in this olty later SPIRITUALISM. | seas tose terror and ancerieiaty assumed the OF . * | ngainat us. And lead us not anto temptation; but | Sacnaumwro, Oct. 14, 1864, By states thet bo shall not print these volumes foe @ | form of the excivomont of Insanity; ta sono tnere * iatehty Got, with whom do live the spirits of those”! Letter frow Sacramento—Politics—Califonria for | Yeo to come, at least. He ia, making a4 INTERVIEW WITH THE ARUTICS PASSENGERS, Cor tom be atari rnowiog why: ‘THE FUNERAL CEREMONY IN TRINITY CHURCH. | Seve Retro after they are deitrered from the bere 1 pice ere mearant, Oo 0% inst ten | tae tie dni oo at ee ne ie and ina few there was a koowledze. im! oa it d felicity; we give thee hearty | Letter from Judge Edmonds, Ft, which tospived hope and ¢ nfidence. They | Sa Sens ted ccamples af il hese thy Tervants) strength of the democratic party. Not only did the of Greece in 1846, and now has the twellia Most Extraordinary Letter alge Bumonds. Werethe most creerful aad :oviog who, on earth, SKETCH OF GER LIFE, | ho, ne their course in faith, donow test national democracy, or hards, of California have to | orerthelt corks as Me iiceenin’ Man Bescoohe ae bad been least selfish, and most active im their i their faburs. And we beseech thee, that we, with , a eroaee | crea, wecks.se Mr Macenlay. Mr. Beare’ [From the N. ¥. Christian Spiritualist, Nov, 4.) efforte for others, ; &o., &o., &o all those who are departed in the true faith of Bo aay contend with whiggery, but with of his ‘ifth and: Be cod Be yan thy JUDGE EDMONDS’ LETTER. | They were, he sald. surrounded by bright spirits ere perfect Cpe pun Be ms clique, which went tothe support of the adminis- Tele three since the third volume of Mert. The following is the letter of Judge Eimonds, re- | who were willing to aid them; bat having been Cub 9.) se ssaing of Mrs, Klinabeth Hamilton were ioe | on wey net Curiat our Lords Amen tration. vale’s “Hidery of the Romans under: the Eespire™ ferred to last week, 19 the notice we made of Br. off from mortal life suddenly and without the wean- M | OO Merci @ father of our Lord Jesus Christ, The administration organs here try to foist a lie | was published, and we have no of the Harris’ sermop. We bave no donbt it will be read | ing from earthiy ties whirh old age or protracted terred yesterday afternoon ia the graveyard of Tri- who is the resurrection and the life, im whom whosoever ‘a. cuctlan wat | toe eo American ‘Risto. with pleaenre, and we hope wita th and atten- disease always produce, their earthly feelings were nity Churoh. In aocordance with her oxpreee de- | telicveth, shall live, though he die; and whosoever Upen the country, by averring that jon Fiane do Dot go at ihe Fare of their beetle: tion, ss. there are some pints that may seem new to till p edomican‘ with mavy. anc, in connection gine the was conducted with ut any of | liveth, nnd believeth in him, shall not die eternally; who signal suocess of the Pieroeites. The Placer Times | Twmocn bh. 60 St bie SOPPIng pao oo SRe quite the spiritual reader. Wrile we are as yet in the with the excrtement, confusion and uncer shy diareyry | also hath taught ua, by his holy Apostle Saint Paul not Cid Transcript, in ® long article, congratulates urate, and altogether ‘as readable os the of megiumsbip, snd ve y imperfectly under- | prevailing in their micds,rendered them inaccessible those formalities which usually attend the obseqaies | 4 bo sorry, ax men without hope, for those who aleep in Riper tien ty om Seg oe, as r") stand {ta philoropby. it be ooves sll >be thoughtful to the approsch of those brighter spirits. “Woy,” cf distinguished persons, and the faneral discourse | him; we liumbly beseech thee, © Father, to raise us from the a ‘Mr. Con, formerly of the New Bedford Mer and cautious in resding, that tall justice may be he added, “we do not oli even see each other, was dispensed with. The services conslated entirely | the death of sin unto the life of righteousnes Walle See ey eee singe ai | cury, has ont with the editorial de- done to all—the Spirit, coe mavinm, and thethought though hcvering thus together around you. We the si but affecting ritual ribed for each fon at the iriessreston in the last day, we may FH ‘ding the democracy—while combi tions have been partment of the Boston Atlas, where his services communicated. We bave much yet to learn and have, as it were, dim c peciousnesa of eachother’s of the simple pres | that, at the gen mn in th last day, we may dividing whi ’ anlearn. ? recence, ard through the instramentality of the occasions by the Episcopal Church. A largemamber | be found atceptable in thy sight; and, Tints Oe! | formed of various discoriant elements, designed to form | will be 9 . Since he let the en ‘ New Yours, Oct. 21, 1854. odioms Wwe har and converse with you and with of the friends of the family were present , who came per = all who ne ent fear thee, saying, come, ye sou ro meer sve taken by California see recent — } a ead ee Beaten ol Tod TS Dsgar S13:—Perbaps in your dis ourse on the eachother. For tis purpoee it is that we are con- to take a lust look atthe body before it was con: | blessed children of my Father, receive the Kingdom pre- Gjection is a source of tulation to every true before had had, and which it will be difficalt for i wreck of the Arctic, jou would be willing to have ducted here by our epiritgu'des, that we may learn tin this the pared for you from the peainning of the world. Grant gemocrat. The democracy here had, as they have elge- + gente anleas {te conductor should be so for. a more minute detail cf th» evexts, which I meu- our true condition, avd though mortal means, *igned toits resting pla. For purpose this, we beseech thee, O merciful Father, through Jesus where, everything to contend There were ar- — the ald of an equally clever as. tioned the ovher day, sad 1 will therefore try to give unlearz the errors which our mortal life hes iaatil coffin waa placed at the principal entrance, where it Cnet our ov poy Leoghn oagrr ord ‘ae! aes oe rayed applet ee et oe re foe, Rg pow ‘which is not likely to be the case. it to you. into us. Speak, then, Judge, to them, You they was exposed to the view of the spectators for some | G..snd the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be withus P&rtt' Jina opnonents, but @ powerfal combination of | Mr. Forrest apzeared at tre Boston theatre lest For severa) days before we received the news of wih can hese 800 fe ost Ue Ge oe mey thas time previous tothe ceremony. Itis made of plain | allcvermore. Amen. Unecrupulous and skilful political traders from their | evening, in the character of Richelieu. He hed a the vag we Gauges, as sho had beea a year wh ide pote a rite, Sher wast all Speak mobogany, witha silver plate bearing the following | BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF MRS. HAMILTON. own mi last, v whoee Hear igo ep = prom "Roy. geceneane, Sat wes not quiteso pe as it eng fe fangne ic wroce of che Sam Francisco, But it plainly, but geatl for ot yum Know not how = Bue inecrytion:— | Mrs. Bizaboth Hamilton was the widow of Gene- pre however, upon thelr inherent strength Jastice | tickets in the early y part i the day. Itis satisfac: = ihe eh ent peasy pole. “ated vavean jeomgte a ee spears ? eocoocooo ooo COO COCO DOO 8 = eae Schuyler, poesia sme She < van m, ae tho intel ce and patito of Ba pot Ah ngie iey pal selling ti ao Snare paid 4 , 4 into the a Lee""fans wera. prodeusl confeaboe tek anaiots, | seca cae tes of he mee aetcan et eie | ELIZABETH HAMILTON, 9 was born in Albany on the 9th of August, 1757, And conquer they di, A moet ignal rebuke wap ad. | 10g et a dlacount of seventy: five per cent. which interfered with ton clearness of the commu: gression wbich is nov being revealed to man. I © © | and was married in the same city in December, ministered both to whiggery and trenbery,, wails a ‘our expectations of strange news Fron one alee nlogtion,. though the rire Neg wreck was frequently reminded them that from dirth peepee been 4 Bom : | 1789. Genera] Hamilton, at the time, was in bis Seren biveioigehine oi ouree sa Rey pa geval ren in a —— we ww vichy presented t» her | ‘ion, and they could re: i i : . és * Oa the day before the arrival of the news, abe had | Ceive that goat life atl coutizued, and. with it mut © gra Avaver, 1757. | twenty-foorth year, an} occupied the positon of Now, what the Times and Transit wens inthe | bave presented to our view. Leading ultra tree eae call from a lady friend, who, ia the course of her continue tne influence of that law of progression. 8 a. 4 0 | Ald to General Washington,-with the rauk of lieute- election to propitiate a smile from the administra: | Cm ene lending altte whigs capaielly oes Toh eseanrn 9 erapers Seseie- Tt was = Sa pares td are be hg then § | nant colonel. The prominent part he performed in | tion is beyond our comprehension. The elestion of | only Memedivea'by tigie abe The pag 4 learred to’ place on board the illYated steamer. ge iom direly and weil. And fortunately for them, | © Ore Novawenn, 1666. ©., the trying pericd which followed the Revdtution Denver and Herbert is confirmatory of the streng+h | ings are more sanguine than ever, and predict suo- But the comravzication was interrupted, ard thus | they were 104 ina cocdiion where they could as-|% oo ce sceccoedcoooo coco oo$ | ta obtsined for bim a conspicuous place among | cr the democratic party here, and sound principles. ee their jorge vee a one ind+fluite ap aae of some impending | crrisir if t hey would, how true or false this teach: aan ‘ the great men of that time. Te election of Denver ond Herbert isa signi! woul a victory of Pony — io iay, Miisforvome was produced. | Jog wer. Z At one o'dlo k the foneral services were oom | General Hamilton died about fifty years ago, and | reboke to the administration, beyond a peradven: | but of what or for what purpose, itis I ee ee ee ae ree thera | PP Aco dating bee b i gst ir | wenced, Rev. Dr. Hawks, of Calvare, and Rev. Dr. | his remains were ceposited in the same graveyard | ‘ eaid. if ‘ALaoMA. nocn,and found my friend Mr. J—-— ia my parlor | ¢¢ ould be most advacced or retarded. That law was Bertiap cffi-iating. Tbe coffin was borne from the wtt my daughier. Some spirit was. communi: | Joye—lcve of God and of one another, ta be maui- | entrarce to the chancel, both the ministers prece- cating through ! gave my attention to it, and then for aboi Lanta, torou, m. tioned to yon, wo hours’ through him, through | go g) Mr. A--—, wo0 came in dariag the | them ia the ap eveming, an) throug) my-elf, vehad the latercoursa | with the passengers of the Arctic whica [mea | fetted not in profession ouly, but in active efforts to od to one another. Tat could be done by t life as well aud, even better, than Xister ce. in their mo So, too, | told them trat they were surrounded by | bright and beautified spirits woo were ready totske | ding it and reciting the following:— Iam the resurrection and the life, saith the Lor believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shal i and whosoe liveth and believeth-iu me, 8 never die.—St. JoMh xi, 26, 26, I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall : he t I imbibed the idea that toore were presaut with | thim to their aims, to teach them the holy truths | stand at the latter day upon the earth, And though af- us at le made themseives known to us, or s00ke to us. N.B Biunt,Ja‘e District Attorney, Bishop Waia- tight, Isvac T. Ho per, Dr. Cory, and others of pur apiris friends, weie alse present, and o:caaic spoke through, or to aome of ua. : e plainly saw the whole assemblage, and particu- a qusiates. He was laboring under gieat mental * excitement. He exclsimed to me, “Good God, Ed- monds. Can this te tras? Is death, after ail, poseible this is the change which death mikes ?” LT answered, “You see. You can judge for your: self. Bing you’ own clear intellect to bear upon it, and yeu can un¢ erstand it.’” “Bat,” he said, ‘where am I? What must I do? Where am I going? Is this to be always so?” Iteld hiv, “No, by no means is it to be always 80, But it will be difficult for me t» tell you what to do, for I cannot know all the circumatances | pr: which surround you. But there is one close at haud who can tell you, «nd who can assiat you.” “Who 's that ?” ‘be asked. Tavswered, “Onr old triend, Blunt.” He said, “Nat? Ishesere? Where? Let me see him. Let me hear from hin where I am, and what Tam to doi” This conversation had thus far been between me and that Spirit direct, aud now Mr. Bloat came through my daughter ard said: “ Judge, tell him I am neur at band, ready to assist bim, and he has only earves'ly to wish it, tosee and hear me hineelf. | Now, bis mind is in such uncertainty and confusion | 8 brother nor I can’ make ourselves | that neither h visible to him. This being said to me in sn andibie volce, was heard uiso by the Spirit, w' o no longer paid any at- tention to me, but turned to where Blunt was, and | soon engaged in conversation with him. thera cf those spirits then spoke tome. One said to me, that his last thougbt on going down with the hip waa, that in a few moments he should be reunited again to his wife and children, who went down with him, but he said—and tais eo much astonished him—‘when I swoke, I beheld aud children passing away fiom me in different directions, amd Iam ieft sloue so near the ears ! Is tais to be slwaysso? Am never, never to ace them sgain? And am olwaysto hover thus near the earth?” Anviher, whom I had well known, aaid to me, with a cod deal of emotion, “Friond Edmonds, is it true, thee, this witch { slways thought an illu- sion of thy in:ave mind? It t uly seems ao. I krowI have died; but now I se-m as much upoa earth os ever, and I talk to thee as plainly as ever I did. Oh! tell me wha; sll this means, and what em I to do?” . I referced him to Father Hopper, who was present, who c-uld jutruct bim biter thanIcould. He ahrark frem this, ani reminded me that he and Mr. H. had not agreed very well upon earth, ha had some difficuities with each other “in es in bed religicns society. - Hopper then spoke to me through Laura, and bade me re-assure him that no unpleasant recollec rootare help him; and, he added, “Tell him, Judge, : aha oleae aod as quick, she take him in as | e wee once to turn m it . | 1e out of meeting: Tell him | not tell the exact time when it was born, except that it | = ee will you Ly in reply, Issid, “I'naed not repeat it, for he hears what you say through the mediam. But your allo- Sion to the old difficulties disturbs him.” “Teli bim,” he answered, ‘‘ never mind that; it is only matter to be langhed at now, and I desire coly to befriend him, snd set his mind at eace.” “Yea,” Teaid, “ old friend, that you have already doze, for he hoids out bis hand to you.” they two passed away together from my Oce of ths sailors spoke to me, and though not a men of as mueh education as the othors, he was evidestly more at home ard more at ease than they were. He said that, after txe collision, he had not —— himself until the rait shoved off fom thi ip. He had been very busy tryin, leak; and when all work oo that pois. he had an aged mother, a #ife and some New York, avd he asked himself—“ What will t! do this winter witbout me?’ And g0 he jum: from the op and sank in the water. He came up under the raft, = his head bumped against it until he was one of them, with whom I had been well ac: | wife | eerth, atid to point them the way to happier realms, whj:h they au In time atiain. Kna I a&sured them, that they had but te make themzelves accessible to ly their spirit friends by earnestly desiring their pre- | | sence and aid, toenjoy the inestimable assistance certainty, and oven to their vision a bright and holy light from above. Tto a them tbat I did not ask them to reseive they now possessed, and to judge for themselves. It could do them no thus to investigate, but if on investigation, they should find that I was cor | rect, they would also ficd much that would be of inestimable valve to them. Something more to the same effe:t I said, and commending them in few words, to the protection of | our Heavenjy Father and the guardian care of the ight spirits who were around them, I interview, and they faded from. ei Affec- bere yours, J. W. Epmonps. The Infanticide at Philadelphia, FINDING OF THE BODY OF ONE OF THE CHILDREN—~ CORONER’S INQUEST. (From the Philadelphia Ledger, Nov. 11.) On Thursday, two of the special officers of the police paid.a visit to the house now occupied by Mr. Rice, at icetown, for the purpose of endeavoring to find the Lody of one of the children of Pamela Snyder, which she stated had been bi there. They effected ther object, and an inquest was held upon the remains yesterday at the Union street station house, by Coroner Delavau, in the presence of Alderman ey. The first witness called was Dr. Andvew J. Smiley, who testified to having examined the remains of a child found amid a quantity of decomposed matter, contained in a rough wooden box, about three feet long and one foot wide. He detailed in technical terms the various por- tions of the skeletons found, including the bones of the head, spina! column, arms, and lower extremities. He | considered, from the size of the bones, that the child had arrived at its full time; but from the advanced stage of decomposition, it was ‘impossible to say that the child had been born alive, or to decide w was no Of on its sex. There mark upon the skull to indicate any violence. | ficer Clark detailed the steps taken in the ease, from | ne girl up to Thursday, when he went in officer Seed to Nicctown. From informa- d from Charlotte Snyder, an aunt of Pamela, they dug in a «pot rhe pointed out to them, and in a few minutes came to a rough wooden box, about three feet beneath the surface. told me that he and George Altemus had buried, and he at the same time acknowledged f to be the father of it. Pamela Myers at that time mother, in the house to which re the body | was found was attached. It is pied by Mr. rdw! a dwelt upon his miod; that he was | | bor; she went u Rice. The child was born on Sunday evening, February 224, 186 he next day washed and laid out by Elizabet Officer Seed corroborated the evidence of Mr, Clark, stating, in addition, that Pamela had told him of having had five children, two of which she choked to death. One of these she said she had thrown into the eess-pool of the yellow house opposite the house in which she was arrest- which could s20n dispel the gloom of doubt and un- | at these things as true, because I said so, but to ex: | what you suid it was, aac is this death? Can it ba | amine for themselves with all the advantages which | ‘this is the child that Wm. Snyder | with her grand- | st & hundred of ham, though onty afew | whi h are now a'so being revealed to man uvon | ter wy skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh | shall | eye ce God: whom I shall see for myself, and mine behold, and not another.—Job xix. 25, 26, 27. Ye brought nothing into this world, and it Is certain we can carry nothing out. The Lord gave, and the Lord hath take: ay; blessed be the name of the Lord.—1 | Tim. vi. 7; Joba. 21, | When the coffin was placed in the chancel, the | following antsems, taken from the Thirty-ninth and Ninetieth Psalms, were recited;— Lord, let me know my end, and the number of my days, that I may be certified how long I have to live. ehold, thou hast made my days as it were a span long, and mine age is even as nothing in respect of thee; and verily every man living is altogether vanity. | _ For man walketh in a vain shadow, and disquieteth himselt in vain; he heapeth up riches, and cannot tell | who shall gather them. ; And now, Lord, what is my hope? Truly my hope is even in thee, | Deliver me from all mine offences, and make me not a rebuke unto the feolish. When thou with rebukes dost chasten man for sin, thou makest his beauty to consume away, like as it | were a moth fretting a garment: every man therefore is but vanity. | _ Hear my.prayer, 0 Lord, and with thine ears consider i eh calling; hold not thy peace at my tears: or 1am a stranger with thee, and a sojourner, my fathers were. O spare meé a little, that Imay recover my strength, before I go hence, and be no more seen. as ail to another. Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever the | earth and ihe world were made, thou art God from ever- | lasting, and world without end. * Thou turnest man to destruction; again thou’ sayest, Come again, ye children of men. Fora thousand years in thy sight are butas yester- day; seeing that is past as a watch in the night. As soon as thou scatterest them they are even as & slee p; and fade away suddenly like the grass. In the morning it A green, and groweth up; but in the evening it is cut down, dried up, and withered. For we consume away in thy displeasure; and are afraid at thy wrathful indignation. Thou set our misdeeds before thee; and our secret in the light of thy countenance. x when thou art angry, all our days are gone: we bring our years to an end, as it were a tale that is told. ‘The days of our age are threescore years and ten; and Liinen be so trong that they come to fourscore years, yet is their strength then but labor and sorrow; Fo scon passeth it away, and w are gone, £o teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the | Hely Ghost. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen. After the anthem, the following leason was tread by the mipisters:— i Now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first-fruits of them that slept. Yor since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead, For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. But every man in his own order: Christ the first-fruits; afterward they that are Christ's, at his ed, and that it wan afterwards taken out by her uncle and other people, who buried it in the garden. I think | the body found is that of the third child she acknow- ledges having; two she said had not come to their full time, and she left them in the field. | Hannah Snyder, an aunt of the accused, testified in | relation to the child in quegtion—said that she could | happened on a Scuday; Pamela had been down to her | mother’s, and after coming home appeared to be in la- | stairs, and fram what she saw, ac- | cused Pamela of having given birth to a child, but she | denied it; after hunting for it, we discovered {t in the cess-pool attached to the house; the attempt to get it out failed, but after night Wm. Snyder put a ladder down, and in that way got it out; the body was placed i len box that I used to coal in; after being | washed, the next night it was buried; this was about three years since, and I believe she has had two children since; I saw the child after it was washed; it was a girl; I saw a dent upon the head and supposed ‘it was caused from striking something in falling into the well; [ un- to atop the | into the wagor it had oo- | her; her last child was born four weeks ago, last Thura- | curred to him that he ought to eave himself; that | caildren in | to reach ‘the ;raft; but he feli short, | in the pool. | marks of violence about its hend or throat. derstood she was taken sick once before when riding into | the city with her brother; while he was serving some | customers with milk she went upan alley, and on gettin, ain her brother drove out home wit yal knew this only by hearsay, but I know that she | previously in the family way. Elizabeth McGuire testified to’ having gone to Snyder's | house, on the day after the finding of the child, a saw the body inaclothes basket. I saw thatit had been | and_no one denied it. I washed the child | and dressed it. I believe it was born alive, but saw no | I suppose it was smothered from beirg thrown into the pool. There | 2B ‘There was much less agitation in him than in the | W8s no attempt toconceal the affair, and I wondered that | poms and I obtained from nim ‘a clear account of Be things, He e in board ship of the one who first spoke to us; seid he tock a command, ard directed much that was done. He was cool, collected, and energetic, and Pap bimeelf felt and obeyed wherever he fren’ Ho also spoke of the general deportment when sll hope of saving themselves was abandoned. He said the sight was really sublime. A deatb-like stillness reigned, and a calm came over them all, as - —< was quietly bracing himself to meet his lestiny. } @ T acked him how it happened thet they so many | fes:. of them came to us, and if he had not yet met auy of the inhabitants of the s irit world besides those who bad entered it with him? He answered yes; his father and two ether rela- tives bad come to him and welcomed him, and then told him to go with the others, and learn what he could. He could not give me his name, or the streat we 1esided. Tiere was no medicm 1g those who to me was a female. ery cheerful and leasant, and from what ie ita in life She un- more clearly the condition in which she berself, and had come with the others more them than ters-If. impressive prayer. there spoke P» a> te spirit of a st he wos a European, whose F had already given some atten- philosopry,and had found in consonant with his reason, with With what he had learned of na- was not a little, for he was evidently cated mab. wie on his way bis country on busi- in’ended, while bere, cy on me. had been of vast service to robbed death of its terrora, om entering his new exist , and to know where baie ge ti of Present | the abstract idea of a name could be | wig, throngh Mr. J., uttered a | tome, but mine was not un- | reat admiration of the effyrts on | W*shington, because it w | | | | | | emp low let | girl m bis house he Pamela had not been arrested. She said George Care was the father of the child, and I-proposed calling it | born on Washington’s birth- e lived in town before the bisth of the child | and I suppose met the father there. One of the | —I think the first—died of smallpox, and she had a child while living at the Rising Sun ; but I know nothing further than what I heard. Charlotte Snyder, (the wife of William Snyder,) tosti- | fict to having seen the child when first discovered in the tink, and also after it had been washed, Pamela lived with her grandmother, at the time, and I boarded in the same house. She came home on Sunday, near evening, and afterwards wept into the yard, where she must | have given birth to the child. On her coming back into | house we accused her of it, but she would not con- William Snyder buried it; I did not see this done, | but the spot was pointed out to me afterwards. She | had ancther child a short time since, but I know no- thing with regard to what became of it. Mrs. Sarah Altemus testified that she recollected the child was born nearly three years ago, in cold weather, on a holiday. Her aunt, Mrs. Snyder, told her the child was lying in the entry, and she picked it up and carried | irs, where Elizabeth McGuire washed and fou ch: Mrs, Sarah Kay testified that she was living in Chester | when the child was born, Feb. 22, 1852. She heard it | had been drowned and buried in the well. The first child Tamela Myers gave birth to, she stated, was seven or eight years ago. It was immediately taken sick with small pox, and died, Pamela was then only fourteen or | fifteen years of age. The mother told witness that Wm. Snyder, her urtcle, was the father. ‘corge Altemus testified that on the 22d of February, 1852, he mistrusted that there was something wrong, from seeing blood in the yard, and two women looking about, as if something liad been lost, He inquired the object of their search, and was informed they supposed a child had been thrown in the well. Witness got a rake, | and raised what he supposed to be a child’s foot. After: | wards, a ladder was brought, and in the presence of Wm. Snyder and David Kern, the child was taken from the | Well, The child was taken from witness by Snyder. The | next day the witness and Snyder buried it in the garden. The box in which it was buried was recognized by wit- | ness. The father was said to be George Care. Pamela is reported to have given birth to two children since 1852. | jomas Rice testified that while digging a well on | the farm on which he now lives she struck on a box | which William Snyder informed witness he had put there. Mr. Rice said he had heard of a child being born and buried there, but did not suppose any foul means had been used to destroy its life. He said it was a com- | mon occurrence for poor people in the country to bury children in the gardens or lots, to save the expense of putting them in the graveyards, An additional reason why he supposed no crime had been committed was the circumstance of an alderman having investigated a ca: of supposed infanticide and found nothing in it. In a swer toa question by a juror, whether he ever sup- - | posed the girl to be in a delicate situation while in his ley, the witness answered, that he never noticed a ssed them as he would a dog. Davéd J. Mott testified that he assisted in digging up the be containing the remains of the child, after the spot had been pointed ont by Mrs. Snyder. ‘The testimony then closed, and the jury, soon after, rendered the following verdict :-— “That the box contains the remains of the body ofa | female child, born on the 224 of February, 1862, and | who wns killed by its mother, Pamela Myers, on the day | ne | in him shall be chany coming. livered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; when he shall have put down allrule, and all authority and power, For he must reign till’ he hath put all enemies under his feet. isdeath. For he hath putall things under his feet. But when he saith, all things are put under tim, it is manifest that he is excepted, which did put all things under him. And when all things shall be subdued unto | him, then shall the Son also himself be subject unto Him that put all things under him, that God may be all in all, dead, if the dend rise not at ally Why are they then baptized for the dead? and why stand we in jeopardy every hour! I protest by your rejoicing, which 1 have in Christ Jesus our Lori, I die daily. If after the man- ner of mengghave fought with beasis at Ephesus, what advantaget@™t me, if the dead rise not? let us ent and drink, for to-morrow we die. Be not deceived; evil com- munications corrupt good manners, Awake to right- eousness, and gin not; for some have not the know- ledge of God. Tspeak this to your shame. But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? and with what body do they come? Thou fool! that which thou sowest is not quickened except it dic, And that which thou sowest, thou cowest not that body that shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of whent, or of some other grain, But God giveth it a body as it bath leased him, and to every sced its own body. All flesh Is ‘not the same flech: but there is one kind of flesh of | men, another fleah of beasts, another of fishes, and ano- ther of birds. id bodies and the There are also celestial bodies terrestrial; but the glory of the celestial is o glory of the terrestrial is another. the sun, and another glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars; for one star differeth from another star in glory, So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption ; it is sown in dishonor; it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in tay : it is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body. And so it is written, ‘The first man, Adam, was made living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit. Howboit, that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterwards that which is spiritual. The first man is of the earth, earthy : the second man is the Lord from Heaven. As is the earthy, such are they that are earthy : and as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly. And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly. Now this)I say, brethren, that fle nd blood cannot inherit the king- dom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorrup- tion, Behold, I show you a mystery : we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, ina moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last tramp : for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shail be changed. For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immorta lity. £0 when this corruptible shall have put on incor ruption, nnd this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written : Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is a sting O grave, where is thy victory ¢ The sting of dent is sin; and the strength of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, immoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vain in the Lord, At the conclusion of the foregoing lesson the coffia was borne out of the church to the grave, and while the process of burial was going on Rev. Dr. Berrian Man, that is born of a woman, hath but a short time to live, and is full of misery. He cometh up, and is ont down like a flower; he fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth in one stay. Jn the midst of life we are in death : of whom may we ecek for succor, but of thee, O Lord, who for our sins art justly displeased Yet, © Lord God most holy, O Lord most mighty, 0 holy and most merciful Saviour, deliver us not into the bitter pains of eternal death. Thou knowest, Lord, the seerets of our hearts; shut not thy mercifal ears to our prayer; but spare us, Lord most holy, O God most mighty, 0 holy and merciful Saviour, thou most worthy Judge eternal, suffer us not, at our last hour, for any pains of death, to fall from thee. Forasmuch ag it hath pleased Almighty God, in his wise providence, to take out of this world ‘the soul of our deceased sister, we therefore commit her body to the | trod earth toearth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust; looking for the general resurrection in the last day, and the life of the world to come, through our Lord Jesus in glorious majesty to Jodge the world, the earth and the sea shall give up their dead; and the corruptible bodies of those who sleep , and made like unto his own girzions body; according to the mighty working whereby ¢ is able to subdue all things unto himself. T heard a voice from heaven, saying unto me, write, from henceforth blessed are the dead who dic in the Lord ; even so saith the spirit; for they rest from their Jabors.—Rev. xiv. 13, Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom'coms. Thy will be done on earth as it ix in Christ, at whose second coming = (Peevey, Give pa tals day cus daly becad. And Congive y migaten—tremton Garete, Bor. Ul. Lord, thou hast been our refuge, from one generation | ‘Then cometh the end, when he shail have de- , ‘The last enemy that shall be destroyed | ‘Ise what shall they do which are baptized for the | There is one glory of | in which now repoee those of bis wife. Up to the | time of her death, it is sald, she always | wore the widow's dress. At the age of nine ty ebe did not eppear to be more than seventy, and was in perfect possession of all her | mental faculties. There are eome who will doubt- Jeas remember the visit she made to Boston, aboat » | yesr ego, and the attention she attracted di a visit toa horticultural fair held in Faneuil” Hall. She was received with marked distinction, and was invited to take a seat at the deak, side by side with | the President of the institution. There were clergy- | men and other dignitaries, but she was the only | woman admitted om the platform. In the course of k yarious addresses made from the table below, richly | loaded wri flowers, frnita, &c., Webster arose aad | begged leave to announce that the daughter of Gen. | Schvyler and the widow of Gen. Hamilton was then | present, and with bis own happy and thrivling re- | minist ences he dwelt on the departed. 1 Mrs. Hamilton laid aside her black bonnet, and | arce. All was silent-attention; those who sat near enough could read tbe tender and touching emo- | tions of her .ountenance. She turned to the Presi- dent ard addressed bim. He immediately, ina gracefol snd appropriate manner, uttered the sen- | timenta she expressed to him and requested him | toemake knowr. When ashe lett the desk and de- | ecended to the aisle there was eomething traly con- genial to our republic, and beautifal, in the simpii- | | city of hermanver and the respect showed to ber in our national ball. No one moved, but ail silently | waited. She walked through the aisle, attended by | one or two friends, bowing almost imperceptibly from one side to tne other to the muiuse49, ex- preesing her feelings by hes countenance. Hler sim- { ple avd unpretendivg mandér, and the silent, re- | spectful homage of the people, eeemed to contain a | Clear and beautiful demonstration of republican | trata ard sincerity. |. Mre, Hamilton wes distinguished in private lite | for her pumereus acts of bensvolence. In cornec | tion with Mre. D, Bethune the founded the New | York Orphan Society, and for several yeara ac‘ed | a8 its presiding officer. For some yeats previous to ber deat» she resiJed in Washington with ber daughter, but seldom mingled ia the fashionable circles of that city. j Before her mariage, end a stort time previous to the exe: ution of Major Andre, General Hamil- ton wrote her the following letter, expressive of | his dissent to the harsh decision of the court mar- tial which sentenced bim:— Heap Qvaxrsrs oF Tim Ansty, Tarpan, Oct. 2, 1780. * * * — Poor Andre suffers to-day, Every- thing that is amiable in virtue, in fortitude, in delicate sentiment and accomplished manners, plead for him; but hard-hearted policy calls for a sacrifice. He must | die, I send you my account of Arnold's, affair; and, to justify myself to your sentiments, I mast inform you that urged a compliance with Andre's request to be | shot ink it would have had an ill effect. But seme people are only sensible to motives of policy, | and sometimes, trom a narrow disposition, mistake it. When Andre's tule comes to be told, and present re- sentment is over, the refusing him the privilege of choosing the manner of his death will be branded with too much obstinacy, It was proposed to me to suggest to him the idea of an exchange for Arnold; but I knew I should have forfeited his esteem by doing it, and therefore declined it. As a | man of honor, he could not but reject it; and I would | not for the world have proposed to him a thing which | must have placed me in the unamiable light of suppo- sing him capable of meanness, or of not feeling myself the impropriety of the measure. I confeas to you | had the weakness to value the esteem of a dying man, be- cause I reverenced his meri Two days before his death General Hamilton made tke foliowing will:— In the name of God, Amen, I, Alexander Hamilton, of the city of New York, counsellor at law, do make this | my last will and testament, as follows:— | First. Tappoint John B. Church, Nicholas Fish, and Nathaniel Pendleton, of the city aforesaid, Esquires, to be exeeutors and trustees of this my will, and ¥ devise to them, their heirs and assigns, as joint tenants and not 4s tenants in common, all my estate real and personal whatsoever, and wheresoever, upon trust at their disci tion, fo sell and dispose of the same, at such time a times, in such manner, and upon such terms as the 3 vivors and survivor shall think fit, and out of the pro- of my decense; in whole, if the fund be sufficient; pro- portionably if it shall be insufficient, and the residue, if | and dear wife Elizabeth Hamilton. Though if it should | Please God to spare my life, I may look for a-con- on the contrary happea, that there is not enough for the yayment of my debt they, or any of them, should ever be able, to make up thé deficiency. I without hesitation commit to their de- licncy a wish which is dictated by my own. Though conscious that I have too far sacrified the interests of my family to public vocations, and on this account have magnanimity to appreciate as they ‘ought, this my re- quest. Jn #0 favorable an event of things,’ the support of their dear mother with the most respectful and tender attention, is a duty, all the sacredness of which they will feel. Probably her’ own patrimonial resources wil! pre- serve her from indigence. But in all situations they are charged {o bear in mind that she has been to. them the most devoted and best of mothers. In testimony whereof, Ihave hereunto subcribed my | hand, the ninth day of July, in the year of our Lord, one | thourand cight hundred and four, | ALEXANDER HAMILTON. ‘Twentieth Ward. 1 fred Le EDITOR OF oe HERALD. that J rec ive our paper teraay, that J. Weller iar presated A being the reform and Know Nothing candidate tor Councilman, and was elected as such. ‘ibie iss mistake, J, Webber was on the fo nee efforts he waa final fell upon him in such a way, says the Providence Jour. nal, ap to form an areh over him, leaving him unharmed, except that one foot was crushed. But he was beld by: the rand which covered him as high as his thighs. The: { falling timber left a space through which food and: water and warm brandy were sent down to him, also hot bricks; and his father and brother went dowa ane were. with him nearly all night, eneouraging and rescued man did not seem to ha’ would be expected. His foot he was covsiderably affected by tha cold; otherwise he seemed bright. Fata. Acxivent.—Ezelial Walton came to his | death at Hightstown, in this county, on Thursday last, , in the following manner:—He ‘was @ in haulin staike from a field to the on ® peach rack, and h with him on the load a boy whose name we did not learn. The wagon had springs, and from side to side in | such ® manner that a portion of the stalks fell off, and with them 4 four-pr bend ‘The boy then fell from the lead in such a manner that a ig of the fork ran entirely and Walton fell on boy a! Funning it theough his heart, He di othe fork, | walked to the barn, laid down, and ¢ the se! Tentreat my dear children, if | bi a esrionr, whom she emsncipates. emma tes his slaves, and becomes quite an ado- |" O king of the book. What that is, I shall leave the reader to find out. talk in the courre of the book, snd some incident bola? ister and binder bave been w ploy ture. The masees rushed, like loyal denizens, to the nd deposited their votes for these candidates, se they were eximions men—because thei- rinciples were coherent vith republicaniem in all ita remifications—becanse Denver and Herbert had no sympathies with that administration that bom- barded, Marcy-creed and Pierce-d the inhabitants of San Juap. None but the employés of the ad- ministration show any reluctance in saying that the acte of Pierce are inimical to their feelings. Gen. McDougall, M. C., is a Pierceite snd church- man, bis compeer in the lateclection, axa the people aoe it bey men Yaar eae Bott Only — thousand and some |, ou -eight thousan Is this fact illustrative of an ‘“ emphatical endorse- ment?” Emphati elly no! It the President thinks that California is not cog- nizant of ita acts because of a lodg geographical istance, he is mistaken. | it te President thinks that distance is fing 7) “ blind” Caivornians, the recent e ections will “‘see” him. The democracy here assimilates itself with the bards of New York and the national democracy of the whole “ Thi:ty-one.” Whiggery, whose defunction was consequent from the last quadrennial conflict, has been exhumed int> life, aud now glows with its principles in slouded by Know Netbingiem—a subterfuge of the old whig leaders to subvert the national democracy of ’56. Union democrats, accp the film off your eyes, and loo’ sharp for ’56. ‘ Califorria at present is dull. Groceries, i, and grais and cther kinds Oa ae eal ex: tremely low. Barley sells for $1 owt; t tells for $1 183; potatoes, $1-25. ‘ons are given away almost; likewise tomatoes. Mining at present is dull, which arises from want of weter to wash the dirt with. When the rairy season sets in there will be indu- op ay ay te en to 88 8p] gra ton “But now,” ae tae tH said, “business is dull, suverlatively dull.” ariees from the fa't tbat reeponsible parties have been Sshuylerized lately by Comptroller Meiggs, Who has took to and carried off a large amount of bullion. The modus cperandi of this swindle is the issue of false scrip of the city, pein forged signatures, which were aimirably executed. Adams & Co. pronounced them genuine, #0 adroitly — executed. . TION. Our Boston Correspondence. Boston, Nov. 7, 1854. Literary Intelligence—The new Anti-Slavery Novel, “ Ida May,” Unpub!ished— Macaulay's History —Its Continuation Further Postponed—Dilatori- ness of Historians—Editorial Changes— Mr. Forrest, §c. “Ida May,” the new anti-slavery novel, is au- nounced io appear on the 15th, by Philips, Samp- son & Co. Iam indebted to them for an advance copy of the work, and a brief account of it, seeing ‘hat so much has been promised from it, may not be unacceptable to ycur readers. Ida May, the heroine of the tale, is the danghter of s couple in easy circumstances, living in Penn- sylvania. Her mother died when she was buta child, shortly after which she was boldly seized on the bighway, by a couple of gentlemen in the kid- napping line, who are 20 lost to a sense of the pro- prieties as to trade in Anglo Saxon flesh and blood, a8 well as in that of Africa—dealers in silk as well asin wool. In the hands of these impartial free trad- ers she is 80 badly used that they sold her, suppos- ing her to be dying, for thirty dollars, to a good-na- tured planter of the name of Bell, who supposed her tobe of African blood. She is nursed through a fever by an old negress named Aunt Venus, who plays quite a part in the story; but on her recovery her memory of past events is all but entirely obliterated. She one day seesa young gentleman, smiabla as a sbepherd of Arcadia, and much more sensible, who, | it is plain to the experienced reader of novels, is ceeds to yay all the debts which I shall owe atthe time | destined.to be the hero of ‘he tale; but who, | at this, ite earlier atege, comes like a shadow any there shall be, to pay and deliver to my execllent | and so departs. At length Mr. Bell, in ebedi ence to his wife’s orders, sold Ida and Venus siderable surplus out of my present property; . yet, | 0® slave trader, who took them Seuth, where | if ie anelt peg Be ee the eternal | they fell in with the hero of the story in a rather ro- orld, lL saibly ss Tender it insuficient t0 satisfy my debts, “fT pray Goa | Mantic fashton, Walter Varian—that is his name— that comething may remain for the maintenance and Seceeuaniens Venus is bought by his unsle, education of my dear wife and children. But should it Crarles Meysard, avd both are 5 to Wynn Hail ence of Richard Wynn, the husband of jaynerd’a sister, Emma. Here are intro: 3 duced a number of new characters—Mr. and Mra. Wynn, their deugt ter Mabel, ol Ida recovers her powers of memor: ‘the less claim to burthen my children, yet I trust to their | collect her own pame when ete «ci mentioned, w posi- tion in roclety, and that her father is supposed to be Charies Maynard, and isin the Palmetto State. Here 80 far as to re- ices to hear it hich leads to tte discovery of her ers. Wynn dead and her re'atives poor. She is ady by Charles Maynard, ard here—as the play bills have it—an interval of eight years is supposed to elapse a the close of chapter nine and the com. men ‘nt of chapter ten. In tbe second part of the story the interest is no: juits eo well key up es it is in the first part. hstlea Mayna: Saving, Ida becomes an heiress in small way, there g@ some slaves among her Walter aleo In the second part is all the love-mai There is a good deal of anti-slavery regular whig ard retorm tickets, and J.B. Stanabery | Cabin,” t! jh as an artistic production it is far was the Know Nothing candidate. This Ido for the superiae to that irregular snd rambling, bat very purpore of showing the matter in its | led light. powerful tale, or series of tales. The charactersare Youre, &c., Mr.Ton Rewves, not so powerfally drawn asin Mrs. Stowe’s work. cngren! of Election in the Twenty-first ward, | Ida May herrelf is a «harming litle woman, and ‘Third district. = fall A Jove with her quite . Mabel Wynn lovin; eable slave por- b Cavine 1x oF 4 Wett—Two Persons Kinirp.— bbw pins bf be be done, bat that is a Arad accident occurred on Wednesday, at Central Falls, | on which J 9m not qualided to give an op’ R. I, Some men were Soret digging a well, when | The hook will bea: reading once, but that many will the ‘carth fell in, burying men, one named Arm- | 5he be Ndeaot belle ve. strong, who was killed, and the other, George Patten, Tead it a second time voe4 is contractor, of Providence. A boy, named Nehemiah | Tbe printing of books that are not published is get- Rider, and » man were on © platform, which fell and ting to be more common than it used to be with us. precipitated them into the well. The boy was killed, | Scme two are three montbe since, Mr. Fields, of the and the man was badly injured, but not fatally. Mr. | bouse cf Tickner & Pields, had a volume of his Patten was not relieved from his uncomfortable predi- | “ poems” , for distribution his cament under twenty-seven hours. The quicksand fell tknae It is one of the finest ‘imens typo in almost as fast as it was mies but by the most | gy9; hy that | have ever seen, does credit rescued. The platform | {5 evens. Metoalt & Oo., of Combrlage Ulver. 4 338 7 My. Fred having written some portions of American poetry. There is and grace about his writings that are not surpa: oo ie aa any cotem, poet, at same that there ance of that energy of expression without which poetry bs: mea the mcet contemptible of oil things in litera Te. a & 5 printed, for private and they will be ber best monnment. Thoy are, Jeorn. te: t up in all the laxu: of typonraohy and tee volume will have 4 part of anther, LLED—RAILROAD AccrDENT.—The conductor on ne ba i gh dens a the Troy and bigeeg tee i was instantly on Thu morning at Schaghti- oke, by being run over by ‘ihe ical, while endeavoring o awitch off the —, from perm bytes rep ars over his body, an m taken up life edly Mts e conductor’s name was Jah Dona- hue. His age bout twenty years. He leaves a wife o mourn his Ly Tow. MARITIME INTELLIGENCE, OO OC OCCT O TOT Oe TCO OE = Ai pashages and letters tatended for the New Youu: Hema ALMANAC FOR NEW YORE—THIS DAY. 643 Ree Port of Now York, November 11, 1854. Steamship Knoxyille, Ludlow, Savan, tah, § 1 Mitébilt. Steamship Marion, Foster,Charleston, Sbotord & Tiloston. camehip Jamestown, Parrish, ichmoD¢, Ludlam & FS nstantine, McWilliams, Liverpool, C u‘cinnell. Ship Cleopatra, Thayer, San Francleco, Y if Cha vh & Ce. Ship Far Weert) Benneti, New Orleans WT Frost. |v Ship Ohio, Hutchings, Apalachicola, J W Phillips & Cas Ship Camdem, j, Charleston, Dunham & Dimon. Bark Phanix, Seaver, Trinidad, Y'snaga, Delvaile & Ce. Drig F Fabars, Jackson, Philadel) J W MoKee. Schr Solomon Andrews, Paro, Slisaveth City, Ven Bran sett Marcena Munson, Brewster, Baltimore, Van Brunt & Schr Julia Smith, Crowell, Philadelphia, J W MeKee. m8 W Lewis. Sebr Com Ke w master. widence, J H Havens, rt, Brown & Haviland. Steamship St Louis, El idge, Havre and Cowes, mdse and Cowes at with: - Rpasongers, Se i ‘timer Livit ae . The 8 L ete inte AM it 26, ‘and ‘arrived @ ‘this port atl0 PM Steamship James Adger, Turner, Charleston, 59 hours, to Spofterd, Theston & Con Nov 5, 115 PSt, lat 34 08, lon 2% hence exchanged als with steamship Promethe: jeans 9 PAC Uattores light, Dearing NW. ee yl rs P th eten of Hallowell, bound ton, Whamipos. J wite teas, allay & Ship 28, an ‘Kc, to master. Seip Caroline Tucker, Chase, Havre, 3t days, with to 3 AMaGaw, and 648 passengers, to Lane & West, Had Sa ees ay ears 20 ere, wih nad racsen, » See Chany 15 with ship Nortbeimberiand, henet for lulvesc Pool. Ship Coosawattee (of Savannah), days, with mice and ‘306 too Bechet hee heavy weather and 25 deat ‘on the voyage. Ship Canton (of Savannah), ries with indse and 208 passengers, 0. a by. Ant: lat 45 10, lon 9 ii cer, CF Selle 8 fat 48 10, lon 930, in's ards eplit anise ke Wed’ 2) dante poet ae and main yard, cholera. Bark Edward, Patterson, Mobile, 22 days, with cotton, le & Hazard. Nov 9, in the Gulf Sti caries om NN eprong the foremast. Cay has been k during the passage. Ilias 3 of the crew sick with fever, Bark Goodspeed (new, 350 tons Lurthen), Faye, Connesti- cut River, in ballast, to Sturges, Clearman & Co. Brig Mary Emily (of, Now Haven), Bowner, Ponce, PR, 30 0 Se Foster wy Mwy) a ie, 29 pn Geo en, Segal somite Rawat Dr tte (Fr), Derricr, St Pierre, NF. Tl daye, wiahs fish, ret. parle Belle (Br), Oats, Sydney, CB, 14 days, with coal, tor rig Mary, Walker, Galveston, 26 days, with sugar, 4e,to Wakeman, Dimon & Co. Nowa’ oF Cape Louaete spéke brig Emblem, from Savannah for NYork. Brig Orlando (of Sullivan), Urann, Jacksonville, 13 with lumber, to Lane, Wert & Co; ia bound to Essex. 5, onthe outward passage, 60 milos 8 of Hatteras, passed the wreck of brig Commerce, of Boston, dismasted, water- logred and abandoned; apparently Fumbcr laden, ‘hr Wolcott (of Mobile), Thompson, Mobile, 22 days, an@ Key West, 16 days, with turpentine, to Brewer & Cauldwell, iatteras, spoke bark A Kimball, from Mateusae ‘The W experienced heavy weather during the MSChe Athon, Reeveland, “Charleston, 7 da b cottom, iebr os, Reeveland, C! joston, witl “Rehr Humming Bird Bogert, Wil ue 7 Hummi 1 , Wilmington, Sebr Mary, Robbins, Newhern, "algal Schr Sarai Brown, Pierzon, G i, Boston’ for Vi Scbr 1 H Hill, Hill wood. Shaw, Boston Sehr Hay Sobr Wert Gleim, Whaler, G on Hall, Coe, Port! Sloop $ Hall, Cos, Portland, Sloop Henry, Jones, Portla \ loop Lawrence, Stone, Portland, Ct, mer RB Forbes, Morris, Boston. to take in tow clipper ship Spitfire, Arey, mer Port lan ortland, havi bark G Pacific, Lil 1; Knoxville, ‘Savanah; Ma~ i , Ti A XV Say yh; Teston; gumestown, Norfolk Be.” Wind during the day from SSE, and fresh, with rain. Came to this pert for Boston. enemas ing in tow thenew oodspeed, One brig, unknown. Memoranda. Sehr Howard, for Boston from Philadelvhia, was at the bso Lana ~ uaaainamnecri sas inst, detained by the sickness of ie steward. Herald KEY WEST, Oct 28—The schr Bi he ¥ ngere for this The brig Tavinier, and sohr Elise Catharine, have novare from N York. EDGARTOWN, Norfolk for Port! 5, Hurd, Wood, for do; Mt Vi Noy &—Arr schrs George & Ann, Fi 3 oer ‘di, NYork for Th A a hove reported remain in port, Cape Norden, of oe te I act jen, of tl tt it Philadel; from. sett River, a, secommends masters of votwala Round te cither Doboy or ndrew’s Sounds to place no ‘pon receiving pilots outside the tive bars, Ilght and modertte weather, several Ganetere baving tae oceurred on bhat account. for Ni Haynx--In port Oot 24 Ic Cathoun, Short, Oot 26; Annapolis, Graham, for N York 40) ry, 4 Crlesn: ‘m ®, wai fordo; Mor Livin rtony Sampeoe, Tavaria Dalley, for NYork; Muscon- Liverpool; Siins Greenmen, for doz for do; Admiral, Bliffen, for NYork; Joka nd, for do; Serampero, Reed, for do; 1, Lane, fe. B Sld abt Oct 22 sche Duxbury, Cl Boston. eet ee dor lage Monte Crieto, Ni from Wit phos’ ding} sche Oar trom Bese, arr 17h, Poncs, PR-Tn port abt Oct 20 brig Elizabeth Watts, of Portland, disg. Ports. BALTIMORE—Arr Nov 9 sloop Syeod,Somers, Plymonth,’ ane. RTFORD—Arr Nov 10 steamer Sens Chalker, Alba ny Aald Suh steamer Sachem, Thresher, NYerk; echt tad son, Gladding; Wm Penn, Lynch; Morning St: and Ook, Charter, do; 10th, J e G Collyer, Baltimore: § T Smith, Clark, and E Nelson Philndelpbia. ion, Hadley, for belter, Auitry, eats Mancock, For Cornell, 2. ii 1, Mitel K NORFOLK—Atr Nov 8 sebes Ineroaso, Young, New Y a Promin Datla Newbuag’ Rentuehy, Tapieh Yaamostee ew Taylor ¥ afd, Blanchard, Harbsdos. A Gin HAVEN—Arr Nov sehr Armada, Willin Hoop Wie H Hawkins, Hawkins, 40, Sid ile Gh JA—Arr Nov 10, PM, brigs Oahu (1 4 days; Lorotta, Norden, Satills rt; Rapire, Crowell, Boston; 5 't 1 Thompson, Nicl ca bee Mt ‘aoe Roper Peta ee Ngee errbieces ater maaba N ny °, NHaven; M hire, Sing Sin, D—Cld Nov Havana. RICHMON D—Arr N Martha Collins, Coll ard, Albany. Sid eohra , Baker; Palestine, SATILLA RIVER—I Moretle, Mannella, and porte,