The New York Herald Newspaper, March 1, 1856, Page 8

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8 THE PRESIDENCY. FIRST POW-WOW FOR THE CAMPAIGN. | Grand Rally of the Know Nothings at | the Tabernacle. Brownlow’s Greasy Tennessean Trotted Out. Speeches of Andrew Jackson Donelson, Col, J. M. Reynolds and Others. Lots of ¥iee Presidents, Music, Resolutions and Patriotism, &o., A mars meeting of the American (Know Nothing} party was hold at the Broadway Tabermacie last eveniag, under the following ca _Gwarp WartsicattoN Mase Mverinc.—All persons {i favor of tie glection of iiilard F limore ior Presdent, and Jacd son 8 202 tor Vive President, are invited to allen’ a meeting ot the citizens of sew om bs oe briday evening, at Uf past T o'c.ock. Alieitizenn, without dsitclion of party, who have the interests cf the!r country at hears, are requested to ne pre sent, to respond to the rininavons of the Philadelphia Uon- vention. Mery distinguished gentiemen will be preseot to ad- amas the, teredng: among orhers Hon andrew Jackson Doo elvon, 0 Ter pes-ee; Hon. Dauiel UIImaon, Hoo, James Bro-ks, Merais, Havktesd, Bilse. Picket and Burton. of Tennessee; ino, “Mesers. barile: anc Joues, u Kentucky, and many And the following correspondence hwa also tranapired: Sew Yors, Feb, 27, 1866. Hon, A. J. Doversos:—Dear sir—the undersigned, by vitae cf wath: rity of the ceirgates of the National Con- vention of the American party, recently assembied a: Philadelphia. hax ca!iec @ ratification meeting, to be herd ac the Taternscie, on Fri-ay evening. 20th inwwant, at 7 iy o'clock, to seapond to the nomiuation of saia evention ne canaidates for President and Vice President of the United States. _Learnirg that you are stillin our city, you are cor- dially tavited to be present end address the meetiog. Aa early reply is seiicited. Iam, vory respecttully your obedient servan JAMES W. BARKER, : Naw Yorx, Feb, 28, 1856. Dean Sm—In reply to your invitation to attend » ratié. eatin meeting of the fri-nds of the American party, to be beid at the Tabernacie to-morrow evening, [have the pleasure to ray that] accept the invitation, and trust that the various clubs o: uae city wil! consider this an ae- ceptaxce of their separate invitations. [hava the houor to be, moat reapectiully, your osedient servant, A J. DONELSON. At the eppointed hour, balf-past seven, there was rather @ thin attendance; but the brothers dropped in im preity good numbers, and at eigut there were near a thousand persone or thereabouts assembled. The choir sas ocsupiea by a band, which played the national aire, In front of the orgna was displayed a banner, thus in- scribed :— &e., &o. NINTH WARD NATIONAL AMERICAN FILLMORE AND DONELSON CLUB. 3 Organized....Feb. 28, 1856. GC renrmeneennene sent tE Ree DOr OPODOEPOODNNOONPEANEE Over tis was displsyed the national ensign. Ata ifttle pest eight, Messrs. Barker, Donelson, Rey- nolde, and other leaders of the party, mounted the plat- form end were greoted with loud app:ause. Mr. J. W. Barxen, President of the State Coancil of this State, came forward and read the cail of the mesting, at the same time tating thet there had been some mistake about the udveriing of it. The call had been publisned in orly one paper, (the Azpriss,) which accounted fur the slimiere of the attendance. A Voicz.—That’s enough to bring the people together. (A lavgd.) Mr. Baxxur then nowinated Coil. J. M. Reynolds, of New York, a3 Chairman of the§mceting, which nomina. ‘tion wes ratified by the people, when— Mr. REYNOLDS came forward and waidie Invited thus a'terncon, at # late hour, by the conmittee who have in ctarge this meeting, I could not hesitate to Tespora to and a tae honor which has been kicoly couteried upon me, The duty of e presiding officer is not to wpeak. Having been « member ot the iste Conven ion, which, after eight disy»’ «'ruggle, has civen to the world the wan e thatare presented to-nignt, af w remarks from me at this ay Dut be ipoppor ure or out of place. From the e crgapizaticn of th 8 new and American party - party comp sea of the faithful and considerate mon of all parties—dcwn +> the last hour v! our present acrug- gie, we have been beet. not by our enemies without, but by yerfidions *raitors wi by. (Applause.) No* coatent witn seudizg the'r emisaaries to the Juas Convention, not ccntent with the nume «f American upon tueic lias while there was ,erhdy in the r hearte— perfisy is a strong ‘lerm, busnot wo strorg to convey the 1 digoation which ait h.norable men should ‘eel towards ifopetin: ford who, with decep'ive demeanor, wiil seek to participate in the Vouncils of » party, while hw holds iance to another aad different party—chey sought to sow dis- rensions im our midst. Gicrious be the nawe of Iraak- lia, who enatebed the lightnings from the clouts! giori- ous be the name cf Morns, who taught tne reething ele- ments te ran upon the wires! that intwo instances dis- oon the existence of Juduxes in our midst. (Ap- plause.) The ao srerees ‘American par'y his been at ali times sand and devoted to their country, its ins itutions, the constitution and the laws notwithstanding the progacs- tieatlona of onr severance and sisruption, made by gar e who, up to this sate pe ve mot ceased in nat cnbete to deatr sy the harmeny of our action. The jate American Conven'ion met in s’hi’adelphia. There were the extremes from ali portions of this Union. There was tf! South, suc the ceoiand calculating Nortu anc there New York, lise au island of rock, rolling back the waves of the ocean, even when larhed in‘o fury by the mad tem; stood York, the constitation, hurling back the w: ciem, from whatever source they came »plause. It required some days curing the struggles of that Con: vention, meeting, a¢ we did, uncer various disc 2u- ragementa, for men to karn eaoh other, and to feel their hearta best in unison witn each other. But we soon succeeded in putting our marks upon the traitors who were wihus. From that moment there was no further doubt and cecessity for sonsuita:ion in our proceedin, save m the choice of cancidates. Thon an honoral competition arose smcog us—snch as will always take place among honora>le men. 1a 2 moment ot our great- est apxtety—] shall never fo: got it—1 wisu all New Ycrk could kave been thore to witness it—there came the nobdie Smith, of Alabaina, who took his etand upon the platform, aid made « burning an¢ eloquent sppeal to us tw take our stand by our flag and priasiples. (Applause. ) It would be conecessary fr me to go into greater detaila of our proceedimgs here, as my duties are now cimpizy to act as your presiding cer. suffice it for the precemt for me to say thas after the most earnest consultation, sfte™ the most earnest giving end taking on 'l hands, the reswt has been most gtotous to you, glorious to the country, and gio- rious Wo the American name, (Great applause.) A pacty waa there cemcn’ed that from this time forwardis a uait, a. unit upon the great vival and elementary principles of Ameticaniam. (Applause ) No fragmentary party—no coalitiom—a party a4 broadcast as this broad land—faith- ful acd true to the constitution and all ite requice nents, Can you have better evidence of that than the fact that i. that Council tnere sat the son of Henry Clay, of Asb- Ind, (great cvee: ing.) casting hia yore with earnest and sincere for the secomd officer in the gift of the Fepablio—the adopted son of General Jackson. | (AD- plause.) From time forward, with euch a begin- ming, we take the standard of the American party in our seeking no coalitions, inviting eo-operaticn frem ail who entertain our principles and sympathise with our ond neither courting or bel copergs withany. 1 PB ic Lng pe Ts fon ot old partivs, not the re combination or re organization of the whigjparty er the democreuic ty, but @ party that e' is upon ‘cons itution. (Applause.) Our Yaimed It: for ia. their journals City within the las: few deys, they have satd, the American party had only united with the what @ fine time we would have had!’’ thet we had Boy up candidates for of defeating republican candi- Capron.) On the one tide, we have our who'e country by sectionai divisions; on the other, sectional atrifes fomenting hatred towards one portion of our ‘and its institutions. Our enemies are on both wices of water. Six years ago, in 1860, when that great Convention assembled in hueter Halt, th ‘there declared, and sent their missionaries over ‘0 t! country to teach us that, on account of the domestic in- ptatationa of our country, the churches here #hould he divided. The links that bound fanaticism upon both sides of the water were from that day to this, are now, foued errayed against us. [ will give you proof of this in & few words, and then will give place to other speakers, who are ® here, who will doubtless in‘erest you more than faball. {want to put some ear marks ‘upon the party we oppose. Here in this hail, in each revolving ear, when they meet on the first day of May, or the first 7 of Anger, rock a thin falls ftom the ora- " zy tongue cleave to the roof of my mncuth before Teal! this glorions Union; “I would not thank Goa for og us & Washington,” says another faye a third, “It is because Americans dere not call things by their right names, It ia becaur wo like the great men of the present time and the past, it in because we spread a beautiful mist before the Union, that ideal which we worshsp, that slavery existe; therefore, resolved, that we re-affirm our old pe Be les of immediate and uncundi- tienal tion of slavery, and we also re-affirm our conviction that there is no possibility of this result ex- cept by a dissolution of the Union and s re-orgenization American republic.” (At this point the speaker was in’ by the entrance into the hall of the Seventh Ward Young Men’s Fillmore and Doneison (nion ‘Association, who were received witb loud and rapturous cheering.) Mr. ReyNouns resumed by saying: Allow me, fn continustion, to place a few mre ear marks upon the party that oppose us. | find them using euch language beat fy “Down with the Gon ts on Ta Toa éown with your ¢ at anc y the Fry Sficres Keunrl, the Andover (od, the God of W (itiam H. Rogers. Toa God who is a monster of oppression. travd, injustice and every erime in the stmpe of slavery, am an ire Bat let me turn from this language to that ef the at great leader of the black repubsioans, and » Mr, Seward, in his speech at Buffalo, » ‘he expectations of the founders of the ainth year of Iadepea wu party ote a8 y be rep lonsy. ‘The nation’s whole breadth is the field of contest A cbapgeless eway of the republic throughout rs future rxide nce ig tbe onject ofthis maaje Uc trife for ah endiees perioa 10 come. The cause of 'h= nou'sisveho der is assumed by the republiasn ‘Ibey pow demand the admission not only 0: frre of tree Sales opiv. inte the Union Where nme nt or Christianity, do you fad xu- yeemilians of men in bondage. fe Fests - weltare. oO €ven weecuce ihe safets, of twenty Ove mi- ion: of otbér men) Does not such lengvage pzcve that b'ack republicanism is Maxed with sbouticnizm’ Bat that poiat I will not argue, for it wust te clea:ly eviden to all yoar minds The mission of the American party is to check and sub ue the wild and fauatical sgitation that now pervaces the country. (Applause,) and to bring che g.vernment vack to ite original purity and admiuinier it according 0 thy requirements of tbe corstitntion, which each S'ate officer, each officer cf the general government has fuichvully to obey and respect, It ix the wlsion vt ¢ American party, tuerefore, to hasten the dey when, like truth and mvrey, the North and 8:a’h may 2@ un‘tet ia berds cf feliowship together, end righteousness and Peace may kiss each other. (Great applause.) After Mr. Reynolés had concluded, Mr. J, W. Baxser nominated the following list of Vice Presidenta, who were unantr‘ously eoofirmed:— Wards. VICK PRE*IDENTS. 1—Henry Smith, A, F, Weymouth, A.J. Wiwamton, J. H. Voone, &Geo. E Sherweod, Geo. A. Baraey, 4—Pobert Beatty, Jr., Wm, E. lowing, 6—Chas. S Tanpan, 6—Jamen M. M. Miller, 7—Yoprar Milla, 8—Ge>, W. Morton, 9 Hon. Geo. Briggs, 0— James (a iffith. A. K Maynard, Henry Hume, Dr. J. H. Leveridge, Lewis A. Coben, C, J. Holsen, Jeremiah T. Brooks, V—Leonare L. Jchuson, Jos. 3. Southworta, o—Jobn Green, E H. Brown, 13— John H. Briggs (appl), Gilbert G. Dean, 14—Benedict Lewu, Jr., John Hope, 16—Cr ester Deiggn, F. W. Ancrewa, —lrasc W. Smith, Dr. Ranney, Benj. r. Pinckney, Chauncey Schaffer, 18—L. J. Oliver, Wm. Gaie. 19—A. J. Genet, Richard Gray, 20—Daniel D, Conover, Cummings i. Tucker, 21—Wm. H. Taylor, Tarwes Owens, 22—Robert H. Shannon, Jobn C. Wandell, SECRATARUS. Ward. ‘a 1—Jacobd Roosevelt, 12—Dr.S. A. Hills, 2—Jeabua G. Abbe, 1s—Jonn Cooper, S—Jobo Stylss, 14 -Berj W. Ri 4—Dr. W, W. Woodward, 16—Samcel Ho « W—Ge ge Mecritt, 17—Frederick Wager, 18—Lafayetto Ranaey, 19—Jos. 8. Taylor, 20—D. ©. Niveos S—Judge Lathrop, 6—Jceeph S. Soucer, IJ. A. Grey, 6—Elipbas Beotman, Jas. A. Brown, 10—Corneii orson, 21—Predarise Perry, —A. H. Bamblin, 22—D. W. C. McCluskey. The following resolutions were introiuced and adop'ed: Resoived, That heartily, cheertntly, unacimously—every one, and aiogether—we hereby confirm and ratity ‘he memina tions made bs ihe American’ party, sssembled i Nai pal Convention, in Philsiephia, and we earnestly recommend them to the support of the’ whole American people. (sp- laure } Pigeco ved. That in Millard Fillmore (Cheers) and andrew Jackson Lovelson. (Cheers), we, us Americans. have the boat specimens of the old whig aod democratic partiva -apoiauxe) — cocice chips from the okt blocgs—and that we present thelr DuIDE® bot ‘Amencans, but tocemocrate and whig rep? centage beet men and best principies of the spective verties iause.) eso ved. That, ia Millard Fitimore we bave the friend, the contidani, te ass: ciate of Clay and Webster, and the tnbori. tor of thai patriotiem and love of country that ever tuspired them in athland and Marshfield; and, in andrew Jucceon Lonelson. (cheers), the confidant, the pupil the bo-om com panion crihe iMuririons solaier and statesman oi the Hermitage. ers} ur country. our whole country end nothing but our country.” (rice cheers ) ** One constitution. one cestiny.”” J kpow poSonih no North, no Rast, no Weae" (Hi kL) pg Zbe Federal Union, it must'and shali be preserved!” (1, urra! An there were their maxima, their pla‘forms, so are they cure, and with God's help, we Will *tand oar cand.dates upon Wem (Cries of ** Gocd’” and much cheering ) ‘Ube CuAKMAN waid:— ‘This is the proucest moment of my Iife, when I have the pleasure to introcuce to you Mr. Andrew Jackson Doneiwon. The audience broke cut in a perfect tempest of cheer- itg, when Mr. Donelron came forward. It was the firs dit of enshusiaam during the evening. aud at wes pretty strong. Hats and oandkerchiets were waved reckleas'y— the bend ed Yankee Vocd.e, and tuere wasa god tire generaliy. Mr. Dongtson then read his speech, ae fullowe:— Gentiemer—I return you my sincere thanks for this cordial recep ium. The deiegates at. the late Convention ot tbe American party have thought proper to plsce me ob the Americen ticket for the second cflice i. the gifc of the people, and s distinguished and trie? statesman of your patrictic state for the firrt cttice. I ceem it a high bovor to be thougat worthy of an assco:a.iun with lard Fidmore in she effurt to carry forward the princi piescfthe American pariy—a party which nas oeen to cuter tre necessity of the Umes, wo correct the abures which bave g.own out of the errora of the vid ganiaa'ions of party, end which have brougut the cour try to the very verge ci social cisruption ond soarchy. It was natural, genuemen, that the peuple of this great confederacy ot States spould turn their eyes upon Millard Filmore, who im bis personal qualities ana ia all che chyracteriatica of @ statermen, ie justly racked with the great men who bave contributed to .be honor and glucy of our common country. 1t is different wih myrelf, geu- temen. I have bela but humb'e eituaticns in the public service, and can, theretore, atiribue toy nominstion to no other cicumstarce but wy earnest devotion te tue copseivative and sound coctrises which form the binis cf the Amesican creed. Accorcivg my understanding, geutlemen, of the causes which bave covs:isated us » now par'y, they have but little reference to our antecedents Whigs or ola cemoerata. Under such designs tons we have euch pursued in other days our own views. We have entertained oppcsite opinions in regard $0 the necessity ofa capk, ena other measures of nationai in- terest. “But however we differed on uch questions, whenever those arore of a pureiy sectional and disorgan izing character, the leading patriots of our country were alwsys united. Clay and Jackson united to modify the tani cf 1878. in order to give quiet to the country, and secure the execution of the laws. They united to disarm the force of sentimenis which were calcuiated to array one section of the Union against another; and if they were now alive they couid not be o hecwire than pariici- pants in the great Ame:ican movement weich 1s inwnd- ed to check the current of the same sentimen's. You see men at the North proposing to nuhify the laws of the jand. You have seen men at the South doing the same thing. What woulc Washington, Jefferson, Madison aad Jackson easy to men engaged in such attempts to dismem- ber our Union? Gentiemen, it would de a waste of worda to amewer in detail tis question. All wao are acquaint- ed with the pubiic history of those great men know that they woud be with us laporing to chesk sectional agitation, and rebuiing the heresy that a State or por- tion of the people cau enforce a construction of the jaws contrary to \h» course pointed ont in the constitution. To resiore harmony to the various ecctions of our Union—to brighten the links which bind us together as sovereign b.atee—0 purity the ballot box—to cut CT the cangera to which we are exposed by the im- migrants to our scores from f reign lands—and to repudiare allthe bigker law influences abroad and at home which have contributed to ooscure the janamarks of our cld Revolutionary fathers—thece, geutiemen, are the objects of the Ameilcan party. Tnese are the cun- sidera*iona which have brought us together, no matier what we may have teen heretofore. And thes ate the considerations which will bind us together until our government 1s brought back to its original purity, and truth{ulness is restored to the rejations of pubiic men to pubsic measures. We have seen the prevent administra- ticn of the government empicy its patronage to cement 4 party wi nout reference to any legitimate standard of policy or principle. Men whe have preached secession and cisunion have been given the prominent offices and have been mace strong when it was most important they should be weak. (ld fashioned men have been vili- fied and slancered merely because they adhered to the maxims which governed cur wise men in the best days ofour republic. Yes, gentlemen, we have been proecrib- ed throughout this land for daring to say that we main- tained the doctrines inculcated by our greatest stater- men. Prerident Pierce, professing to follow ta the foot- steps of Jackson, has piaced himeeif in direct antagonism to the leading *ntiments of that great map. Jackson, rad that the patronage of the federal government ought not to be brcvgbt to bear against the teedom of electiona, and thatit was time we were more Americanised. Mr. Pierce says directly the contrary. He proscribes from office large masses of his ‘ellow citizens for dating to ex- ercive the privilege cf utterig their opinims. ite has ostracised national men in order to build up the agitator; and no ove can be surprised ty see that uader ain fos- tering cure tbe country is threatened with geographical parties far more dangerous to the integrity ot the Union than they have ever been in any former period ot our histery. He has introduced tne doctrine of “‘tquatter sovereignty’ in # form which, as recent events have shown, is but snother name for civil war, and though Ginguined by the profession of respect for the sentiment which recognizes the right of the people to govern them- relves, is in substance nothing but aa sbandonment of the censtitutionsl duty ot Congress to guard the right) ot the Territorial inhabitants until they are competent to form State ts and take tank under the provieions of the§constitution in the confederacy ot Stat equal and sovereign members. Against such abuses we have protested, and as members of the Amert- can party we fee! that it is not omly our right to protest, but vo claim the support of our countrymes in giving us the power to correct them. One more remark, gentle- men, andlam done, Our enemies have asseried that ovr organization could mot be maintained because our ranka are composed cf those who bare oelonged to one or the other ‘of the old parties, and that we cannot es- cape the influence of former divisions. Those who thua ‘Aavrail us reem to forget that there is a country to nerve which is above all parties, andthat there are prinelplen which cannot be assailed without weakening the pfliars ovr Union, and in defence of which all patriots ought to rally. irrespective of the desigration by watch they may ave been known as party men. Ax in time of war, when the foreign fce invades our soil, every true hearted citizen should rally to the fing ot hia country, so when dectrines are put forward by party leaders, which are caiculared to render inoperative the checks and balances of the constitution, every patriot should throw off party shackles and do what he can to render harmiess such doctrines, It ix on such grounds that we are constituted an American party. Let us oe true to the apirit of sucn a party, ard let us forget that there were ever any differ ences between a a4 democrats or whigs. Let our triamph be that of our country, measuring our claims tothe pub: Ke confidence by no standard but that of honest devotion to the principles of ¢ur cause, which is no other than that of the constitution and the (pion. If we succeed, it will be main'y througn the exertions of the bardy and manly energies of our soung and middle aged men, who are carrying on the great enterprises necessary to the developement ot our country, and who cannot be tempted by old party watchwords from completing the reform which They have commenced uncer vhe flag of the stars ‘and stripes, and in defence of the sentd ment which prociaima that Americans ought to rule Ame fea, Sach pa riotic Arvotions —mnat treet with is correspenting teware. Gentlemen, | was NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1856. evcated en the banks of your noble river, and have always felt » price in tho prosperty of this grea: empo- nium cf our country. You have elways shown a just st nee of the importance of maintaining the constituion. by a etrict adhe renes to the princ'ptea it was intenaed to perpetuate, You bave always been cational mea, un- wiliing to disturb the harmony of those feelings which are peceseary to the eafety o* our progress as @ nation. 1) is flavering and encouraging, there‘ore, 10 the friends of the American cause in otber parts of our Caer f when trey hear thet she great city of New York ia witi them. 1 could not doubt thet I was right when your aprrovirg voice was heard in whe formatiinof @ par:y uining 10 heat the cissensions in our Iaad. It was ia Ur ety, in 1819, thar I fret learned to disortmica ¢ be- tween the mere party man end ‘he patriot. It was here ‘hat Gen. Jackron. though the guest of the Tam~vany mv, ‘oarted De Witt Cunton, who was thea considered by that er cien’ and venerad.e sccfety a6 mot orthodox ea ibe purject of te rigo s. The ota here of the Her- n itege ceid tha pa ties were not always righ*, ond that pubic men ought not to be rejected use they went teycue the api of their par y rn the eapport of their country’s interests. Ibis geutlemen, is our dostrine. We have lett the old parties who were unabie to aan- | quilwe tbe 'apd, and siend out on # platform national hed beginning to emo, and American in overy toaturs | of it | Mr. Docelcn’a speech was frequently eppiaudei, but | cic not cause apy violent ou: break of emtharisam. | Hon. ir. Rind, of Teprensee, wax the next speaker. | Af er n ‘ow preliminery remarks be went otf to say that | tom the odéal of the Conventiow through whith we | eve parred bes eprung & party lesa distinguished foc the | inwr aed tecbrimifies whieh it has anuihiated than ‘or the great and natioual batis on which it has cetablismed i'ser—tbat of American consti‘utiousl freedom. (Ap- plavee ) Gentlemen, there are two grea though in- | volved in the proc ums: ium tbat you rave jus’ heard fom tre cancidete tor the Vice Preudency. which meet my most hearty end unqualifed aporobali a. (Applause) | Whacarethay? One, sic, »bich @ anos ot tu bold relie! is, thet this great American ty is pot & party of tne pa-t—it c' mes not cown aa the autique relics of Pompeii or Her ulanevw—it is «party of tho fature, and of the | faturealne (leno applacse ) Avd, sir, when [wasn | rerident of this city 1 waa a Dickioson democret, ficm | ‘apd true, When my health fated me (and which is now | exceedingly fisgile) avd I bad ty return again to whe serpy Scuth, since then I bave acted with the demo- cratic psriy. I view, gentlemen, this great nstlonal party with allits siete apd moons and runs of the fu- ime, nib no nght of the yeat—the past delng impeuc- tranie and invulnerab’e—if jou please oblivion—a acicen bebina which we cannot pecetrate, or behind which we shal not iock, but with everytuirg looming up ia the future Mvminsting our path 1 view it, Teay, ax @ | grest rational party, prospective in its grandeur a itegiory. (Appsuee.) | acmize another great priaci- ple. lr, end beartl y endorse it. It ia, str, that i? we are | aveceariu'—aye, if we are not euccrasful—tkes who pay | that devuticn at the shrine of their country co #0 a8 oa- ti pal men, irrespective of all anterior 3 nsiderations. (Avpisure.) Demoerate und whigs cn stand on this tate tc paiform: “epirite grvy and spuirs black, epi- rite white end rptris rec.’’ What is the test of tae great Amizican par'y for, geuticmen, we have no plat- form but the Union anc she conaiitution. and theee tried impercorations of consritaucnal treedum— he candidates | for the Prerigeney aad the Vie Presidency, (Loud | cheers). Woat are your plattorms, geatlemen/— | whut bave they been! Let me sit, refer to the , giest democratic plwtiorm of 1852 After they | went on there to enumerate the great princt ies of unas party, hey wound up that mo-aic oi every color, its joinery of every hue of po.itical tinkering, with pledging bemseives to ne longer euiate tee F sage of slavery —that now the great American 1epuoliy should have re- | pose, What, eni—not two years’ euns bai pettormed | | i their ‘nrusl revoluion woea an sgitstia indvitely more sectional and dangerous. infimiely more exzited erd furisus—the egitan net the Kauses and Ne caska bill- wae epropg upon the country. Yes, cir, and that by the very wen who had eworn there should be no more | agitanon on the surject. (Loud cheers.) bid the | routh éerire ity No, rir. Did toe country demand ity No. rir. Doex the South new stard to it? No, sir. (Avplause.) One great principle whish every American | shor jd etand vo is, Uhat the people, wh n they become | suffcintly numerous ina Lerriwry, shoul orgemze » State government, mansiscture tt themselves a consti- | tection, and seck adatasion into the Union as | american freemen, aid wave o right to make | such Jaws as they deem mecenary. (Cheers.) 1am no less an American and I have av ives the right of an American, whethee as a single izdividual or as # col- Ieetive inc ividus]—wnether | stand on the eoil of New York, or uncer the flag of our ecunty cn the Ter- ritory of Kanvas and Ne>rashs, (Cbeers } {nterloper from cotsice have no bustzess vo interfere with the ci:i- vere of vhat Territory—whether they come from Missourt: | or ficm Massachusetts, they are adke promovers ot dix cord ane vexatinn, ‘The relanons of one Stace wo another, ax regur¢s interterence with dumentic atfairs, would be 45 upressoraole as the interference of France in the dumes- vic rewtions cf Ezgtand. The equatter sovereigaty e- tabii:bed by the nefarious Kapsss and Nebraska bi evtaplivred ry this mere vefa:isus ano wicked adminis fica, (Applavre) is a violation of the constita ioual li erty—icis@ violsiim of the soveremuty of the State, and of every icdividnel tiving as 8 cttizen in that Terri- wry. The rpeaker then weat on to inquire ‘at every Eurcpemu ecnyict from a penitentiary and every deg:ar eo pauper fom @ tore gn land” thould, on their arrival here. cast their votes fr pubiic office inciden’ bave a voice in tne setilement sfcciples, beside them and their No, no.) Should such a one (ir. B. eentimued) posse 4 euch a privilege when he has | not dunk ove living draught from our hallowed foun jan—when he capnct read our languace, much less unders and ovr ccnatitution—when, eir, the Prome- than fire that descended favo the bosoms of our Revo- ‘utionary fathers, who gave us our unperailel-d and | unique jiberty—when he tad never experienced the frat remtillation of that fire—when be is not capable of un- Gerstancing the meaning of American constimtional heedomt Is such # mau to vote side by side with you for cfficers, to make laws and have tte right to stamp, net for a cay but all tine perbaps, bis sentiments upon the institutions ot the country’ (No, no.) Suca a man ovght to be an abimicaiion to every American who believes the heri sge of the rights cf an Aqorican clitven is bygber and gronier than ever divinguwhed | a Roman citizen, Mr. B then referred in eloquent terms to the downfall of Roman and Grecian greatness, arguing that it was brought about to # great ex‘ent by theic in- stitutions having been gradually eapped by foreiga infla- ences. He tben directed attention to Japan and Chica. ‘These were countries the institutions ot whica he of course did not approve—they were gcverved. These overnmenta Dave stooa for thousands o: years (observed . B.) with thetr ancient and unique tnetitudions en- tirely vnimpaired. Why fo, fir’ Beeause they have sednlonaly shut out the foreigner and foreign influence ‘rom the ¢xercie ot governmental power—oecanse they have prevented them fiom mixing up in their institu- | tiens.. If, then, tho-e putrid despotiams conta survive 80 Jong, how long will not our fair institutions exist, if free tiem foreign influence, foreign interference, aegradation and cebasement? (Loud ogi Gentiewen, there 15 no resort for the nationa! men but upon the piatfrm of | the great American party. (Applause.) Who signed that rolemp protest that the compromise mea- eures of 1850 hell not be diaturoedy Your Ciays, your Websters, your Dickensons, your Casaea, Toombe. snd others. How can they affitate with men who bave violated their rolemn objigations—wno have | hurled the nation egain into this whir:poot of excl ement and sectional strife How can the Dickinson—how can the Clay and Webster men do so’ It they do, what con- | fidence have they that they will not, betore the ead of « year, by seme trick or quibble, violate the present hope ‘and tepore ard expectations of the nation? I tell you that the man who de'iberately, with malice preponse de- cetvea me cnee, and the party who does fo can..ot doit saan. anc J am convinced they ought not to have the confidence of any party living. (Applause.) But they they aay you are going to have athird party. The cemo- cruis, perkapr, will say that they are another great na- tional party. ‘If you don’t belong to the American party nor to the other, you must exist in a sort of guerMa war- fare between ‘hove two parties. Why would tasy join a third party} Js not the democratic party broad enough for yon? Isnot the American party pute enough and national enovgh for you? (Laud cheers.) How are you going to exist—what are your principies to be? Before many years bave elapsed, the Kanrns question will be sét tied, and it be a slave or # free State. 1 den’: think it will be a slave State, because the North has the redundancy of population—and the North bass migra- | tory population. They seek other countries, while the Southern planters are stationary. 1 my re there are not more than twenty men with slaves in Kanaas at pre- nd the men who are now agitating in that Terri- -y,tegitate not because they want it to be a slave State, but because they claim equality, and all the righta of | free men, in having s voice to make the Jaws which are to govern them. (Ind applause) After re- citing ® humorous te about » man ia lennessee, who co coined = ex raordinary words in telling his stories, and who on ome o3- casion. when relating the manner im which he had killed a perch by jumping on it, informed his listener that he had “‘exceberated’’ the fish, Mr. B. asserted as his con- viction that such would be the fate of this third part; tat be bad referrea to—they would be *‘excaberated * Mr, Bilbo then made a gracefal allusion to the qualifica- tions of the candidate for the Vice Presidency. be aaic— Mr. Donelson is the reoresentative of the bone and sinew acd the patriotism and devotion of Mag igs und middle aged men of the South. (Applause.) It there be a man on Ged’a earth who has everything that is manly and patriotic, bold and fearles#—if there is a man npon whom the wantlo of the immortal Jackson bas descended—it ia our candkate for the Vice Preridemey. (Enthusiastic applause.) Gentlemen, it wax im 163:, when, fur the fir’ time in this country, there dared to exist a apizit of nullification south of Mason and J)ixon’s It arose 8 State gallant and patriotic, and among a people who pad on every oceasion peen distinguirbed for their devo- tien to their country. That man, said he, would hang them as bigh as Haman if they committed cne overt at. of treason; he told them to their face that they were traitors, apd were breathing treason to their country and thet man war—Andrew Jackson. (Immense ap- plause.) The adoptec son of that man (com inued Mr. BK.) wes the candidate before the country for the Viee He asked any democrat within the sound o { lillmore and Donelson the ecuntry, North, Sonth, Fast and Went, in all its for- eign relations and in ell (ts domestic relations, would 20 be perfectly safe, and that Le wou d repose in ccntidence, exving to them the guulance and direction of this go- yernment, a8 calmiy and as Kweetly ae ‘the good man’s repose.’ ' (Applause. ) Mr. B, ccpciuded his remarke, of which the foregoing ina more ontiine, in conreqnence of pressure on our space, with an eloquent eppeal to democrats and whigs w bury all the animosities of the past aod rra‘ernally unite apen the platform of the national American party. | At the close of his remarks, Mr. Rilbo Was entnusiaati- cally applauded. _ Col. Joxys, of Kentucky, wee the next speaker. He eaid:—Mr. President and gentienes, | am aware that | the compliment which I acknowle:,5 by this applance ia | paid to the gallant State from which J come, andl re- iret tha: there is rot here tomght someone of her gifted sons to do honor to that compliment and to this ocervicn. 1 am in no condition to adaress you, yet when the State of Kentucky is called upon | caunot, however unprepared I may be, remain without responding. Tam proud to participate in this meating. Tai giad to come ftom our home ip the West, end to pass « day, if but « | | tween us-1 mean that question of slavery. | the South don’t care about them. | meeting had now become very thio. 1 om happy to stand here in ‘the Empire city of tne fm. dey, in this great emporizm, pot only of the State of Nes Yors, but of this mighty contedeacy—a piace 60 which we all look, w whatever section we belong, as & @ eat rere) voir, & i prmtigr gen is Beguine «ply oF o0e 1 whieh te ge her the cis‘ant parrs pPegeii i. (Applause. ) While elaing upon this eerd I have been remincea that at waeip the city of New York, ana not far trom this piaee, er of bis Country, the immertal Washiog- 4 ipavgurated first Presicent of toe United ntates. setrerbing for us who live in the biekwoods to cr me bere to getber “p these glorious recollections of the In Kentucky proud to say, the Ame-icaa periy. aM hough io shat Siete bavicg an existence of not mee than twelve wm othe, ts trmmpbently in the arcea cant In my cwo State, men of all parties, seriog tae great process y ot be ame; secing how much of oorrn:- thn bad crept into the acministration of public affairs; seepg the cengers to which we were exvesen abrosc aod. ot hime, these wer, as won as the American standard wor plevteo—ceme up with zealand smbition, with re pewed hape determiced to live or die, (Appinuse ) It wouls be inepproy tate to this ocessiun for me to attempt to express my septimects upon the great principles of the smericen pa ty. You kave heard then discussed {ime and again. o1:d every one in the bearing of my woirs in perieot:) famiher with them. We ta Kentucky came up to thelr support with a beilet that they would be the ail sbeorbirg principies of this government, that is, thas the gecd mencf all parties would forset old insued, aad peeing tho ansolute reotastty for the eatablishment pery, would piart theuselvee upon the piatform ceterinized x0 protect and preserve the liverty of our ovunuy, its honcr and glory. (Applause) But after the elections of the sagt year we bad the greatest fore. bocings. We begen to fear, in the Sou.bwest, that the mre) ish hac ail the characteristics of the mos na- ti n’l perty ever establisred in thts country, and hold i g torih tothe world the immortal principies promal geved ty Wasbingrop, end Jefferson, and Madison and all tke fatberr «f the countrs—we began to tear it would not stand permenent, and that it woula be shaken to its foundation. Wo were a'raid that xo many isms had cvep' ip’y tbe ne‘ional crgenization that ouc success ia the ccmp g oniess would be deurtfut; but with a am ra- lisnce uvon the patio tem of alt sections of the coun- thy Kentucky tent ber delegates to the Jate National Coa. vention, of which I bad the honor ot peinga member. I covst pot tut that some of you, from the report, perhaps, of seme factious egitator fcom the North or S utb on that Convention, uttered io a moment of entiu- sipsm, yOu gen to fear that this great party, this party that 1's promu'gsted such gio ious pemelpies. was adout to te dissolved. But the knowiog ones in thet Convention —ané they were many, } atn proud to séy—the true men, the wire men *bo Icok to this gorious Union as. in the lavgurge cf Wasbingtcn, ‘the paramount good of the people.” were rot the men who made thee factions neches or gave ceuse for euca alarm. (Applause. ) There wea in that body stern dete mization on the part of wll goud men to bartwouice if it was ever in the besrts of men to do 60, and to act twogetber for the ad- vapcement of the true interests of our whow country. We area great peopie—a people, however, viferently coveated. with different smstita ions. living in different cegrees of latituce—we are by rature and education dif- fexept and there rene one gieat bove of contention oe Now, gen- tvemen, ] am not cing to ciscure this question; bat a wird or two, Lam aSoutherner, boro in North Caro- Jina, and now an x pied sh of Kentucky; but altbough lam a Scutherner, ali my inmincta souttern, dercended ot Scutbern parents, yet having received my collegiats education at the North, and baving miogled with tue Northern people in almost every State in this Union, | am proud to say that, elthevgh devoted to the itu. ens cf my own fection of country, my hea:t 1a not nO restricted in all ite teachirge—I ‘mean so sectional— ar nt to have & kve anc true devo ion sor all thia North eax rection of the country, and of our glonous Upioa. (Appisuse.) Ane if we haa a litle more cf sosial tnter- courre between she Norta and South, we would iadeed be a bend ct brotkerr, aud each man still ebtertaining hit «wn opipiore, I went as a celegate from the State of Kenrurky, with a decides preference, end I am sure every « te went with a preference, toc; but then we weat with s cetermination to allow the majority to take a iran upon whom we covld all agret ano unite. ‘the dels- | gation trem Kentacky went to tnat Convention with a Getermination, it porsible, to secure the first office in the gift cf tre people ‘or «ne ‘of our own gifted and gallant sone a men who, al hough h« bas been in the Nw ional Courcils, and acquitted bimeelt with honor in that ep lightened bocy, 18 pnt Jittle known to the country at Jeoge. tut a man upon whom the Father of us ali set | impress of a tue and g est man—Ove who, one day, in the Constitutional Convention of the State of Ken. tucky, Jaid down a platform, and eetablished with va the comer stone upon which the American yarty of Kemncky, and 1 might ey this Union, could étena invinctble, ‘The aptech cf that gentleman in the Kentucky Convention was the ablest that ever proceeded fret the Jips of ary pubic man in this country. Ho eaid slong 9s be wight sive he would stand upon the Ameri- ccn platform, ava there vorda were uttered with as true a cevotion aa ever characterized those of a martyr. ‘This en, who grew up under the umbregeous toresia of Ash- nc, the boscm trienc of the immortal Clav, (applause ) | and as the living emocdiment cf his prinel sles in « more cmizent degree thin avy other man of tors Unira—we. elegetes frem Kentucky, picrentea the name of | Garret Vavis. (Renewed app.awe.) We had another nc ble ser—oue upon whom bas been showered all the henors ix the git of the people of his native 3:ae—a goliant and gloricue an; we might have offerea him; I epesk of Joba J. Ciitfencen. Toese mea we believed would have done bonor to tue station, but believing taey ‘were not the preference of this C: nven‘ion. ani having ap carnett cocfidence in the judgs ent aud wisdom of the an embledceiegures of our greutr ational patty, weenb oi - ted to the will of the majority. I, fur one, endorsed with as uch zeal and with's greater hope ot triumph the neminatten of Millaxd Filmore. (Applause.) At one time T began to fear it would be alm st impossible f r us to harmenize, but when I raw the names of Donelson and Fillmore looming up, my beart arcee and every puisa- ticn of my body neat an antbem of hepe and victory. Now, a to this excitement about Kansas and Nebrasks, 1 am _&® prorlavery men. yet 1am a national, and say to the men cf the Nerth—let nature have its course. Goi Almigh'y is pointing out the way for the settlement of this nubject, d tke more you agitate the question—every blow tbat 18 Btruck for the immediate freedom cf the slave, adds but a link 10 kys bondsge. ‘Then, however attached I may be to the institutions of my ‘rection, I am devoted tothe Union, (App'ause.) [want the constitution to beceme paramount law. [only ray—bave what opiaion you believe about slavery; ] have as much res.e.t for the man who regarca tlavery as ao evil #8 he who does not; bat I ray, let it have its way aceoratag to the laws «frature, Let us be unitec—let us not have all these little matters dividing us—let ue do all in our power to promote the principles of Americanism. 1 am an Ameri- 2 up’R principle to the dew'h. Kather than sacrifice all we bave already gained—rather than give up what we have eooumplirhed—I would say, a4 the expiring Greek tald to bis followers— Sterke till the last armed foe exoires, trib for your altars acd your fires; Buike for the green graves ot your aires, God and your native land. * —In the larguege of your own great man of the North— “Umen! Union! now and forever, one and inseparaole.”” (Cheers. } Mr. Burtoy, of Tennessee. was the next speaker. The Mr. Burton said:— pue State. Iam happy to believe that you are true and «yal to that Union ara copautution in which weall have apart. and J am glad to meet you here upon thit common pistionm, Itisrmht and proper that we shouid culti- vate there friendly relations, being all members of tae fame great American family. We have all Hved and provpered under the same influences. I come from State which always bas, ard over will, prove loyal and drue to the great consututional pv ineipies whereupon the Union and the constitution of these S:ates it based. (Av- plunze.) I come trom the gallant State of Tennesseo, which ‘owes no smal part cf ber attachment to these rinciples to the immortsl hero who sleeps upon er sci). His motto was:—‘ Our federal Gnion—it must spd shall be preserved. (Cheers.) That is eur motto, and we intend to go into thiv contést with it inscribed upen our bannera in letters of living light, and borne by two such standard bearers a: we have selected—one of them the very counterpa: t of Old Hickory bimeelf. (Load applause.) I confidently expect » series of triumphs only second to that achieved by Andrew Jackson at New Or- jana on the 8th of January, 1815. The people of Ten- nesace love and honor the memory of Andrew. Jackson, and it is their proudest boast that his mortal remains sleep in their soil. While we cherish his memory, we also look to his prototype, and I msy ray to you that in ‘Tennesee Millara Fillmore stands next to Av irew Jackson, (Applause.) We look upon him sa a modern Aristides —pure ana spotiese—a recond Wasbington, and I have no hesitation in saying, that when the telegraphic dea- patch con‘aining ouncement ot hia nomination leached Tennessee it sent a thrill of joy.to every. heart, He bas proved himself: to bes statesman of the highest | political integrity; and in bis administration he showed tbat he knew no North, no Fast, no Weat, no South, but with # heart broad asthe sum, he took in. all sections, When the éark clouds of disunicn hurried over the land —when the od rhip of Etate wae toered to and fro on the billows of fanaticisam—Milard Fillmore stood at the helm, and guided the bark intow haven of safety, (Ie pewed applonre.) Ii the American party had looked cver the whole list of ite able statesmen, it could not have relectad ore more able, more conservativeand more truly paticnal than Millard Fillmore. Thus we have a good tcket; but something else i6 necessary—we must al) wo to work avd elect it. The time ha» arrived when every troe lover of his country should rally round the con+titn.iop and the Union. We must remember that we have s formiable and wily enemy, one that will use wil the weal of politicnl wariare against us. We must be prepared to meet them with the saroe weapons; we ninst give them no advantage over ux, Int every man mast be at hie post—a sleepless sentinel. Thue may our efforte be triumphant, The deraocratic party ia broken into fractions, which can nover be re- United; and if we go into the Sight with courage, and prorecute it with untiring energy, we shail achieve a seriewof the most brilliant victories. They teil us that the great American party is dead, and that the probabi- hty is, we ball go over to them. ‘i don’t beiieve we are vo entirely lost to ait rene of self reapect as to ge over ton party that bar stigmatized us as thieves, teurderera wpd traitors. (A Voice—Never.) No, we have not yet reached that pomt of political aoasement, when we aliali sLendon our great American principles and throw our- seives into the arms ota viper, We take our stand upon here principles, and our motto fs, “Never surrender.’’ The Ameriean party hed a bigh and noble mission to ac: crmplish in the glorious contest so near at band, The tact was, that the ration to-day was passing through the moet terrible ordeal that bad ever occurred in the histo- ty of the country. The whcle land was distracte! by the violent dissensions of party tacticians, and parties were involved in # most invincible etate of contumon. The very pillars of the repudlic wer pee ff e wpirit voices ot thelr npon their sons im +olemn tones to rise to the rescue of tris noble colump, reared by their patriot tathors and ce- mented by their bloed. The watch fires of 1776 had been finoulk erg, and were well nieb extirguished; out they had been kindled anew by the council tires of tie Ameri- can party, and were spreadieg trom East to West amoug ali the native born of this land, (Great applan .) They bad been told that the battles of the Revolution were to be fought over again—-that the same dark and gloomy reenes enacted then were to be re-enacted ofresh upom American rail, Bat the true friends of the country would be found new, as (hen, restating foxergn eggieseion, ana on the cide ct civil and ae itberty. (Applauae.) [ft they failed to acdieve hee ' peer core oh wuld helé them re-pousibie for it. They stocld go into fight, then remembering that free fastitali vas were theirs ovly im teust, to hola them for the denefit of coming g?- nerations, yet to emerge from the stream of time. They sbowd mi ver forget, if they suffered these insti astlons to pars from their hapda, that they were guilty of » double crime, frnitinre allke 10 themselves their posterity. He earnestly trusted that they, at leart, would never be called upen to behold a division of their repudlic, Per ht wif about a disunien, but there were some things belonging to this repnbli> that they could never otvice, ‘They could never divise its glorious history, the recollections of Lexingtom and Ba r Hill, Tney could vever divide the bones of their Revolutionary ares, for trey would net lie still one moment upon the ancient bettie, grounds where they have 40 Jong. slum dered. (App'scee) He ccu'd not veliave that Ameri cons would ever lese their self respect ro tar aa to forget the great principles tha: constituted the corner stone of the repubile, or #0 far dishonor them- selves as (0 sever sounder the hal'owed bonds of uaion which bad +o long kept them tege:ber. Where upon the tace of Goo’: grren earth could you find such a coun try as their own? They were the proudrat, froeat aad bsppiest people cm the earth, and the name of American citizen wan ® passport throughout the civilized world. There lived nu msn no free, ao happy. a4 he who bore the rroud appeliation <f an American citizen, (Appiauss.) ‘Tbeir cofery consisted im wnion, and to preserve this in- violate should be the prayer of every true and honest American. It was the mission of the American party to rebuke the spirit of disucion wherever it exis's amocg us, and rive from the Couneds of tre nativa atl sections: feeling and uissord. It was the ion to diapel fom their minds »be fell epiris cf tansticiem, and cruso out the jife cf the horria monster. che country then wou'd be sa'*, end their institutions stand upon a ficmer and breeder bask, and the spirits of their venerated fathers would rise up end call them plessed. (Great Applause.) Attorney Geners] CusninG was then 1atroduced to the mectirg snd made a few “licitiams remacks whion we'e receives with great apolauro ny the andiancs, but whith the pressure oa our columns foroics us on The meeting was thea edjourmed at b: o'aock. MARITIME INTELLIGENCE. All packages and litters intended for the §i Pt ey pean be sealed. oe Le, an Yeas A1maNa0 FOR NEW FORK--THS DAR, + $B | moon numa may wares. Fort of New York, February 20, 1856. _ 5 as CLRARED- teomsh'p Atiantic, Kidridge, Liverpooi—B K Collins. bop renry Cay. Canine, ‘Liverpone rd t Tileston, Sbip Supy bouth, Wiis, Rio Janeiro—Napier, Johasoa & 20 Blip Rebecca, Danieter, Buenos Ayres aud Montevideo ~ Feater Fi 101 & Co, Bark khowe. t aver, Havena—W Nelson & fon wig O + ¥en (Kr), Dow, Motviardau—W F Scbmiét & Co, Brg Sars, Laucester, dt Thomas —Kusse & Viniag, Bix Af Wruker. Partridge, Oxrdeoas- J & Dow. inig BB Penty, Davis, Mavagnez—Pooln, Fentz & Golage. Brg Piorerea. hiekett, New 1 Owen & Boa. Hiw Pr ilurw. Tbsicher, cavanosh—Dusbam & Dimos. Brig 7a. Wiilixme, @tlmington—R P duck & Co. Behr Moverce, Woochouse, Rrazoa—Shsers & Mallory Schr HP kurtsil, Greea, Kingsion—Wenvers & Weeks. Sehr JT wring, Very, San Junn, Cubs Mastor, Fob: Mary tava, Homan, Charie-tou—Vun Brust & Slagit Schr G P Tayior, dooper, Elizabeth City—@ 4 W. bebr Jemestozn' Latourett=, Oit+ Point—J Baoter « Co. Scbr Jun T Bragy, s-ougherty, Willlamsburg—Master. Scor © Knight Davis, Boston ’—Tas mand ton, Providence—Master Kvuns, New Haven—Master. ARRIVED. Etearehip Posnoke, Skiover, Norfolk, dc, with mdse and passengers, to Ladiam’ & Plewsants hip F) cet iz, Hoste, Mouila, Nov 8, apd Anjier Dec 1, with © Carew, Was ip company with clipper «nip 'Bwai- Jn -be China sea, trom shangbsetor 1oadon. Veo abip Inez, of Newburcport, Int 119 8, lon 2825 W, spoke kambler. of Honon, for saa’ Frat cisco, ihe Phas been 8 N of Bermeda, lost mainiopgelisnt mas', split aat'a, 4c ip Independence, Haskell, salied {rom Maria in com aby. Pihip Frcelaior. Badley, Liverpool, Jan 9. with mdse und 2% nde, lace ‘Toe Dasrengere to Semvel ibompson’s Nephew. Jan 19, 1st 4¢ 15 N, Icn £0 20 W, ew ship Edward vere, of Balimore, s'cer- ing Eset, f.oremast head, foretopmas’, jisboom and maintopesiiant m: set, bark Relnderr, Chase, Rio Janotro. Jan 9, with coffee, to Reyroids & Cushirsn. Eabed in company wha berks Japo- nica, Jor Philede phia; Cera Kaxball, for Baltimore. avd orig Branay eine, tor Poiede'phra. Jan 2, lat 6 N, lon 3517 Ww. spobe tckr ¥ Poove. 4) mee N of Cape St Kcque, trom Rio Janeiro or Mobile; ish inst lat 42 £6, lon 6h 43. oxsraaged elarals with back Princeton, steerwg North; 20th, 40 miles off te Riehloudy, got a rus ply‘of Ureed from cullen’ Washington. behr Emm a (Bry, Congcon, |oudoncerry. N3, with potaors. to DR Dewol!. Has been frozen up ta the Sourd. tne past six week« Schr Lewis S Davis, Abell Savannah, via Newport (whore the put us for repairs), with colton, Ac, to MeUroady, Mitt & 0. Schr Wice World, Dickinscn, Witmigton via New London, ‘e ebe prtim ter repair. cbr Pearl. Weetervelt, Hailfax, NG. tebr Catharine 7 Dix, Accomack. Sebr May tiower, Ei shins, Has been frosea up.in the Sound Jor the jast six Weel tchr Delaware, Bridges, Kocklard. Haa beenfrozen up in the Sourd for the }aat six weeks. Behr Bary Brewer, Hooper, Milford, Del, 3 days. @cbr Isnec Achirn’ ssreweter, Rockland ‘via Ne wport. Ecbr fisher, Fooper, Ruch ianc via Saudy Schr Fievtword? Niekerton, Falem via Newport. br © Perdietcn, Brown, Boston, 8 days. Echr Baltic, Holbto>k, Fotton via Newport. Scbr Ophir, Meck, Boston. Has been frozen up in the Sound for the Jant ax we fcbr Lanra Jane, Young, New Bedford. Propeller Westerprort, werry, Portland, Me. Haro beeu frozen up in the Sound for the last aix weeks. She was belore repcried na boing cnt through by the ice and ‘sunk. She re ceived no damageto ber hull while in the tce near menongis Point that will render 1 neceseary to take her into dock. der cargo v@ partial y dameged, but the vessel will reseme her tripe in regu‘er order with others of ihe line. ropeller Peizel. arey, Providence, Pioreller Quint ebeug, Holm Norwich, Propeller Decatur, Geer, Norwich. BELOW. Sebr Louisa Dyer (of Rockianc), Jamison, fromJamatos via Newport SATLED. Snips Wizard, San Francisco; Whirlwind, Melbourne; Heary C’ay, Liveroool; orideewater, do; tark Sam Slick, Key West, with U 8 troops; brig Kercuies (Ham), Bremen. Wind at sunrise, NW; meridian, W; sunset, SW. Herala Marine Correspondence. KEY WKA&T, Feb 2i—We hear of po wrecks, nor have any ‘veasels nc upht this Ince to effect repairs during’ the-past fort night ke vessels reported as being here ln distress ar rapidly putin astate of seawortbiness, and they will soom re sume their voyages. + he Gam aged cotton saved from the wreck of the ship Mary Hime, to the number of 180 bees, bas been sold: by the US Marshal. lt averaged $25 per ba'e. The ealea amounted to the num of $4400. ‘Ibis cotton will be ahipped:to: New York. At is but gant damaged. ‘the ebip Columbia, Proual, lately sebore on tbe reef, and towed into port by tke UN sieamship Fulton, hes comploted her repairs, tsken to ber cargo, ard saled for New Ovleana where she is to be docked. ‘penses, $1150; expenses ovcargo, ne Plager Adams, Adams, sid the 18h for New Or- werful leans. She was leaking rapialy, but witn a por wina- will pump and an effective body of seamen, no fears are enter- tained of ber ave arrival. The salvage laid upon this.ckin and cargo was 90777 69 | ‘otal ealvege and exzensee, siz, ‘the br bart Bajakiava hua been condem: ed. ‘Ihe bark George ‘il omes has been discharged, and wilimow undergo a thorough repetr. ee Gea Worth bos finished al! her repairs, an¢ds being relosded. ‘The brig Brookline bas been caulked, and will soon be ready seo, Brig JG Anderson, Randall, ald for St Marka the-1ith; ship Eliza Mallory. Wuton, sid Lath for Genoa; bark J. W Diodgett, Waite, sd 13th tor New York. ¥chr Balt:more, Gardner, arr 16th from Charleston, with ma- terials tor Fort or. ‘Three masted sebr Elizabeth & Eleanor ald 18th. for Attaka- per, rhip Columbia, Prous), sld_ 22d for New Orleans; brig Gov Andersen, Carey, ald 2?d for Naesau. Lacxcn—The bark Jobn J Palmer, of 500 tons, was-launched on Thursdsy afternoon from the Weslervelt ehip yard. Shets owned by J 8 Lawrence and Oelrichs & Co, and !s a. supertor vessel. Surr Pronexn, of and for Baltimore from Antwerp, was at Margate sth inst, with five feet water inher hokh with. loss of archon and: chain andother damage. (ibe above: is {rom a telegrapbio received by the Asis.) co AIE tax Racex, Cant Eldridge, trom Palermo, of and for Bali! re, betore repo! ashore near Cr has been got off aad towed to Norfolx Siivinsts | | Pe anu Doustas, from Rio Janeiro for Ballmore, put i Baiia let ult, leaky; no particulars laine bx1G Lucy HCHase—Capt Lanfalr, of brig Thos Snowbrid atNew teh Ly Obie Denied " ‘akon the out end pa-sege, Jom it a) 20, 71, fell in wita wreek of the i Ti Chase, dismasted audfall of water, bontaail gone, hailing distance, when her ores begged. to be takon off, Saunched our long-beat, Rough blowing # gale, and went to their reliet; succeeded in bringing on beard Uapt David Baker, mate and crew, 7 in ail, in an exhausted stale, Tho Lucy H Chase sailed trom Wiscasset on Sd Jan for Cuba, And was knocked down and diamasted on. te Gib, whes she righted, full ot Water. ‘The FT carried thetn to Barbadoes and Trinidad, ard brought them to this pokey | fhe TT brought from Barbedoes tho mate and men of bark Hud- ton, from Norfolk: 10 U8 Marshal, sent by U8 Consul at Bar- Sour Lovrsiana. of and from Newb: for Philadelphia, ‘with apples and potatoes, waa ashore dust, o2.Straitmouth Inland. No otber partic ulare. Exsuragice Losars—The insurance on the rnip Great Duke $25 000; katipbler Alliances and Merchant’ pions 810; 5 kauitable, oS jer x Pach; United Mates, $12 000; Manufacturers’, $11 DOT ‘Eeacont Musial, $10,000; Neprane, $375, Total on saip and freight mire ; ‘he British bark Maid of Auckland, abandoned at sea about Ist inst waa insured in on eargo and fraight for $18,000, 1 lows:—$7000 at the Equitableofiice $7000 at the New i. acd Mutual, and $4)00at the Neptnne offlse. Brig China, 186 toos, built at Dartmouth, Maga, in 1843, of tia best_mat and well founcs was sold st auction 27) Py'hs Hurris & Cor for $ob00, cosh 8: cies The Shipping List xtates that brig Reveille, 9 . 283 esenag L oae, Perai, 2 rican, built in Connecticut, 10 years old, 367 tons, at $6200. Spoken, Sbip Samuel Adams, Gay, from N . eans Jan 10, Jat 25, lon 3 Tb scholar ad als thip in ir), from N@rleaus for Glasgow, Feb 6, lat 42 20, Jon 72 20, hark Henry Trowbridge, Rhodes, henc for Barbadoes, Feb 22, no . |. diammasted (probably bai m, Upton, which fd hence X ge 20 for Constantinople), was een Jan 15," Int 25 48,.N, lon 20 W, Fark Rienzi, Bangs, from Calcutta for Boston, Dec 10, lat 96.22, lon 25 25 K. Brig Goiba (Swe), fom Charleston for Gothenburg, Feb 3, 5, lon Brig Eerriet. of and for Portland from Cardenas, about 3 dayn out, lat 29 45, Yon 79 getit Jenny Lind, trcin Boson for Bevannsd, Fob 22, x0 lat, C Kate Brigham, hence for Favaunah, Feb 19, wt 3258, 2 Jon . Brig Forter, Crowe! in Crooked Msland Pa Brig Lucy Ann, from Jon bo Al. Foreign Parts. Accna (Weet Coast of Africa), Jan 9—In port bark Manchex. ter, Lakeman, from Salem Got 26, bound to leeward, Hark Jobn Swesey, Arnold, was at windward, Anniv, dan 24- fo port bark Chag ® Lex, Willama, trom Philadelphia for Port au Prince. Burnes AvKes, Dec In port brig Mungo Park, Nichols from Bangor. Basta, Jan ~Arr bark Douglas, Lian, trom Po Janeiro tor Pait'me re, pot in leaky: no particulars. Bar par cee, tou & Ap pork ory Avaaie, err, deg, rom Port au Prince for Lostom, Feb 9, °. Baitimore for Mavana,Jan 90, la: 1888, Coquimno, Deo Si— Io mesa) Kaliorb, trom Cal e@ and Chrnche Ts! wnda. Canpanaa, Feb 12-417 brig Louisa, Souner, echrs Alfred Barrett, Cacttele, Boston, By rote 19a Og Pty Searle ee « (br), Frepola, N York: Zot. che J Oook, P Bld. tit brigs M: all Deter Cotrerd. leer, vi. ip T J Roger, Maxwell, Beraas 7 wrth, do; Mth, ‘ship’ iixchange, Bath: tcbr P Gilkey, Gitve+. Portiand; 16th pare « (Braz). Urnetise 6 York; briga Aontan. Yulee, Beth; win, Montgomery, Vortand: Lodt Tinker, Chwe eon; Georgia. Drinkwaier, Bath; 16u. brig Celestion Ficlets lava ‘W arown Daseau NP; 1710, bri NI ap Bt Jen, NB: B Go.cord, Park it F il unit, 16, Tibberte'Fertinng; sear ih abip Cerro Gordo. Mervyn an, Bosiray do; brie Sarah Kizahedi, Loathaker, Tint, bara St Jago, Means, Mariel; brig Mey Queea, janb: 224, sehr Winters eh, Marrow, 1 ford. im 28d ¢hip Albert «sailaitn, Storer trom New; C4 25d orign Wm Clerk, bi pron, NOrieans; WM Ge, Webber 0 York, (U4 bxe agen Rea Wing, Gsraner, do, 29 Bods molasses; O Micke Krowlion, Movie, in palast 1016 b bere Rxpress Rov, NYork; With barks < W Wood’ Amercrn. Seavey, N 3; brig. aw'ey, Portland; achr Selah, snaw on38; 1 urale, Gavia, NOrienns; 22d, debr Ucean Ranger, Ool- 00. Balvmare, if ie # dort bark Bebring, Mone, to rail for New London in « tew days; drig Grecian, Ki cargo. ATANYa8, Foh22—Ip port barka Ootavis, Woodbury, Lueitda, tare, do; kanger Go dig, for Bowiot Idg; 6 AK ws msn Penfiele, for Phiade'poin vin dagus, Idy; Cos! Fdgecomb, wig; ML Fraat, Msaxell, for AYors, lag; Lapeles , bishop for bbilkfo Sern do, Peri, Curtis wig; ned. +00. Gooding, tor Cork, dg, Lite Lizme’ Gilpatrick, aaranl- on. Orecker; . Epofiad ant Hinckiey, bicout, we; tf i Prentiss, Kelly ior Niork ide; % H Berney, r. dings Rich, from Foucou, arr Lith; wig! brias Moelle, entuchy, Nicho s, idg; Nwzoivon, Ingle, freee T lsth di g; Merenfiad boceson, from B or Lith, do; Bion Bradbury, Miler, are ith, do; Wool wick Jaatl, dieg; sero-ter, Gino, tor Phiaae'phis, Idz; Tee: gr ph, Bieera; 2 Thur jewla und Ihoxas Concur, York, an; Valestine, Vemae: Grevinound, Pi Cumeale 88 $ |, Parca, Gin, wig; Banoock, Ober tor York, cl4, echts Kaven disz;'Frec Wording, Rure tor Be fast, Me, ldy; Eastern (Br), Cox. for Pivtucedr bia, 10g. act Feb ‘com, ton; 14th, brig leacel Burnham. James, Segue in Grande briss Martha Kiseman, kdmonds, Keight, Griten t, Bowland N¥or’ ;echra Zephyr, G zart, Bavana, bith, begs Moondght bir Rogers, Coitreil, Philsdeipina schr Rockingham, Hardy, Jeeerouvile, Fla; Lita, brg Wappoo Coombs, Nuasau HP, 30 kad, coticn "tor "s York at 63 ver bale. loth, briz serada (dp), Diaries, NUrlesns; Wh. belg Hancock, Ober, N fork: Zit, Neander, Davisin. Phitsdaiptia. Foreign vessels in port Fen 22 Br barks Duchers of Suter Inod, Putlerron. and Boa:isea, Muchanan, unc: Mlizsoeth, brown, for Cork, Idg: Bs ndeford, Leetob, ‘for Glasgow Go: Ercokshy, Wyre, for the Clyde oo; bal:yards. Wright, do de, Magee, ketl; John Ferguson, Main, end Nile: Oisnnel. dings Joep Denier, Dexter, wig orders; Hehe (Soragi. Swan’ fon, vec; Santos (sp). Muciategul, tor dantunder Idx: Br Judith, tes, and Crgnet, .or. for Leith, tag; Vilown, fcr baltiex, NS, Co; Scepwe, Burnett, cing; Iris; Rutger, tor St John, NB, Ide; Peasy Mcworald, uve Glore, for Queer siown, Ide; Cniete o, burke, disk; Mary Ann, La ther, one: tpanish brige Dion Shan, adrie, diag; atonarca, Pax gin, wig crders; achra Jane (Br), Monto: for Yarmoue, ‘AB; Ica: Eeangioncia (Dan), Wordinger. for Leer, ide. MaxGate, Kog. Feb —Ic port ship Pioneer, Young, trem Antwerp, of and tor Raitincre. Pemssnuto, Feo Arr brig Cevion (Br). Cofiln, NYort. . Feb 3—Tn port bak Garland Van-H4oen, (com N rigs Harrah Balch, Keen, for do 0; Mor Hill, (Ge do 13; Btephen Joy, nycer, for do 2; EU 4 liver. for do 1d; @ 1, Bucknam, Weight, for do, ready to take in cargo; Castilian, Lord. tor do 1b days Point Petre (Guid), Jen 6-In port brig CO Bittugs (ot Pager), Cort, 1 esi! tor St Thomas ina fow days. Port Srain, Trivided. Feb 5—lo port bares Hypertoa, Griff g trom NYork, just arr; Excelsior, Hartman, for Geay? ane, FR, vext ax. Port Panar, Mov W—tn port ships James Baines, MeDea- Palace, simmons 11}; for Liveepool 26tb; Crytai . tor N York do; bark Aura, Crosn, for do; echrs Vaquero, Newell, from Heoouln via sycney, NSW, ure fn; tickler, Huboard, for Fejee Isianda Spraey, NSW, Nov 19—Arr bark Auckland, Nelson, from San Frencieco bept %; prev to Deo 4 ship Kit Carwun, Ore Well, do pid prey to Dec 4, ship starr King, Tuaner (érom San Francisco), Melbourne. ‘81 Jaco pe Copa, Feo 10—Arr brig Marshal Ney, LAlties, NYork; Jt, brig Gen Marshall, Kavsonab; sehr Surin small, Brown, Norv. = 8. cua, Fob 9—Aurr brig Timothy Crosby. NYork: Adelaide Metcaite, do; 14th, brige I weke, Mitchell, Boston; Gen Bod, Gipeizick, S York; Wm BS Nash, do. RGR ee erie bog ee, Tub. Boman: Mache Mele R |, haviin, Cura; brig Mart ‘aabingtoa, 4 Bt Thomss; 1th, sctus Agaie, oberts, Boston; Re- on Berey, Red Yark, st Kartholémeme | ino, Jan li—In rt ip America, fiturr Mihi and cuers. Sid th (Bot Sd able Cauntiet, Andrews (trem NYork), San Frazetsoo, Whirrwind, ¢ dee, Now York—saw off Plymouta, echbr G J Jones, from teens; brige Montgomery seIntyre, Mansenil's; gces master ot Dob. } H Cronstadt, J H Kent, Boston, A Lawrence; sehr 26m Home Fore. ALEXANDRIA, Feo 2;—Arr schre Suwasset, New Yorks . do. BUBION, Feb %—Arr sche Plymonuth Reet, yemerday norfolk fer Bostou. Cid Br stamuhtp Canada, Jang, pool; barks Sophia, Gupill. St J Et sepce Bavenpah; Canton, Crowell, Steve |, wind W to WNW and N. sicamehip Canada @ ebip Cambridge: barks Sopbia, Churies Willies rr_sbips Herbert, Doane, avd Napoleon, Ke ig % eed. ‘NOnioans: bark 12 Freeman. Sraith,’ K. + Yervier, Raopahannock; James Lawrence, alen, New York. nel bark Lysander, from Vieni vie town; CB bawiiton, trom Havana; brig Planet from Oonetor Atrica tor salem. | did ship Beveriz, Ghar, Melbourne ney. %. Winthrop, Treat, us; ‘Wells, Surinam; Harriet Newell, atch, fe James, risk, Kichn ond;'8 B Jame Faittmore; fam] Glinan, siclion. do; Rareb Ann Hos, Baler, Philacetphis. Nothing went to sea wind WNW, light Bark Rival etarted, but came to anchor in the-Hoada, Dere- thea Henrietta has not eatled, BALTIMORE, Feb 21—arr steamers Piedmont, Post, New York: Totten, Moriey, do; Parker Vein. Ramsay, do; Creek, Gazer, co; Win Jenkins, Hai ett. \. Fe 25 81d ahip Canova, (new), Fisher, Havana, Wis jon, NC, BREAKWATER, Feb 27—8id schrs Lather Childs, Nickerton; Jultet Baker, and MM Freeman, Nicker- sont ‘28th, bark Chester, Orcsby, Phi adelpbia; schr Teiegrapa, Nickerson. BRISTOL, Feb 27—Arr sehr Pinta, Latham, ¥ York. Feb 23, PM—Arr brig Ana Flizsoeth (of fork. Old betg CHARLESTON York), Dungan, Gonaives 62 da: to NYork. Oura (Swed), Anderson, Falmouth and s market. Sid ship Collier, Liverpool; bark Carontic (Br), stalker, do: aches Fanny, Huli, Genoa; West Dennis, Croweil, Pailadel- bia. viatn—Arr achr RW Brown, Derrickson, NYork. Btd bart NP Tasimadge, Small, NOrisans. 24h are brig Tooooe, Atinson. NOrlgpus, In the bark Cherokee, Mein, trem sOrieans. Cid ve. ‘ela, Pin, Barcelona; bei CUIY POINT. Feb Span Magra, ° 26—arr -schri A ton, & York for Kicbn ond; Danvilie, + beater. ao tor do; Ricwmond, Barris, — for do; Liberty, Kay, NYork; Manchester, chenier, do. Zith—Bid Pr echre Windsor, Dunbar. Liverpooi, NS; Magnat, Lewin, co. CHATHAM, Feb 27—BSobr Jas Lavrengs got out of the lee uring the night and has proceeded. Schr Catot remains in the ice. Wind NW. ld aobr Flash, Boston. 28th ‘8 AM—Schr Cabot -got out-of the ice in the night, and Proceeded to Boston. | Wind NW leur and plesennt: Ae re A AL ae poh fancy anid arbadoes; 224, John ) Barstow, Mattapoisett; Belie Barstow, do. KEY WEST, Feb 19—Cid ship Coinmbia, Prosi, Queeme- town, RB; 2st, rig Maria, Chadwick, boston; 2d, bark Joke Colby, Monroe, NYork. Tn barks George Thomas. Cutter, reps; Joha peter. Moproe, iég with part of cargo.of ship Mary tiale, tor NY Magnol'a (Br), condemned: bregn Maria, Chadwick, cid; Brookline, Haskell, vepg; Gen Worth, Treat, ready; Taver- vere. Lesier, do; Uranus, Lane, wig cargo; Huutress. Clare, old for NOrleans; Tevere-(sard), refitting; schrs Chesnut, Lowe, 60; Entre, Jefleraon, rey MOBILE, Feb 2)—arr ab ip © ure, Pray, Liverpool; bark Arge.a Brewer, Ulmer, Boston; brig bilshs Doane, Loring. da, Cle ahip Plantagenet (Br), Askey, Liverpool. GAT? ships Callodéa (Bz), Mesauztlin, Maite: Rllza- beth (Br), Loeh. Liverpool; scar Cloitds, Russell, Havana, Cid Br, ships Weed, , Liverpco.:' Imperial, Moran, do; bark Tom Corwin, Castnée, Boston; b ig San Miguet Sph, ‘Ventoss, Barcelona. 2d—Cid ship Buperior, Souls, Havre; brig Candace, Mat- thews. Boston; scbrs Jaa T.Grios, kogers, NYork; Oliver M Pettit, Clark, Providence. NEW ORLKANS, Feb 20, PM—Arr shina Sami Adama, Gay, Newport, W; Judith, Brown, Liverpool: Carrack, Stephene do; Nethan Hanau, Jouelya, Havre: brigs Daniel Mowaey, Welden, Boston; 24 Fraalfo (ap), Sust, Havana: goar Lows McLean, Buckiin, Rockland; Me. Cid achr Thos Denniston, Story, Matarzas. 2let—arr steamahtp Black, Warrior, Smiib, Not orth, do. Cd chp Jao Durcan. Rinne: d, MoCann, Boston; brigs New World ey Matanzas; M & J C Gilmove, Eldridge, ¢hiladelphia; # Erench, Lewis, Baltimore, 2d, AM—Arr ship Iisdy, Wostmoreland ((8r), Stratcbon, Com santinople. Below, coming wv, 4 ships, names unkuowa, a y (Br), Tomilnson, Livertooi; brig Crimean, De Snow, Towed 15th inst, ships Sam Watts, Geri Woodbury, Walter beott, bark Avo Bendix; 16h, ships J & Keeler, Sweetland, barkg Augusta, Cherokee, L D Carver; 17th. abl Ophir, Agamemnon, brig’ HG Berry; 18, ehips Revenua, jarathon NORFOLK, Feb 24—A rr steamship Roaneke, Sk'nner, New Your hound 16 Richmord, bark Wilzateih J, ee, sth—are bark Cactingenn (Br Wainwright, 1 5 tehr Francis Aztemiva, Grant, NBedtord, pare Yoanes (Bp), Beblevelboin, Cardenas ‘Bid sehr Cumberland, Chase, NEW BEDFORD, Feb 2/—Bid schr Laura Jane, Young, 3 ork. Wh—Arr schr Mary Anna, Gibbs, Yortamout ve Bynain for Baitiwors or Philadelphia. cate aid” aa A, brig Alex Million, Fish, Darien, Ga. NEWKURYPORT, Feb 2/—Bid schra Louisiana, Daly, Pht Indelpbia (seo Disosiors); Mary, Piainted, Georgetown, 80, NEWPORT, Fed aM-In port brig’Joha Altred, Por- ry, trom Havana for New York, arr ‘his morzdag: schrs Fish Hawk, Tord) trom Norfolk tor Fall River; fiarriet Neal, Bunt, trom Lubec for NYork; and oibers as before. S14 sche Mary’ Mepxia (froma )) 8 Youk: and others. tbe ice in tha inner harbor, veesela cannot be boarded on arrival NkW HAVEN, Feb 25~Arr brig Thos Trowbridge, Lantatr, Port Spain, Frintdas NEW LONDON, i'eb %7—Arr propeller Decatur, Geer, York. ND, Feb 2i—Arr sshr A K MoKenzio, Drideo, Cardepen Wiel brig, Jean Hopties (ire Mauansan Shi oe Oe GMIDENGE, Fob 2 varebark Nyon, Adarmwon. M1 via Ne ‘Cid bark Chas Brower, Dena, Mobie, bate ee Jagzo, iehcia, Matanzas, ‘RICHMOND, Feb 26—Are achra T Baymond, Hulse, Atte hapany Lae Sharpe do; Hacall, Moss, N York: Hane: \er Diprle. Allen, Baker, Keeton. Sid steamship NYork; schrs Wesiover Rogars Boston; dear, Dunbar, Liverpool Magact. Lawis, ¥ ‘Doorn, Crocker. New Ofleann; ‘selre ceate, Catwoll Bowens Ophir, Poasa, Tavtciacd Crewell, : it, Pease, Rockland; Ce yates itatogna; Henico, Seroatiog’ Gallego, Seth? King Bud. Weeks; Danville. Chester; Lynchburg, Neiaon, apt only Daughter, Robbins, Now York.’ Sid teks Covisihun’, Ploniom, down the river to load, wily !uusder for Thomaston; echys Pearl, Chase; Arctic, Jackman: Wm Gregory, Buckland, sadJoin Bet), Ham, Boson; Ortanns, Tulle, aad New York Gra In Hampton Roads 2hth, bark Clack Haxall, of Richmond, from Rio de Jene.so, tor orc ROCKLAND, Yeb 2!~— Arr schra Nowran NYore fer Frankfort; ‘Bd, Justina, “whteher do tor der soby ellen. Biivera, Boston. Sil 22d ache Sephrovia, Van Nate, N Zork. ST MARKS, Feb 16—Arr brigs Suwanbea, Muaroe, NYore; G1 Ward, Barrows, da, SAVANNAH, Feb 2i—Avr rhips Hartford, Hallet, Boston; Kxste, Dunbar.’ Uiverpool; Queen, James, ‘Gem * Ward Chveman, Beck flaie’ Ferguson, decossed), Malta W206, ear Annie K Coxe, Witrpenny, Boston, with ed ¢xr@o, Sound from Mobile to Hoaton. Arr ship ft Bulk’) Rona, Liverpool. Old barks Tas Bowe, Oasty Soins Currin, Muufort, His Vte: Povel Sovercty ver pool. WILMINGTON, turmed, brig Harp, (ren, for West Tadles (ea Misceliscoour. Cli 2th, sobe Joba A Swnly, Siromore, § York. WMI Are bevy Prack, Rishardaon, Cerdenaa, sabe LP Suh West, N¥ore C Vark Saranse iqloy, Have ua f co Gay sea, Frecumar, Carndeams,

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