The New York Herald Newspaper, March 24, 1860, Page 5

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NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1860.—TRIPLE SHERBET, game democratic that we are | I cesire to do so in a manner which shall not involvoany | from insurrection there, in @- ‘not £0 vory darned drunk after Co eticut om Trial. Sree, amie which a 2 Ciseuasion of the legisiation or the political acts of ths ‘on ‘and to folet them | ell,” long and patiently for matches and lamp. [From the New York Tribune, March 23.] attention # pot merely a question of floance—it is not a | Siate of Compectiout, for it ie not my business to com: with off the washstand and smash- Areal Down ¥asi Conpectiout Yankee ie eoseally x0 questwn merely ot taxation, of war, er of psace, but a | from wsetia $7 oriticise the legisiaion of @ sister the finally gave up the search and ne On the etage and regarded throughout the slave- question whether this Union, uafer whieh allsec | State, J wil! prove it, therefore, in 4 form perfecily un- > lent to bed—yea, that’s the word; but bg States as @ remarkable compound of shrewd.es-, a ‘ong of the country have eontioued to flourish, shall be ———— and that ia, by the legislation of the State from the te: confusion of their senses, they | impudence and meannes:—a creature who would sell his perpetuated, with it sentiments of fraierniiy—with the | of wuscite, Ido not mean w say that Magsachu- 1Y, im this, and all other methods, the bli. | made @alight mistake. In short, Bill’s bed had the honor | wife or his sister or his native land for a hand(ul of gold. iy ackrowiedgmen! Of all the rights which belong to its con. | ectts is to be taken ae @ mode! State. Var from it, But indicated un- | of receiving the two friends—Tom getting in on one aide, | He bas no convictions, no generous instincts; and if "he situent paris—er whether i shall be handed over to the’| I do mean to say that her political acts and legislation in- iitmtional spirit by an open violation of that inetru- | and his friend rolling in on the other. profesees any {aiih, wheiher in religion or politics, it is exnent of fanatics and mistaken zealots—whetber it'| dicate the apirit of the repubucan party wherever it ob- | ment which is the fo ernment. (Ap- Bi,” Tom, touching somebody’s calf, | only that he may swindle a litte more extensively, adroit- be governed by the American democracy or sec- | tains the contro! of public affairs. Now, what ia the sys: | p) rened this career of ly or eafely. He but no soul, but a gizzard, very close 1 aboltioniem—that ie for you, gontiemen, t0 decide. | tem of legislation in Massachwetts! For a period of jtitutional where they have ‘ r '? exclaimed Bill, feeling @ a no devotion, but plenty of snutlie; and he sing. At this moment, while this great battle is being fought on | twenty years it bas been guided almost exclusively b: ja it not they ‘cannot {| etrange elbow in the region of hig rbe—“there’s som: list bymps through bis nose in Canada, deals faro the soi) of this litie commonwealth of Coanec: | an sboiltion sentiment, governed by free soil opi | be entrusted with the functions of the genera: | bed: my bed too.”” . ip California, preaches free-negroism in Chio, or sella tient, we have the whole peoole of this vast | piops—by precisely those opinions which constitute sreecnmen st It proves that all their present pro- ry) there, thought? eried Tom—“‘let’s kick ‘em out.’’ shackles and slave whips, horn tints and basswood pum p- Unien a6 imerested spectators. (That's 80.) Every- | the animating spirit of the republican party—and | feseions of pacific and patriotic purposes are A ” said Bill, 5 kin seeds in Alabama, according to the profit to be made » where, in every section of the Union, in every State, | that bas been in direct violation of of the | only pretences, by which they endeavor to avoid that de And accordingly the two friends began to kick. Tt laat- | by either operation. (nm the whole, having his weather im every Territory, from the heart's aitar of every Union | constitution of the United States, has been systematically, | feai wbich they see impending over them in the approach: | ed about a minute andabalf, and Bill was sprawls om | eye occasionally squinting towards kingdom come, he- loving wan ars.§ the prayer—God bless the democracy } deliberately and maliciously aimed at the violation of the | ing canvass for President of the United States. Now, geutio- | the floor; Tom was leit in poesession of the bed, For @ | would prefer to do God’s work for tour shillings per day ef Connecticut! (Appiause.) Byerywhere amoug the | constitution. Let us reflect for a moment on the subject. | men, what ia our duty? What is the duty of you, the demo- | moment all was silent, rather than the devil’s for four and six; but if the devil Duien-loviug men of this republic is the soune Tove felt | Remember that there United States are a confederation of | crats of Connecticut? Is It not parent that you shouid “Teay, Bill!” cried Tom, sheuld advance his price @ sixpence, of course be would ‘thet the rame gallant band which plated Oriilame | States, and that eachof these States has ita own domestic | stand by tho constitution, ite enemies, whether “What?” aeked Bill, sulkily. take the odds. of our country upon the embattled beignw of Chapuite epbere of legislation, in which it i# supreme; but that | foreign or d and defend it a, all aagault by “I have kicked my fellow out.” From the beginning of the present contest, the sham do- eball lift that same banner in victory oa the Sret Monday } each of these States hus accorded to the federal govern. | steel or sack, by “ foreign levy” or “ domestic malice?” ‘You are a devilish sight luckier than I am,”’ sald Bill, | mocracy of Covnecticuthave acted as though thoy believed of April next (cheers), to be an emblem then ag it was | ment exclusive jurisdiction over certain subjecls—things | 1 say that it is your duty, and 1 belicve that it wili be | “for mine has kicked mo out.” thie esi je of the Yankee character by their brethren before of a great national triumph and @ bright token of a | which belong to the functiovs of the general government. | your pride; end in go dolpg, and in qbtaining @ great and Whether Corwin will kick Seward out, or Seward kick | out of the State a perfectly jostone, Thus thoy raised tho new epech of unity and peace. Gentiomen, fa this contest | Now, among these functions are those which embrace | glorious victory here ip the State of Con: it, you de | Corwin out, I will not attempt to anticipate, but that they | cry that the South was withholding and withdrawing her many of our poliical brethren have come from other | the foreign and domestic peace of the state. The consti. | clare to the United States that there is at loast one bright, | are both drunk—indeed, grossly intoxicated, with deep po patronage from the workshops of thelr Stato, with evi. Bhates to assist us in the War we are waging. Most pro | tation accordingly abounds ix provisions, the object of | green epot in New England which is not infected, cor: tations of abolitionism, none can deny, and it mattera little | dent intent to iucite the proscription they proclaimed or minent among these is the geutleman who is to address | which is to secure to the citizen of each State the enjoy- | rupted or poleoned by the pestilence of abolitionism. - | which ia which or whether they both stay in or both go | predicted, Thus they sent an agent to Washington to in ‘ou this eveuing—one who, by bis abilities and learning, | ffent ot his right to personal property, and among them | tlemen, the cause is a great and glorious ove; you have to | out. But the care evinced by these leaders for th peoee duce the Scuthern members of Congress to impel their as added now ‘foatre to the Jorum and the bench, ai ig apecitio security to the slave property of the Southern maintain and uphold the institutions of the republic. | of Connecticut docs not truly represent. the black republi- |. constituents to withhold their orders from Coxuecticut whe served bis country &8 @ distinguished member of the | States. Among others of this class, we have an express | Look around upon our great couniry. Reflect in how {can party. Hear what ono of the loading republican pa- | factories and workshops until after the State election, cabinet of Franklin Pierce. T vow beg leave to introduce | provielon of the constitution that ‘no person held to ser- | many ages of the buman race, and in how many countries | pers of the country says of you, See your position as | Thus the republican emplorte Of the mos: extensive to the audience the H2a. Caleb Cushing, of Masagchusetts. | vice or to labor in one State, under the laws thereof, | of ancient and modern times, men have labored an¢ | painted by ove of the master Spirits of the party. Hesays: | manufacturer of arms in the State were discharged almost Mr. Cusning here came forward, amid See ringieg squad escaping therefrom into another State, eball, in conse- | labored im yain to reconcile individual and domestic down east Connecticut Yankee is regardedasare- | Cntircly a few weeks since. Thus tho cry has beem kept of tumultuous applause and the clashing of drums and —— of any law or regulation therein, be discharged | liberty with a powerful general government. It was tried up fof montbs, that the carriage manufacturers of Con- < 2 g Of shrewdness, impudeooa, and mean. ey mbals. i rom such service or labor, but be delivered up | in the old republics in Greece, in Rome, and elsewhere; but |} ress—a creature bo would well Nis wife Or sister’ or bie nattre necticut, especially those known as republicans, were BPRRCH OP THR HON. CALE CUSIING. on “claim of the party to whom such service or | after all, civic government was found io be smeompakible Japé for ful of gold, He hag no convictions, Ppymeee losing all their Southern orders, when in fact they never Mx. €qamman-~1 thank you, sir, most gratefully forthe | labor may be due.” Now in various republican | with extended territorial power, and so goon as the Ro.’ it ba Arve! pati a, fo lonor | before received £0 many orders 1a the first quarter of wordial weleome you have givea me this evening; and the | Northern States, and the State of Massachusetts | man republic expanded over the ‘world, it coased to be a iF OF pately. Te has Do soul bare itd ney | aby year ax they bave received since thia year opened; spectacle of this vast atsecmbly, if itrerve to inspire me | among the rest, we have enacted s series of | republic, and becamo of neccesity a monarchy. §0 alto no devoulon, but plenty of snufile; and be'ainge anda lege proportion of them ome from the & effort, is at the game time the im oe lawe, every one of which bas the sole and object | in modern times. What republics are there in Europe / through his nose in Canada, deals faro South. The Scutbern merchants, with scarcely an preesion of tay respon- my Bibility en thie occasion. Iam here to-night as a bomble | of nullifying this international right, ferred by the free negroism in Obio, oF sells shackles | exception, have booght their carriages and other goods of poldier m the ranks of the great army pp Sonstituiion of the United ‘States. Pet; Sonus A im | lowly marshes of the Netherlands—thero in the mountain oe Gud basswood pumpkin seeds in Those, who would afford them ey they wanted on jam and Unionism, and as such please to regard me. | the year 1843, with the firat personal liberty law of Gens of Gaitzeriand, or on the bare hill tops of Ban havin hie Cemade by elther operas. 1 most favorable terms ; just as Connecticut as bought her Gentlemen, democratic citizens of the State of Connecti. | chusctts. That persona) liberty law, in ita three sections, is 0. Dt topeard vingwomn worse, No wend preter forks ay |) Cotton, rice and tobacco precisely where she could buy cut, I depart from.all the practice of my life in leaving my | aimed exclusively and solely, and in express words, at | We and we alone possess thoee rs ‘wo! ‘four sblilings per day rather shan the devil's work for | Mott advantagecusly—no questions as to politics being Own Stato to discues political snd party questions apper- | the nullification of that and govern—which give to us the domestic trangulllity | Jour end atx; but it'ibedvevitehewd advance Gl prices ux | aaked by buyer or seller tu'elther oase, "taining to the annual domseatio elections of the Governor cA ty rp R iy pth of the constitution, fee for tare aphnns 2 able A ‘The effect of that, Peace and liberty oompatible with great national power | pence, of ogpree be would The of yeaterday pursues the game of bullying by, to Mr. Woon then went into a statement of the proofs of | or bribing the freemen of Connecticut, as follows -— theeympathy which the republicans held with the John ‘The jobbirg houses of New York, from the number of 300 Brown raid. Ho dwelt upon the evidence which bad [2th Pycehene Cosneetions, goods, and they sell them to tho 5 ‘been furmished which connected that party with the Har- | Sout! a ie ets will ot buy theae from. New us } per’s Ferry magsacte, reading extracts from the republi- | York houses, then ie it not plain that the industrie! interests of dimalegs lustre in ths proud Lrepest, therefore, that al! the provisions of that | freedom of action. \ We have tho vast prairies of the | can prees of Ooanecticut to show bow fully that Lioody reat aca aru pe agMsiee ha he wetibdenwral of the Aouthers Tell of his country's herors and statcemen—(applause)— | act have for their express and sole object the nullification | West before us. Atthe same time that we increase our | affair was sustained by them. The republicans did not Tere alrei ph ty Be ri under whese leaderebip: it were honorable even to fail, | of the constitution of the United States and the acta of , We secure and protect our public ii deny the responsibility. Their teachings had produced | conservative movement for the pui of confidenee but under which it would be thrice glorious to triumph. | Cougress which have been passed in pursuance of the These are our institutions, and their vir- } that result. The Now York ?ribune had declared that | tothe South! But confidence is not restored to the and But theee censiderations, serious as they are, and | coustitution. Indeed, so patent is that gasault that | tue and excellence are the secret of their | “Old Johm Brown” was a good republican. The New | Will ‘met be, ‘ill it is scoomplished by m revolution at knperatively ag ow address themselves to. me | constitution and the constitutional rights of the strength, the only element of their durability consisting | Rayon Journal and ‘had eaid on the day that John | {26 bellct box How is this to be done? Not by the + %m my relations special personal regard and | States, Liat, dass ak ia Sine, whan Dee republican in the reconcilement of the power of individual Staks | Brown was hung:— ¥ aveeches of Caleb Cushing, nor even of Mayor Wood, \ esteem to that gentleman, would not have | begins to be apprehensive sofficed jo jecuee a come bose Gin evening, or at Fs iigr lyr ay aye ~) where it beware onsen any time, to engage ‘an election State nec. members oj are beginning to io it J ‘to make their earance in public in aba} form, Heat, if it were bot that your edvoreatien had broken | giss for thia lepialation, and’to endearce iw shea, nai on lies, to pul an end to this peelliential agitation, dis town arc resi by the Mother of Satesasentibet | but io visit ihe maanetoctarers pr raiay, ond reprevent iba down the barrier of State Hmits amd set the ie not agaiset the constitution. But what iy cnegety gy vege mp need keep nal, eadowed 3 ie John Brows {s to be bung beesuse be actod on the belief Gr ict betsdied Jobbtag bvunes in stew Yexk. har whet ae? fl nee In Preserve those inetitutions? Zour | the aftrmation the Declaration of Indepenaense bas some, | By sending out tbetr conbdentia gents, hot to make speeches, more than 4 nor: the splays Dz spate te vergoefpeitcl a | un e4 tnt tm Wary and Sn phology ar | feutand te adect Rgw Sort hairs inn, wc jutroducing a8 sdvocates of their cause the citizens of | are these ? A gentleman in Congress | and rushing us on, step to the dis. ness are ul of New York if | na juss thes present, we tains ‘Ins geastin Gong ive, tneny | Caotuling tmutenen er dnl Ba and cd tsumph. I eee a ig eS by = aR rng to | fears serra ft Rew Fy ao ie it ete a8 preseat, we . et y have wo } unl \pudence to r! you will. r 1 ‘of the Soi dows, we take up ‘They ao orto; baa we | tae repcbionan are tt cease Par tes tacos, ee | cet bai nee ee eee in this great and | Brown's executon ;— {eiety outs oid a rat Treating, a och thle ‘ enter. They invite us to thia close fleld of the State of | sooth, it was passed in the year 1855, 4 the reiga of rinse tape Re Seas ot ‘our enthusiastic endeavors } Jobn Brown had no murder, no treason in his heart. Hla | 'usly agents to make this appeal to the pockets, which, if , Gonneeticut to ight the battles of the Union. We acccept | the Americans. Bat that excuse will suffice, It is | to redeem the State of ie sending a thrill mission was one of roperly frat. pill be er than any [ the invitation, and here we begin the preliminary combat | the pettifogger’s ; for the same act—that which isin | exultation and sympathetic joy and admiration - [ poems and processions, will celeb Bis fame, and give his U the off wih old ead water of the approaching great contest for the preservation af | ‘direct violation of the copstitution—was revised and put | out the United Btates. (Applause. Tt ia true, as the P pame lo posterity of @ good man ands tue e influence of the New York jebving bouses, can ecntrol tne t&e Union and the constitution. (Applause) It isa na- | in force in tho year 1858, under # republican government | Chairman of the evening |, that the eyes of the Union ticetion carry tbe Keymour ticket ‘next moath, and break the ficnal cause, and @ glorious one, for it is the question | and with a republican majority in the State. Nay, in | are fixed on you with apxious and solicitous and a‘ And again it sald:— cordon ot New Kngiand States, which stood together for re. Srey, & ote as Sah pa Eta | anne Se wen eas Roan Menges ee | RAL tat Reel Poni ave pnd ae tf Kear wmwest hevowmanatmanmaaen, | gion note, aiaata ee Lat coen’ , or whet & eame ‘was re’ ion oi fas nn very sam! 5 ne; whether the custody 0 the constiaton shall be | sachusetis’so that it isin vain to say that the repabi | pisuse.)° That, fou ell ier we Tot woe Pip 22°, Winstead cg rg ey Sean be the earnest of victory in the same Gtato next fall z In strict accordance with the general programme of the Hera, the foilowing secret circular has besn extensively @ among the jobbers of dry goods, principles, and it our city. reese tng | ober noun, be taken from the hands of fis friends and be given to its | can party is not responsible for it. Another excuse has fy,” God ‘that you enemies; whether, indeed, the Union shall or be | been suggested, and that by @ gentleman from whom A an @ashed prostrate by the frantic fury of that fanatic | should not have come. Senator Tr, Of the State Herald, wi us all hope; and let last year or two a member of the Republican State aa thus’ be, in His tral Committee, says of Jobn Brown: abolitionsm which rages like a pestilont epidemic in so | Vermont, and Senator Wade, of Ohio, have a= 3 8 d that of the Northern States. That is the question, | these personal liberty laws were designed for ‘Brow: CONPLDRE: it is ene upon which every an ay monte tbs tbed.cr fe Ataeret eee ‘ashes ‘will Raw Yors, Moreh 211 Hoe. and 19 Warrea sive Be proud here to speak. Is it not true that in the ‘which they are enacted. A general contradiction of this will be goa pos igre ty oho we bbl Soy Pat of shese vain phantoms of sbolitionism—nay,'in the alti. | may be.seen in the fast that although in their titles they pe hE pa Ei Us! nonstnations and election, vation of the odious sectional spirit of abolitioniem—all | falsely pretend the protection of the citizen, yet all en- 07° F itt sbould unfortanstely result Uke New Hampshire, (be effect the wterests of our common country are at stake? Our | actments aro for the sole purpose of nullifying the act of | plant ourselves on the ramparts of the constitution. ‘The must be very injurions. manufactures, our commerce, our political interests are | Congress for the rendition of fugitive slaves. These acte | to resist every attack, from whatever side it may come, ax sary ng = Diack republican | ™A’nomber of gentiemen, deeply interested in the cause, bare 8) of them in imminent peril; and even the honor of our | do not throw apy safeguard around the fugitive for | on the and the Union—Zslo perpeua, (Ap: | Paper, thus gives vent to its feelings;— associated for parent lop roatantal aagicto th country iteelf is deeply endangered. Yet, in the face of | imputed crime. A white man is not in any | plause. Johm Brown died a martyr to the cause of fair dealing and | Siate Commitice defraying (heir general and special | ' a this, looking around upon the rage of that sectional | case, but a Diack man is all, to bo} Owing to the extrome evening, Mr. | donest prineipies. ‘The moat strew nous e‘foris are being made by the republican ; fury which peaneat pone Nberty roy It see) pace ot ised poodle 2h se eloquent q And the Hartford Press raved thus;— arty to carry the election at all hazards sia then? ‘Whew #1 itive from the jastice of Connecticut | were received the approbation of his large au- fis engaged tn tha Fouinara, bad Bubwedrt rade, Be- pay ote toe yee cheers were then for Gov. Seymour, Jour approval, wil fe! happy to baba tthe eomniiee your the law of the State wheto the crime was committed, three for Gen. Cushing, three for the National Hall and repay moto se, T wil be glad to hous from you Nor ts the rule confined to criminal matters, If s debtor mocracy, and the | byor before Saturday a |, tos. Yours, very . Ae a Ry PO YORE Hehrye, Smith & Townsend, ; B.M. & B.A. Whitlock, Bate de hs domell for the trial of there whe Demecratte Mass Mecting at Middletown. Soro: Gast olga a. Beprar Oo, ey au wife, or your minor child, or your apprentice runs away | SPRECHES OF MAYOR WOOD AND DR. BRADFORD OF son Q, Hunt, $260; 4. nt, $800; Allen, Melean & Bulk + process of poly A aL ‘white persona, ins thnchdety ey headioons feet geal be! T= eae ee (one, since oul fe mY upon boasted they D provided tachusstia, ‘Nor OU they to be; tee Pager Reghine | Se Connections river of about 8,000 inhabitants and 1,400 Aan Bie 9 thd omelet peg Meo alaves to be. The great rule of international comity | voters, held an immense mass meeting last evening. Mid- Dut one way, that a way which morality, democracy. tall Christendoia, apd the cxprens rale of the eonstitn- | dletown gave a democratic majority last year of about six and law unite in stern!: ding. It is in effect givon Acquired or exiolng, ia anoihor State ‘and os tones | bundred, and from the apirit manifested, promises to in- oat ena Fe PE aad tate song ein en he ni ote of Property or persona be determined to | erease the majority st the approaching election. The know how to choose. is our position to- Propaganda; the inst resort is to see whether @ men a law of State of the ‘y's ‘whole country seems alive with excitement and strongly | night. ice the days of Jeflerson there has boen no | thousand or more of them cannot be bought. If there cil. Ronaway slaves from Virginia and uisyiand are not democratic. Last evening the democratic headquarters | “ange in the densest party, cither in regard to our } are republicans in Connecticut whom nefther conscience, domestic or foreign peter. It is the game in New York, | bor pride, nor shame, can withhold from the pit of infamy necessarily or generally. sy the unoonstitational and the Yeung Men’s Chepultepec Club Room wore illu- | and here in the North the South, upon the Atlantic | now being cug before their feet—if there be one thousand voters after e twelve moutkareiaoos, while wha amt | mitaled, bonfires blazed inthe main nest, cannons were | snd tbe Face mags. On, She aber bind Miho repabl: | uch whe areat beat th. aso, sori wretces which can wi 1e fee Ptands uy) oir race aD in ha ley grants from Burope, although citizens ot the United Staten, | SFPd, and alarge torchlight procession, with several bands A beaned.,40.,the.,|..Seadiucers, now js thelr cance to show’ themesives: what 17 t , , | Of music, paraded the town. The hall was altogether too | South means—if it means anything—the abolition of ae are, and remind the world that, though Connecticut the pretence in the titles of these | mg Uberty | small for the immense gathéring, and bundrods were un- | slavery, though they think it expedient to die- | bad few tories in the Revolution, she was nevertheless the ps Mey ae ene a Psy od Test, | sbie to obtain admittance. guise i now, Suppose that slavery were | birthplace of Benovict Arnold. If there be any of her false false pretence, disgraceful Legis r abolished, working men of Connecticut, me Ae living sons envious of his fame and fate the opportunit; lature of that State as falsehood, and still more 0 The meeting was most unanimous and enthusiestic. ould tay Goeth Gt Sirenee ied tagtios ut many an “ goed now afforded them. Let the unpurchasable republi- Sueh a conflict does, fin part, exist; but it is whol- | because deliberately designed to cover up and conceal the | Dr. Woodward was and Would come North to ‘compete with you, "What woult | cane of each township and ward lake care that no fraud Wy incepenient of, and inno reapect aflected by, the con. | dngrant violation of the Sonsusion of toe Unied Sates, | DE Wood dlpedyreipsatiacmapry mallard fy hg pee aro oe I RS ROR I aE Acapella Siderations of political economy delusively introduced into | Again, the abolitionized Northern habitually and Aemocercy, »which } cents a day, and olther you mast be ‘or the no | which corruption alone oan deprive thorn. ‘We question by Mr. Seward. It is nota conflict of inte- Speen Temes tne previaeas ee the constitation | were heartily given, ho introduced Dr. Bradford, of New either must oocupy his OF 160) Dim | gems pgp YI NRREP ee erp reste, but ef ideas. Itai is t© be found in the in- | of the United States inte! for the protection of the in- | York; who was greeted by applause. fe says that there is an “4; le con- tolerance of other persons’ opinions, tastes and habits; | terstate commercial and social intercourse, and the re- Dr. mp said that he could hia derstand | tict between the North and the South.” God designs SHIPPING NEWS the eager zeal to reduce everything to our own standard ciprocal security of Property within the diferent Phare aly the laborers and the labor to suit the climate? Here we ® © measure; the Tieks ont, £0 toca Se eacenie: States. It is Great principle of international | how a State whose people were so hospitable, so indus- | manufacture. At the South they raise agricultural pro- - ef spit tie fanatical propagandis in short, w comity in all Christendom that, as 4 general ‘rule, every | trious, ao ingenious,/and 20 intelligent, could have nurured } duets, the most of which we could aot rae. "We do not ALMANAO YOR WEW YoRe=rn18 DAY. eenstiutes one of the elements of virtue, and, by easy | man’s right of person or property is to be determined tn ifs botom 80 ® t as black republican interfere with each other. You are most emp! 568 transition, one of the vioes of character of the people of | by the Jaw of his domic!, or Toc, thatthe Sate of ently, % eurnes lack, rer ed at thelr work, or they at yours. the Northern States, and ae es ‘those o wi ie et georhk ‘Thue inbred hese nes fanaticism. It must be that so good @ people had ‘been | two systems 9, on harmoniously logether. Btates of New land. We are prone dogmatically States goos sojourn, pecs through France | misled by fanatical teachers. Ho was glad now } False cotton, eat conservator potters tet Soe habits, associoons and opinions, and | on his way to lialy, with apertect sense of security tn re- | 4p y ie et 8 r id hachirwen iii! aby ete Sk Gamer, cima ation bet Pert of New York, March 23, 1860. these enly, are. right, and to endeavor to . cut d to all bis individual rights to person or property. | the people seemed reso! shake off the repubiican | made my own city. Upon that #oil’no other lator but qeARen. down or carp at the opinions, habits and bas not the least fear of being stripped of his apparel | yoke, and to vindicate their conservative nati Onality | black could flourish; and £0 God has provided it. I will Steamship Cis of (Br), Petrle, Liverpool and useges of all ethers upon our own bed of Procrustes. | or personal baggage, as he might be a: ‘the barbarous by electing Scymour. (Applause.) The speaker ar- | Show you where the enemies of this jon of the couD- Queenstown—2 0 5 peer ‘That does create conflict between us and others ll the | people of Asia or Africa. That is the Aistinction be- a testo tag try are; England and France have spent millions of dol. | —Sleamehip Vanderbilt, Lefevre, Southampton and Harre—D tme, and it is irrepressible in vo far as we indulge our- } tween the civilized and savage States. Go also in Franca | Sued against repu rom the increase in | jare in’ an attempt to raise cotton. They have tried it | Terrance. serie * selves in irrepress:ble cbetinacy and wilfulneas of | or Germany, if acompanied by his wife and children, he | the State debt and taxes of Connecticut, and then dwelt {| moge recently in Africa amd Algiers. The North com- bteamsbip Marion, Foster, Charlestou—Spoftord, Tieston & intermeddling with other people’s 8. Thatis the | knows weil tha tthe matri@onuial and pareatal 8 apper- . tes with these countrics in navigation and manufac- true and sole cause of conflict between us and the South. | taining to him by the law of hie own country write respeet. | "PO the importance of victory now in affecting the na. | Pe gat tures, but the South eompetes with them in nothing. On fi Tet us of the Northern States mind our own business, | ed inthe country of his sojourn, That js the in- | tonal contestmow go near. He continued by arguing that | the oiker hand she supplies them wilh ootton, rise and | “hos Magnolia, Rtarkey, Panama—Tappan & Starbvok. and the eonflict ceases. It continues and grows aggra- | ternational comity of Christian Earop® and America. Still, | the North only relinquished slavery when it became un- | sugar, without which they ceuld not subsist a year; Bark Aetive (Nor), ‘Hopp, Cronstandt—F uneb 4 Meincke. ‘vated in preportion to our bigotry, our intolerance, ard | it is but a rule of comity, and is subject to be limited or profitable, and that the South would dothe same; that | therefore England and Franco are cager to accomplish Bark Dido (Ham), Ipiand, Peeve ae Meincke. our epirit of wrongheaded intermeddiesomeness. We | abridged by the local law. Now, in establishing the con- ? & dissolution of the Union, to havo the South, to Be] Bare yee vena, etd At scare may indulge in this meddlesomeness of temper to the | federation of the United States, our wise forefathers, | “lavery was necersary to our national prosperity, and | which they are friendly, secede from the North, Fabs Yori; Diwortag, onilo. tausuee A Cloner danger of maxingeverybody uncomfortable. We may | those very fathers under whose opinions or example the | was no evil to the negro; that even if slavery wasanevil, | to which they are necessarily hostile. They Scbr Helen, Long, Mobiie—N H Brigham. persevere until we make everybody angry; we may pur. } republicans disingenvously endeavor to shelter and hide & black republican victory could not change it, as no Prem- would have a Southern Confederacy formed. They Sebr G Harris, Tetsey, Wilmingtoo—Dollner, Potter & Co. Sue it one step further until it becomes insufferable; or | their own unconstitutional acts and purposeg—I eay our ae would supply the South with money, arma, and, if noces- Schr Mountain Avenue, Grtenteld, Philadelphis—Jas Band, finally we way yield ourselves to acts of aggression and | wise forefathers saw tbat it would not doto leave this | dent had power to interfere with a State’s domestic af- | gary, men enovgh to hold her own against the North, or Pe ears Heteesy, Faoseloue\ W Mokes, vioiation of the rights of otbers in the attempts to con- | great privciple of interstate intercourse to the mere dig- | fairs; that the extension of ny would not increase | against auy nation in the world, with the aid of her al- eh Reg be poe , vert them to our opinions, and then it is war—private or | cretion of the different States. Aooordingly they inserted | the number ot elaves, or the sum of their suffering, but } les. My friends, this is the fact. Vrance and England pudiic, according as it docs or docs -* vo whe in the Constitution the following provision: oe gece were Rete obs Sate Sa influence. | know that, i eye Moy aay ile ge a ‘qin nal acts to thore of governments. point ‘3 ‘Applause. je them arraigned republican 93 | cannot survive for twenty four hours, an ory Meseiated. aboiitioniets end republicans are OTR PR pe ge teeny tay apne viral am (GiRiories to the Tall of ohm Brown, Capplacso.) | would obtain, by tho dtsolction of the Union, those pre. aotislavery propagandiem, and that isthe rel i ‘aes Brown was carrying out the republican programme. (Ap- | ducts which are necessary to their existence. This i@ no which it mcuacea the public peace, by its unconstita- ‘This proviaion is of great importance, of far more, in- pea.) He then read newspaper extracts to prove this. } chimera; I know it to be a fact, and I know it because, ARRIVED. ite incompatibility with the principles of the | deed, than is commonly supposed. Let us refiect upon ft, ese extracts were greeted by mingled ironical ap- } upon his recent visit to Europe, Seward had oconversa- moisamie: Fotensee, Valk, rortient, with mdse and pas- Union. All such persons and parties are A citizen of Connecticut goes to Baltimore with his ship | plause and hisses. The speaker said it was impossible, | tiens upon this subject with members of tho | sengers.to (ty mt Teo ). Hewes, Liverpool, 34 to the public peace. Their action tends to un- | and merchandise for sale, having om board, besides the | then, for the republican ty to clear ita skirts of the | Britieh ministry. The speaker then asked what jan ane, to Nesmith & Bove. No date, iat 41 6¥, lon @enstitutionality and violence just in the degree | crew, his wife, a child, and an indented apprentice. What | doings of John iD. conversing a few days ago | would be the result if the South should insist upon | 80 spoke ship Java, sieering, k by 8; 1th inst, off Gay Head, of the carnestnets and sincerity of their character and | prevents the State of Maryland from confiscating the ship | with a leading cloth manufacturer at Norwalk, he was | settling cur affairs by force of arms, and should outrage | toox piict from boat J D Jones, No 15. epinions. The frantic rage of writings and speeches | and ret When the State officer comes to take | eae informed that bis business had fallen off one half, because | us as we do her by such insane interference with slave- Bark Roanoke, Teorapeon, Pernambuoo, $0 days, with sugar, ¢f Garrison, Parker and Phillips, their incendiarism, their | sion of it, will you urge that lt Ja your property? Butthe | of the alienation of the “South, and a bat manufac- | ry? And do we think the South more patient or any less | {0 Kirkland & Van Sachs. Experienced heavy weather inside aegry denunciation and vituperstion of the South, eviace | State of Maryland may reply, that if local law, and we | turer at Danbury said the same thing. Comment. | decided in defence of her rights than ouraclyes? Sia SL Kate ycstit,, Marssdibo;” Meare & will sollie'be, their force of conviction. So John Brown’s abolitioniem | don’t care for the tocal Ina ‘Of Connecticut, Besides, the | ing upon the Hon. Tom Corwin’s late speech he } is a@omestic affair, and cach State must settle it for itself. | .,” ‘Meitland Phelps ‘& Go. Balled ih En. sftp Storm King, Callaghan, San Franciseo—W T Coleman company witn schra 4 der im Kansas and treagon in Vir- | State of land show me the statute of Connecti. | said that he would pay Corwin the iment | But the republicans sey tbat they do not wish to interfere 7 J Rodgers, both for New York; also, Fr bark oat ty tema the foroe of his opinion, co out which expresiiy oe 1 you toown a ship, or even | of saying that his speeches had not provoked much } with slavery where it is. They wish only to restrict it Sterptertietoe Marseile 0th inst, lat 1845, ett was in ‘with she obstivacy and cold blooded ferocity na- | the coat upon your back. We do not believe you can find | republican applause. (Great laughter.) But when Mr. | from the Territories. Now the Territories are the park or whhechr Matchless, of New London; 1 at 3) 02, tare. So the propagandist zeal of the Germans [a the ‘such express lnw on the statute book of Connecticut. | Corwin attacked Mayor Wood, he disagreeably recalled } the common of the nation. Any one can go npon them. } lon pees ; Eiricenth century, the efforta of the Protestants to convort | 80° as you bave nothing to protect your alip and cargo, | to mind his own connection ‘with the Calp case, of | If you go into a State you must obey the lawn of that | 1éth, lat 34; lon. 74 45, spoke ably Hunan, Crocker, Of ey ‘the Catholics, and of the te convert the Protes- bi nd itd Jocal law, and cannot even produce that, the | which he was the counsellor, and lobbyer and congres. | State; but when you go into a Territory the law of your | Gychte FR for © vk fants cu)mipated in the irrepressible conflict of the sangui- | State of Maryland seems to have a good case against you. | sional friend. The Speaker then eoncluded amid great | own State protects your property, whether {i be ‘Bark Old Dom‘nion, Johnston, Havana, 15 days, with sugar, Rary and destructive war of thirty years, terminating in | Worse than that: your wife, who is with you, | applause, by recalling the enthusiaem of the republicans | property in laves or anything elec. Don’t } t Robert Williams; 17th tust, lat 32 30, lon 76 50, passed bark ihe wjeoch lately al: bas been im the. habit, at home, of attend- | at Norwaik at veing told by Corwin that as the was in company with bark Dw oke Westphalia. Now, in by Degrowas | start when I 61 property in slaves, for the | Yumuri, Anderson, from Matanzes for New York. paler tl Mr. Seward to the Senate and the country, in | ing abolition and womens’ ts mootings, | dcscended from Ham and they from Japhet, they and the | constitution re¢ognises it, End 60 does the law fof the Serer ernie Sens, Bey Crane, Metanme, 14 days, the justification of himself and the republican party, be | and bas thus got some pretty large notions of liberty in | negroes must be blood cousins. United States and of the Southern States. Noonocan | "hie Bin owbriage wf New Hoven), Soofeld, Agnadila, PR, ‘mdors to cover up and keep eutof ‘viow the retical and her bendy ad she bees fit to leave you, taking your child ¢ Chairmen then introduced Mayor Wood, of New } abolich property in slaves in a Territory but thoae who with sugar acd moi 8, to master. 224 met, off Barcieget, revolutionary passions and purposes of the party, aud it | and apprentice with her, and perhaps all the contents of | York, who was greeted with nine rousing chcers. hold them. I don’t say whether this is right or wrong. | passed a eebr of about 140 tons, boom up, painted green, anc assumes the attitade and guise of devotion to your cash box, and proceeds to establish berzelf in a free Mr, Woop opened bis by congratulating the peo- } I don’t eay whether slavery itself is right or wreng, but apparently not long Jn that ritvation. the eonstitation and the Unioa. How stands the | condition at Barnum’s. What are you going todo? Will | ple of Connecticut upon great interest manifested by | 1 do say that the republicans are oyt im their reasoning ‘be Cerito pad Boston), Grewal Jaemal 14 sys Mook bed aestion? Can the friends of the Union and the coustitution | you sppealto the courts of Maryland for redress, pre- | the black republicans in thetr local affairs. This sudden | upon slavery in the Territories. e republican party | f¢@. logwood and mahogsny, to aa inst, . Professions cing was to be regarded itor Ricolamole, spoke sehr Enchantresa, from Maracaibo for New these deathbed of the repablicane? I | ten that the lady is your wife, the child under | fricudship, he said to be ap an eyidence of | are very so! 8 Dow about Connecticut. Now, I want . Bi hiess. for New York. eS eae thomead’ mes no; and. this atiempt our authority, tbe apprentice held to serve you by the | contrition for the ip, » ‘York. Sid in company with sehr Maichiees for New Yor ws may injuries which this same party had so | the people of Connecticut to hear what the New York febr Philander Armutrong (of Boston), Whitmore, Atlakapas, of Connectiout? Ab! but the State of Maryland | often inilicted upon them. Having taken the State from | Triluneeays of them. Mayor Wood then read tho first days, wb su yar and ‘mofasnes, to Sturges & U ythat is your local law; what do we care for | cemocratic bands, out of debt, and with a large surplus in agraph of the editorial upon Counecticut in yesterday's Sebr Eunn: ‘¢ @ntirely' disingenuous or basely bypooritical and false to- | that? ig what the State of Maryland would say, | the treasury, that party had plunged it into an untathom- [asta poe secre cTarria, Rishesond Bangs. (wards either the North or South. So ft must be of no- | bothasto your property ani your family, if ita legislators | able cuif of pecuniary embarrassment and increasing Areal Down Bast Connectiont Yankee is generally Geir Moaoheate:, Rath, Winoned 4 Gaee. eensity. It is bute fow short years since Seward do. | bad been corrupted, at to0 many of ours have been, by | taxatkn. The presumption wag, therefore, that» change | senied on the stage ard regarded Groughowt the slavehsiaing | eere yananemer, Neleon, Richmond Adaya. to the Ne of Ohio thet “Slavery must and | the fanaticism of unconstitutional interstate hostility. | had come ‘‘o’er the epirit of their dreams,” and that now | Statess#a remarkable com id of okren sngotence heavy northerly gales. shail be abolighed, and you and I must doit.” Ata later | They might Personal liberty laws, as Maseachuretia | they sought either to divert public indignation by preach. | snd meanners—a cresture who would sell his wite or hie sister | keit George W Gover, Thomas, Norfolk, 3 daya, fay, in s speech addressed to the people of New York, | and otter States have done; under’ the false protence | ing antl Slavery dogmas, or atone by exbibitious of fine | oF bs nelve ined for s handful of old, He hes no convictions, | Sehr Telegraph, Nickerson, Norfolk for Boston. Se écclared toat the contict between the two social sys’ | of Protecting the liberty of the citizens of the Sta.o | black republican eloquence, thus giving stones instead of | f° koueruve insitiens, and if be 5 mg as Ce aac tems of labor in the North and South is an irrepressible | of “Maryland, but in fact to eval away and kidnap | bread. Within the past fortnight the ebining lights of | More “oxtensitely, advan Baanosoal, but a | Sehr Julia e Franklin, Mike Virginia. eonilict, and must go on until one conquers and crushes | persons under subjection by law to the citizens ) that delectable faction had been among them. Among | girzsrd, very close grained; no devotion, but plenty of auntie, Fehr T P Barhalow, Bodine, Virginia the ether, an event which can only result from an ag-| of other States.. They might pass laws to | cthersthey bad been treated to the eloquence of Tom | and be singe Me hy ons through his nose in Oanada, denis fehr Loulea Francis. Higgins Georgetown, DO, 4 days. invasion of the Sonth by the North or tne Noria | conflecate your propérty in ships or merchandise, | Corwin, who bad come from Washington to edify them, } ‘sro tn Oslifornia, preaches free pegroiam in Ohio, or selis Echr Bergen, McKee, Georgetown D0, 4 dass, y the South. Yet now, foreooth, we sre told that hi¢ | as you have done to coufleeate thelr property in slaves. | He (Mr. Wood) felt it quite propor to allude to thin gen. | sbeckele xnd siaye whips. horn iliniaand besawood pumpkin | Sehr Bamuel Bday, Bday, core Ae means nothing, that {ti perfectly innocent, and that the | They aro very likely to do so if you coptinge to pues such | tleman, as he held in his band the New York Times ot | Sects nslavame, scgording to the prof be maceby olker | Fehr Klize Fbaro, Cramer. Fhisdelobia, party which he ri sare not to be mistrusted, nor | laws. But ai] such laws, whether pasted by them or by | to-day, which contained a long tirade of Corwin’s against | syu'niiug toward kingdom come, be would preter to do God's Bebr Jave £ Jobnaon, Bunter, Phusdelphis, 3 dave. ‘their new proteasitan abd pretensions doubted. Bat the | gou, wonld be palpably contrary to the constitution of the | bimgel’, in which that gentleman had endeavored by | w: rx for four shillings a rather than t& devil's for four Schr Marie L Hall, Lawrence, Elizabethoort for Portland truth, however, isthat in this very speech from beginning, | United States, which, in the clause abeve cited, protects | ridicule and sopbietry to answer tbe logic and the | ar ie if ihe devil should advance bis price a sixpence of Bebr Pennsylvania, Ladd, Kuzabethpor for Portland middle to the end, it ‘ts Quashie and nothing | and secures your rights of person and property in Mary- | facts of the Norwalk speech of Mr. Wood. There. | course be would tke the odds. eamer Delaware, Cannon, Philacetphs Ay .) AG in the opera | land, as tt does those of the Marylander im Connecticut. | fore, be said, in his opinion it was well that He thought that this was a confession that the republi- Steamer Pellcan, Aldriah, Providence. it Site hero, Figaro | Such was the wire thought of the fathers of the republic | Mr. Corwin had come away there. He wag a | cars bad given op the State. I cbngratuiate you upon the BELOW. Gere, Figaro above, Figaro below,” so it is with the do- | before thete days of abolition corruption had come upon | most one man to represent the economy of the biack | honor and suecees which awaits you. 1 myself am an ex- Sehr Dagzle, Atwood, from Cienfuezos. of Mr. Seward, And yetwe are asked to be- | the Northern States. Of yore these rights of sojourn and. ublican party. His experience as a member of the | ample of the effect of republican abuse. I was @ poor | Also cue ship, ove bark and four brigs. Neve that there is nothing in this of trapsit were not only guaranteed by the constitution of | Cabinet that allowed and paid the Galphin claim, tosay | boy in New York until the republicans again and again BalLED. ¥ thai the United Sta'es, but were even recognized oo pothing of avy participapcy by members of that Cabinet | hbelled and abuse me into power; and the more they | Stips Cambria (Br), Glasgow; Far West, Mie Ortouney beige laws of the different States. Now most of such laws have | in the claim livelf, rendered that gentleman a fit exponent | bave abused me the bigher Ihave riven. ( Isughtor | Lavaca, Mobite; er hw} a TES tes Deen repealed. I beticve there is but one—the State of | of black republican principles. Fheretore, if the people | and applauee.) The speaker then dwei pon mode Teteae. ryt 4 » Laverpeoi; New Jerscy—in which they remain. All honor, for this | of Connecticut aro not fully imetructed im the science of | effect of the non-intercourse of the South, which would : NWtoe and other tningg, to the siabls, congtant, brave and patri- olitical and financiering economy a Meme oh soon convince property holders and workingmen that Wid during the cay otic State of New Jersey. How shamefal is the cou- Tom Corwin, it could Rot be becaune the teacher not | the republican Lge Tevelutionary party, which trast, in this reepect, between New Jersey and other | experience in the ecience. But Corwin was not content to | would make thos re the memory of Henry Clay Tele; ph Marine Reports, Northern Btates, one of which, for example—the State | edify them on finance—he went farther, and set himself | and followed his banner, acknowledge that the democratic HIGHLANDS. March 2, eunget—One sbin, one bark aad of /hag, within the year past, under the in- Lo asthe great leader and expounder of niggerism . | is the only national party, snd Jead them to join it, and | two brig in the ofling. Wind NW, light; weatner clear, fluence of yudlican , made it a penitentiary | He denied that the black republican party was for aboli- | which would give demooracy a glorious success. He then SANDY HOOK, March 23, sunsct—No vessels in sight offence op & Southern 'y to enter or even to touch the | tion; he said that he himeelf was the founder of the pre- | dwelt upon the vale of the €onnecticut election ina na | bound in, Wind ENE, tight; weather clear. Sehr ¥ State of Michigan with her child's nurse in her company. | sent party oppoeed to the democracy—that he had been | tional point of view, entreated all to work and to vote, | which was ashore on the Hook, was floated off at 6 PM. And thus, in defiance of the constitution, as well as ef | the firet to raise tho standard of revolt against the demo- | and declared that Connenticut, whose ingenuity, whose FORT LAFAYETTE, March 23, sunset—Sbip Barnabas the of international comity, the Northern | cracy and organize the present opposition tot in the | products, whoee sons and daughters were everywhere, | Webb, from Liverpool, eoming up the Bay. Wind NW, light; States bave deprived their fellow citizens of the South of | ehape and form that opposition had now assumed. Thus {| was the most interested of all other States in the main: | weather elesr. - 1 their constitutional rights of sojourn and transit here; and | Tom Corwin attempts to cope with Seward. He scts up | tcnance of the Union, and that if his visit ana his addross hertael ay ving: that, pretend to be righteously indig. | for himeelf, and proclaims himeelf » rival chieftain to | had con@ibvted apything to a ‘‘consummation so de- absegenennt ‘ou, rns, a Now Bedford from Indian nantif here and there occasionally, some act of reprisal | Seward, ‘and presenta himself to the world as a competitor | voutly to be wished,’’ he would consider it the happiest ‘Cnet dark end faining, came in collision basa! Ruphrasia, is applied to our own citizens in the Southern States. Will | of Seward in the high honor of leading the wool; ‘and moet glorious of his life, (Tremendous applause and So bouratrem New York for Apalnobiovls. The stores ax i . was cloee you say that you capnot conscientiously in your judgment | beaded hosts to batile. It is im: a beau! a few hiesee,) bauled on starboard tack. heactng N by Rcadabwere- obey this provision of the constitution, and that there‘ore | rivairy—Sewatd vereus Corwin—Corwin versus Sew- Ur. SwacknaMEr, of New York, now followed with a | ning BY F, two pointe free, when the later shio strnck the on pare and retain such Jaws in your | ard!" What will be the result? Who will - few axeedotes, and was loudly applauded. Atter which | Young Bhomis on the, port bow. exrrying away bowsprit, jp can party has power in any Site ? Then I reply without now to argus ibe | the bauble of the crown? The contest reminds | the meeting broke up with cheer for Wood and the | SMe Time jmtoums fore lopmast, fore topaaliantmest, wat has exerted it to violate the constitution of the com. | morality or immorality of your conduct, that this very | me of an anecdote of two drunken friends, whom I will | Unien, and with the greatest enthusiaem. the knighthead and peveral timbers, and started wood enas for ey. = Monee eer pablio (eg i which | fact would serve, if there were uothing else, to prove that | call Bill and Tom, who were roommates, but they ooou- Mayor Wood speaks at Norwich this evening, ro- | 6 feet, ond leaka altgbtly when rug TBe Kupbraain bad meet the |, they say to us ey are not ened ou are unfit to be entrusted with the control of the | pled different beds. Hil's sleeping apparsts wae 20 sito- turns to New York on Sunday, and resumeg hie speeches | jib avd fying jthboom carried away. twiated head pertly off, enemies of the constitution. and, as its friends, may bo Tedera rnment, when your conscience, corrupted as Med that be could get in on either side—thet istosay, | at Hartford on Tuesday Bext? Ex-Commienioner Bowlin, ad tolaend ehaton ripped out ‘Foe Intter ce ‘ 4 ery erirusted with the care of thie federal government. But | it would thus Appear ta be, would not. allow | there were two fore aides, which Bill found very cones: | Hon Mr, Larabee, of Wisconsin, and Mr. Ciuskey, the | pisht. seit was sunpeaed the ¥ P was more seriously inane lave tried them in the States, with a result whieh {20 te sdminister the constitution coustitationally, althongh bient. Ore night Pill and Tom had been oat, and, on re- | former Congressional Postmaster, are conducting the am- Ga Seon Cheeta coe ae ioe eee ae) ‘up from tbe aaa areata, Sectional and hostile to ving selemnly sworn to support the constitution, | turning, which they ¢id near }, Were jerabiy | peign in Litchfield and Pairfeld counties with great fervor sicupaide und ibe ober was esved lo & alcllar fhe corentation and the Ia proving this amertion | In ali this, and ia ether respects, an in running of alayes | cleyated. However, they walked sp to their room with an | and eflect. Ea bows. La , from pias in dinttens, wae mak! Would commence dieg on Scur Roucu & Reavy, at Roeland, ar the main the North Fits inet by the boiling over of & kete Ly ‘oabip. 7, over of kettle of heated 7 ‘hse fire was extinguished damage eatimmated at $200. Scun Baco (of Bridgeton, NJ), which put tuto eal ao partera, NO, inne for bad York. os, of vy Weather, it into Norful, foresail, flyin, is de ‘and deek Wad of 300 bole fey overboard, Will re;air and proceed, Sour Bara Pi Gardner, at Providence from Charlestom, lost foresall and sri meaipaall, ree Sonn M A Gout, Philbrook, at Bt Thomas from Frankfort, had bed wealber aud ioet dec ioed. Couision—Schr Shawmut, Roberts, at fort, reporia, atS AM 22d, wher with achr Florida, fram Port! an¢ cutwater; also loat of Boston, who wos eta time. ‘The Shawmut wily! nol . $Suld Rot find him. The ¥ orida had wort + Capt Compton, of sloop Cont about 9 day Borning, pldked up a lighter louded wih) Bay. named ‘the Gardiner, mupposed to belong to es ; Donde ER, and will leave Wo day at ose %. oieet Chamber of Com: at Ni ull tobe ealvors of the cargo ant mater 2 parsed om ths bark 8 W Lind 45 ver cent on the vet proceeds or value thereof, and £12 to he wreck Bark Indiana, 256 tons, built at Warren, Ye, of and backmetack, in complete order for seh well ound treaties riahiag, chain cables, 40, was sold at auction 22d by Johm Tyler ‘The bn bt BE yoy op — ‘Gelveston bar ightvessel a: the entrance v will be Aiscontioned on the evening of aprit I next, mn Ch the same evening, at sunset, will be lighted for the first ‘Ume the folowing Beacons:—One on Bird Island, in range tween Bolivar Point Light the outer Buoy, thd woes Pe. tea Island, indieating the eof the Knoll and Peliesn Spt Buoys, with the present p mn of the Lightveasel te be die- eontiz ved By order of the 1 ighthouse JQSRPH Board. FLY Lieut USN, Inspector of Lights, ‘Oflice Ligbthoure lnspestor, nated er ase Lnspestor, tinh Statin, Spoken, dc, Ebi Peseta for Liverpool, wae passed from NYork for Aspii : ganar mes, from HY Aspinwall, Mareb 17, on eine, nea, from Manaanilla fOr Boston, March 19, NW — miles Orig Masibe Menon, foe Havana for Doston, no dake, Jon 76 with loss of deck sds aac seha Brig Hopo, of N A 1, aan 't Hono. of B ‘York, from St Marys, Fla, for Trinidad, ne Sebr Jobn 1, Darling, Baker, from Provid oe for Norfolk, aa seen March 31 off Groat weet Bay Lt . fore and , pain wings white mgnal with black anchor, was passed’ March Te, off Sharieston. Apex, Feb 30-In pot Make Aries ‘DEN, Pe EN, Ly geen = es ur Piexertsg, Cloutman, “scvavits March 7—In port Driga Adela, of and for Cbaries- ‘ork soon a 6—In port schr Busen Hail, for NYork in @ = kssIWa, Feb 25—In port barks Daniel, for Norton (Br), OerHot for do: MC Byer Fe Desens Braud maser Gr) for ‘Untaiee: waht annie rook Went, foe jer (Br, for ; do, and others as befor q 6. Maver , Sli , a ane Jan Aare ship Uriel, Walker, Onleutta (and jARACAIRO, March S—In_port bark Ilva, Durie, for NYork; sche Ada hiae, une. Bid hy, behra‘Wnchantrees, and T Bed! eTtiyacuer, about March &—In port bark Mayflower, D: for NYork soon: Francis, wig eargo; L Armstrong, Tkompsov, arr 2d. Patsnuo, Feb 7—8l4 barks Resolution ), MYork; Oth, Gel B Sincere eee det omer ae NYork: metto, Wheiden, ‘Kolus, Allen, Le- onidas (Prua). for Bostons Wik, farts, Clemention (eh andl Eile (Neap), Wrork: beige Civatavo: Puilsdsiphier ist” berke Roman, Lowry, ‘NOrleans: brig Greyhound, Plates 36, barks Ulovannt Balti (te), NOrloune;’ Franstne (8k), dy ig Ghoseppina, N¥ore. weokrann, BW, no dale-Are bark Helen W Almy, Davia, PERNAMEUCO, Feb 22— bark Li Brigade. for Ny pple Roads dg; brig ‘aise oe athe Lf Buminam, Feb 2—T barks Alice Tarlton, Kendall, front g. arr 1d; HO Bell Tucker, for iouvester 20° saves brige paved Homans, for do 30th; South Boston (Br), Canning- 7 Feb 21— A: Zulehka, G: q werent teat he Sri Ppa sur ashe gee acer d Soest Sito eae ash nena ¥ fon ton Porto Cabello cy Tlpgton; 22d, abip Sitpez sta fe Mea Guaysms, York; 294, brig Beaver, Tapley, SS man lo genomes Sr Joni. NB, March 16-arr bare vannab; “pn Beeley, Bt ‘ Sreamenir Canai at Hairsx—Trisararnn, Airtroms MYork March 3; Tassee ak hopiees ba Orem, a Bremen, (th Walang OF “id: Neptune, off Qreannaowat seinen ae tyne ot Sean Marat, UK Arr from Mobile 7th. F Sherman, at Queenstown. ‘Arr from Boston 10th +h Bomubemas ot Laser pce on Sid for NYork Sih, Aucie, from Fa'mouth; BB Seailb, from Liver ;, 7th, Hannah Secor, from Clyde. Bid for Boston 7th, Sea Flower, from Liverpool; B@ Cari, eit Tor NUrieaha 60, Nevtune, from Newport: 8th, Cresewul for NUrieans 6th, Nevtune, from, 3 Clty. and Aramece Snow, from do; 7th Alleghancan, from Cardy; bt, Niebolas Gurwen, ftom Liverpool cite, Feimyre was at Queenstown, and would have to die- atic area ten pore dears ee Coan, pe rr fe Sar aet tartae: ncaa tres ‘ai Liverpool. Arr from NYork, bark B a 4 D ry 'W Holbrook, Curtis, at Genoa; Sel- ALEXANDRIA March ood Pants Montloello, Gager, ST Oe Bal rae tones, York ta ow scenistas fant nim eae Rete Atkins. NOriesns; brig ary Hi, Lane, Jeremie, sebte aT len, Baker, Bichmond; Ac Howes. Baltimore. L Green, Green, NYork. Sa wind RW to NK, winmoe Be wet \—~ Arr (by tel) sebrs: orig. Hil, Fr and MG: tab, Greeviab, Jeremie; U P Btickuey, Garwood, Jackson Jas Martio, Harding, and Emma Amelia, Harding, Savannaly Roe Charleston. 8 &. » Mar t2—arr steamship Thomag Ramsay, NYork. Below, a ship; bark Indus, from Cardonast ‘brig Uberapeaks, from Demarara—the latier two a anehor. Cid. steamship Potomac, Watson, NYork; echra A @ Brooks, Buckley, Kilswortb; Resoue, Bacon NYork; island City, Con klin, co; i L. Wiliams, Jackson, Newport. Sid bark Lapwing, Kau. Bio Janeiro. ~Arr (by te!) bark Indus, Cardenas; brig Chesapeake, Demarars. BATH, March 21—Sld bark George Thomas Foss, Havana. CHARLESTON, Mareb 20—Arr steamebip Colt Berry, NYork; Br abip Lelcester, Robbips oo; orig H H Meili Clidiord, Catburien; rehra George, Waltt, Mavagues: Rheet shor Packard, Koorpurl, DB Warner, Uarrow, BYork. mechan ay RH Tucker, Clark, from Hav: of and from Bremen; two berks unknow: I Reems, Johnaon, Liverpool; Dan bark Dores, Peterwn, Fleusburg; Saraees ous yi) oe Boston; Cote oor wa, BO; sloop Adams, or! nue steamer Harriet Lane, Faunce, on s cruise; ships Me- dalton, ‘Thecbala, Liverpodl; ¥ aples, Sons, Herre; cp), Amengual, Harce ona; bark Burlington, Keene, ant 0s; beige Kaperanza (Bp), Ribus, W Indies; Storm Kiag, Ber- Wi ; , Gelpi, Fa a Nt Wim | RO, PAST ORRENWICH, March 22—Arr echr Hunter, Rackett, is J Ball, Der a wrAt RIVER, harsh 31—arr echre MH Mittin, EM. BO See ahaa ae ee ten ey, 60; jen, ; 22d. schre Kv Porter’ and HH Bascom, ‘Touils, Philadelphia, 1. Hulse, icGee. Elizabetbport Sid.schr Peru. Thomas, NYork —” GALVESTUN, March 18—Arr previous, bark Pleiades, Knowlton, Liverpool, outatde the bar. days from NYerk, dag, Govalio: Washington, for do 10,” Ghd rom NYork, diag; Oavi Ti eh Loin rh 1518 port brig Myatio, Pla, fer WYork 4 VACA, Marc iD iy ready to commence dg; schr Btampede, Burrows, for NYork a OBILE, March 17—Cid ship E Deoniuon, Post, Havre; barka TG Bunker, Cooper, Poston: Magenta, Hopkiog, ‘palachiola: schre Orin Cow!. Kit, and BE arcularius Boow, MACBIAB, March }0—Blé sebr Gassabeas, Grant, Jamaica. NOKFOLE, March 2/—Arr schr Amelia P dowe, Apple- gate, Feterbare. put in to finish Idg for NYork. Cid sehra Le- roy, Osborn, NYork; Ocean Btar, roland, Fall River; Queen, Mulline, Plymouth, Mase. Sid schr Mott Bedell, or! EWARK, March 22—Arr sloop Banner, Haverstraw. NEW BEDFORD, March Zl—arr sebrs % Secor, Grant, N York; 224 Wm Loper, Robipeon, Port Rickmond. NEWBURYPORT, Maroh 21—81d echr Sharon, Thurlow, Philade NEWEORT, March 22,7 PM—In port sche Mindora, Sar- gent, from Jacksonville err 2lst, for NHaven; Cole- an from Taunton for NYork! Virginie, Westgate, from dp for do: Lady Adams, Davis, from Bomerset for do; Thomas nang Davie, from Fall River for do; Queen of the Cage. Raat Un Willow Harp, Beary Brown, Gilde, afd others, Wind with snow squal NRW LONDON, March 22—~Arr achra Now Delight, Covell. Eiizaterhport, Adventorer, Chappell, and ibames, Geer, do; Pailacium, Avery. NYork. PHILADELPAIA, Marsh 23—Are Howes, Boston; Bost Tasifax, Georg from Pérto Cel n, Bath, WW Marcy, Norvn, snd tonb, Boston Sbenandoab, Blackman, New Bedford; caicn, Danversport. PUBILAND, March 21—Arr Br steamships North Briton, Borland, Liverpool via Queeenstown, Nova sootisn, MeMsster, tt Jobn, NB, © jon'ca, Loud. Geayama, FB) Qeamer Patapeco, Vaill NYork. id, wind BY. barks D Yoous, kpbralw Willisms: brigs Gen Williams, Lanzarote: sobre NOs ‘of Clip L : on, WU Queen of cup: 2 and overs, steamer Weetchester, PROVIDENCE, March 22—Az7 RYork: Peek, ‘Obarleston; Chaaneey Jobo, Dayle: Eiabesbpert thee, Aen fol, and Frau Sid ‘senre Pr Poeilup ‘Smith, PI ieee N Genin, Phi ote Win Bt Bowen, Brotherton, do. Wert torea at 7 he AM, bark Jas L Davie, Fairchild, for 2 rl etot CRET, March 2t—Arrachrs CW Holmes, MeRiwee, Philadelphia, Rva. Tourgee, Elizal wet RUCKLAND March 16~Bbid scbre Sea Bird, Scear,and Joa Baber, Wilton, 8York, 20th Charlotte, Arey. do, m NYC SAN FRANCISCO, Mareh 8—Arr steamabip Cortes, Pana- id eb'pa Moonll Srock, Hong Kong; Prima Bray: Went Wind unt Noouday. etry, allay ithe len 8, Hog (oot Harris), 3 — Bid beige ere (ns EXVANNAH. March 19 Below, bark Yankee Blader trom ool UESTEM, March 19—Cld brig Ann Elisabet Sant b, Lang, W { Africn Bid sehr Sliver Magnet Perry, Philad Trig ace Rilabeid, Afrien; achr Curvo, Aolbroox gtrom Rook: aud), NYor. SUMEREAT. Moreh S1— Att sche Orlom, Davia, York, WHLMISOTON KC, Maren s0—Arr acbra IL, Barry, Wes ver Boston; J L Kednér, Cordery, NYorr; That, Seaakoe. I Wort, Boston: J W Keavey. Nickertoo, Charleston; 22d, RW Brown, burton, 60 Olé tet rig Faith Cory Files user: peel: RC Dyer, Turner, Mataness; sehr Aun & Glover, Rab- inson, NYor WibCa+SET, March 21—id sehr Benj Praukila, Gresnienl. Jachaon ville,

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