Newspaper Page Text
mk satecHii® 3m'gf««4
hi*bit The UMMUHUr Ml r*pMljr,eail *• had l
•Hf III Ami* * 1
11 NKW ORLKANSi Deli 30.
FIIIK.
About 4 o'clock yerterdny mnrnlnf,* Ar« t»rok«
'out la tHc Ladies Cabin of ilia steamboat Empress,
lying st 114‘J*rae. It rapidly cmnmunlctitfd in
‘Olhar part* of tlM boat, ami iha whole structure w ns
sooh In'flaniet* Tim Empress wat rut adrift to pro
vent the ditration Of the fir* to other boats, trad she
floated gradually amts* ihn river, and came In con
lact with ilia steamboat Monarch, which had recent
ly undergone .thorough, repair*. Tim Monarch lm«
‘raedlste'y look (lrej.and both boat* werecmnpIct.My
'destroyed.' Tim fJounar oflast evening rays, " The
amount of property Unit destroyed It at follow.:
'Steamboat Monarch—about $10,000
Inturcd fur ■ 85,000
Steamer Empress about $20,000
Cargo, principally anil 10,000
Believed to bo partly covered by iuturancent St.
Louis." "*
From Ike Aim Bedford Dailg Regiiltr, 08 ih ult.
THE NEW YORK CONSPIRACY.
Our language baa not term* sufficiently strung to
’express jhe indignation nf every lionrtt American,
•nt the foul and bate conspiracy which hat been
tarrying*oh* by‘khe’whig party to ovetthrow tho
d bcrtiei - of this Countiy.—In proportion to tV
-enormities of those treasonable effort*, our giatl
lude should burst forth in langunge of thanksgiving
•and pruiie, to. a kind Providence, who has inter-
C i to stay the torrent of co iuption, which lint
drivlrigMv'tfr our land,tind threatened to tweep
away thotrthniintunts of bar national liberties.' Rut
Iftr'lhlt prdviticmal interposition, tho maoliinations
‘rif'tlio enemies dt Freedom und freo institutions
••might hay? .slept, till tl.e coming elections, when
they would have ripened into action, end ingulphrd
•our country itrruin. Truly wo have been walking
4n quiet sdeutity, upon & slight incrustation of earth
Nvhicti covered .iho burning tare of this corrupt erd
‘Corrupting party. But thank God, we have boon
'waked from this distruciive repose; and wo will
•Vise liko the glnnt from his slumbers, and hurl do
'atruction upon tho head* of those, who would have
^strangled the.'young Heiculet in his cradle. The
danger once seen is no longor to bn dreaded.
It wat the (iMdliiVa .kn'fe, tho Traitor't mid
night pint, 'that threatened ruin. Tho open foe,
the naked weapon, we Tear. not. We are defended
by the shield of truth'which covers us, and our
enemies, -beholding in iu polished surface the in
famy of theta pnrpbtet, will bb turned to stone, and
their arms be withered eie they can strike a blow.
Who can doubt the ultimate safety of our republi
can inititutipns,. when to many agencies, desthtad
for their overthrow, arc at once paralked, and con
verted into engines of defence T No one I Let no
one, therefore, ever again despond in the darkest
hour of hiscountry'* prospects. Lot each demo
cratic citizen b$ true in himself—true to his country
—truo to Jp£ best interests, and hit countiy will he
beyond the roach of her enemies.
We present t« you) Fellow Citizens, tho evidence
of tho TrailorausConspiracy iff tho leading mem
bert ofdheTfXfr party in the city oi'Ncw York, to
carilrnlthe popular Will of the freemen of tlmt city,
to prostrate the- sovereignty of tho people, and to
ride into ppwfr by .means of bribery, cort uption,
perjury and subornation of perjury. Look nt this
fellow-cttizetpl shew' it to your neighbors—ask
'them, if thby can lend ; their protection to the men
s who could devise such measures, or their countan-
1 ances to ,the*ta*asii''ei adopted to prostruto the
rights.of.tiiakgqy end State—and which aimed a
fatal blow nt the genius of our Government! Ask
them, If with the knowledge, which this develops*
ment Comlriunicutci, they can longer yield avvil
ling subjection' to that vassalage of purty, which not
only leads.thermblindfold to destruction, but which
will cover their staines. with ropronch and -thoir mo
mory, wiihfiqfamy, .
Can any pqedqubL the truth df tho charge brought
against the persons named os principal conspire-
tarsi There h no room for doubt. Tbe-fuct* wlilch
are spread before ua, would convict them unon an
indictment for the offenee, before a jury of honest
men. however warned by prejudice or parly. Let
us examine this Evidence tar ono moment.
What ihen - t*OT~to-be-i^VdedT The democratic
City of New Yotk, was to he turned from her sup
pttft of democratic principles, and bo made to send
fotfr'monibcrs to the Mouse uf 'Representatives in
Congress, who should lend their aid to prostrate
democratic men and domeciatic measures. How
was this to beeffettedt Not through tho ordinary
““operation of tho ballot box} for ft was known that
the ehiefeity of tho. Empire Stale was os true to do
mocracy, as tho needle to the pole. Nut by any
change that, could be wrought in tho popular will of
her citizenii ’yrtr* had demonstrated the attach
mnnt ol the commercial emporium to free institu
tion*; and the integrity of her cltixons tat bade the
belief that they could be bent frorm their higli pa,'-
pose by persuasion or corruption. By foreign inf. <
cnee olone cobid any one hope to • fleet tliis purpose.
To control the will of the citizens of New York, tar
sign merclna’rfes must be brought into the field; and
the engineers whose hands wore on the wires resor
ted to ibis only sure means of success.
Who would bo tho.Rian to plan tho enterprise and
conduct the operations? Surely not those who hod
never emerged fro# the humble wolks of life—not
tlioin wlio played tho giimo without stakes—not
those who had neither character, considertion nor
means; hut such men ns looked for immediate bone
fit nm) future advancement—whose cupidity and
ambition were to be rewarded by a successful tcimi
nation ol the campaign; Mon who could commnnd
the sinews of such an enterprise, and could work oil
the wires of tins show, without once bt. gsren by
the audience—men traine ’ «p in that code of mur
als who viewed oil things as subservient to thn nt-
■t/lts to bo obtained, and whose ethic* taught them
* the .end would snnetify tiro means' Such men
would concoct tho plot,and complot to perfect their
treasonable purposes. Let no-one believe,however,
that the men wire should bo so lost to all sense of
/patriotism and mural obligation, as to enter into
inch wicked and traitorous combinations, would bo
tccak enough to do so, without providing the means
of escape, ?f accident should unmask their villany.
The same debasement of principle which would
stimulate them to embark in tho enterprise, would
teach them by cunning and contrivance to avoid
the consequences. A nd hence you would find them
using language to their lubaltcrnt, which carried
the idea of hgneit purpose, while llio tiusty "gent,
comprehended tho service which he was subsidized
to perform, and moved ns steadily to tho object as
• jthough his Instructions hnd been convoyed by the
unbaptized language of abandoned profligacy.
Now let us look at tho evidence which is furnish 0
ed to us by the developements resulting from tho
logoi examination. In the first plnce however the
tact is before us, that the city of New York for the
FIRST and last time did elect Whig Members of
Congress, of the Lngislnttire and of the city Gov
emmrat. That the result of tho election of 1038
was foretold with ccrtuinty by the whig*, and was
not anticipated by tho democracy. That tl.n effect
of success or the Whigs wos astounding to iho De
mocracy, and as unoccuuntuhlo by them as it was
unexpected.
With these tactsin our mind let us look nt the
evidence, James Young, uf FhHadelphia, high in
office in horpolico, is found in New York, and upon
examination sweArs, th»t James B. Glcntworthof
the city of New York, wns introduced to him, nod
stated "ho wanted his, Young’s, nssistancc.to got men
to go on to New York to Vote in the Foil of 1830
He sold his wishes, ma le arrangements and return
ad to Now York. In a short timo Glcnlworih re
turned to Philadelphia furnished with money; paid
the money to Young, and ho, Young, furnished the
men; put them on board tho steamboat; pai l them
the hire tar their services. He swears, thuthisun
deretnudingwos, that the pi*n were to go to New
York toaetei' This was whot Glentwurtb wanted.
For that purposa ho selected his men; and tar that
purpose be shipped tliem. He instructed the man
what was expected of them when limy were on the
wliarft and now mark hit instructions: “Now men
I do not sendymi limre to vote and got yourselves
into trouble, ifyuii do you must take the con*e
quencci." I. told sotqo of tlic men the object of
their going was to sec if any permn from 1‘hUadel
pMa wouldofferlo-voto who had no right to vote."
Now whance originated these instruct ions which
Young gave tbtsmen, as welt as his answer to them,
that they were to be inspectors of tiro polls I Let
any person look at the letter of Messrs. Grinnell
and Draper, and soe how well this letter sustains
the instructions of Young. Glentworth had Iwenlo
. Philadelphia, bargalijed for hi* men, agreed upon
“•' the number and prico, returned to Now York to
communicate with iba higher powers and obtain!
means of carrying into effect the object in view.-
He started with hUmoasy and drafts in hand, and
•tlto moment of starting Messrs. Grinnell, Draper
and others, furnished the letter which Is now so
niouily partHcd before the public. For what
•mi that letter feraished t To prevent the
applied! It was lb# worcl of
promise to tiro ear. It was lilt llilr f intended.—
The nff'dr was too dargerout to he amwtaken with
out providing tl.e moans »rf escape. What do they
write—“tire pndoct which you laid out Is not Jfholly
understood by your friends in this ei/y. If y-u
have made any arrangements which In any way tend
to any thing beyond a general supervision of the
polls, you RUst nt once abandon It.”
Was Glraiwnrth tho humble Instrument in the
hands ol Grinnell and others t Who can doubt it t
The willing subservient tool, who has sold himself
f>r lho reward promised and obtained—Inspector.
Did bn not nndtis'and lira meaning of their loiter t
Did ho not know it wns to bo written! Wns Grin
nell without precedent in this matter! Wall street
hasfcrnUlied ono illustrious Individual educated in
the samo school with (irinoeli, who effected hi*
purposes in a similar manner. “If timo bust not
signed thn policy send It to me t the ship has been
hcatd from." We rll remembertlieell’cctproduced
by that letter. That was and sots tills letter the
pro luction of low cunning operating upon unstable
moral principle. Can it screen the perpetrator*
fiom the ignominy whicli they deserve!
Can these men put forth before the public, this
rak and fllimy defence and hone to succeed!
Did they not know If not WHOLLY, "f tho pur
pose of Glentwarth’s mission, yet something! And
if they did—why as honest men. did they not dis
cioin tho tact to thn authorities ol New York, nnd
pul them upon their guard ? Wo answer, bocuuso
they weto tho men who admitted, they were his
Frikkiis in the city. I ow oould they ossunto the
commanding nttitudo toward* Glontworth which
their letter shows, if lie was not under tlioir control
—you must abandon, &c. It is too w eak a defenen
tostand n moment. Add to all this, that the hired
agent, Itumhio nnd organ of theso successful poli
ticians, is paid by nn appointment to i dice, which
wns niiUo unexpected und inexplicnblo to nil, but
those who recommended him, nnd him to whom ho
wns recommended. But it Is idle lor Grinnell und
other* to say, they expected “supervisors" of tho
polls to cumo. Are they now willing to ndmit,
they would seek such men, in the woy on.! munnrr
there were obtained—nnd of such chnr'iclcr—would
they stipulate fur their pay in this way—who bo-
lieves it! No, tliey would have sent for the Police
of I'hilutlelpldti, who would ho likely to know such
men as would oiler to violate the law—und who
upon discovering them,would hove character enough
to susta'n the chuilenge. But hero the veriest
loafers which could bo dragged from tho kennel*
of the city, oro hired for thirty pieces of silver to
cover their souls with everlasting infttmy, nnd to
betruy tho rights and liberties of the citizen. Judge
you, which is the greater traitor—the miserable
remnants of mortality who uro brought like sheep
to the shnmblos—or the vile nod practised villain,
who tempts tho miserable offender to commit the
crime.
Fellow citizens, a righteous Providence has inter
posed to uncover this foul nonspimey.—Let not
the wunt of wntclifulness betray you ngnin. People
of New York, we call on you to vindicate your
rights so rudely astailed, nnd let not tho fear of
numfts.or the influence of wealth and stution deter
you from laying open this fountain of corruption,
and from visiting u just punishment upon llio heads
of the offenders, ho never high their heads are cur-
•eicd.
Fellow-citizens believo us, this plot wns not con
fined to New York. It is hut onu net of thn drama
which was enacted upon tko stage at Hnrrisburg
nnd New Jersey. It was hut. pnrt of the mnehinory
which was sot in nperution to put n whig majority
in tho present Congress—what said Mr. Stevens!
“We wilt treat the Pennsylvania dun inn us though
it naver happened, if tho Legislature is democratic."
Whut did the Gpvernor'of New Jeisoy T Sent his
brand seal to pass to nevnl in Congress, men whom
ho know wero never-elected—and but for tlm firm
ness of ilia yeomanry ot Pennsylvania—nnd the un
flinching integrity of the democratic members of the
House uf Representatives, the House of Represen
tatives would have been whig. Believe us, tho sumo
spirit witich devised these nefarious means, is yet
rife in every part of our country. It must he met
withul- Let then the Democracy, oppose to these
cunning, canting, wicked measures, a bold, detet-
mined und upright purpose, and tliey will prevail.
Victory will crown their efforts.
NEW YORK. Oct 30.
Fifteen days later from China—Movements of'
the English and Celestials—Canton not yet bat
lereddown.—lba “Delhi," Captain Crocker, nrriv
ed yesterday fromChino.
It appears from our letters and pnprrs that there
had been no nortieularchange imho affairs between
tho smoothed faced Clilncese nnd British. Neither
Canton nor the tarts nt Bocen Tigris hnd buen but
tered down nor touched nnd Pekin wns sofe. Neith
or hnd the English squadron orrlvod off Macon. So
the inte.'ligencu received a week ago by the 'Acadia'
is incorrect.
Cnpiuin Crocker informs us that lie was in Con
Ion on the 2.1 June, and obtained tho following list of
tlte British fleet. It was ItOUtly expected to arrive
titer*. He states ulso,that on thc7lhofJuuo,when
nbout 200 miles from Macon, bo saw a steamer
stoncling towards Cunlon, which he took to be one
of thn expedition. In the annexed list llio names
of two a. ;.m ft ig.It on are given. That seen wus tin
questionably ono nf them. He saw nothing of tho
other vessels of wnr. Bums they were evciy day
expected Hi Mircou, nod us thastenmrr seen wns nu
doubt oho of tl*e fleet, the Avnnt Courear, it is loir
to suppose thnt tlte entire squadron arrived in tho
Chinese seas n few duys nfter tlte Delhi left. Tho
next ..cws will therefore ins inipottunt und looked
for with tnucli or.xielyt
ENGLISH FLEET IN CHINA.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7. I#4U.
King or tlte free I still bear thy sway,
Undiiftm’dtliroueli ages yet untold t
OVrrnrth’* proud realm* thy stars display,
Like mnrnlng’e radiant clouds unrolled.
Plnp of the skies! still peerless shine,
Through ether's nxure vault unfurled,
Till every hand and heart entwine,
Toswenp oppression from tlte world.
LATER THAN THE MAIL.
Tlte Editors oftho Charleston Courier recolvcd
from pnssenjors tlte N- Y. Herald of Monday lust,
and Bultimoro Patriot nf Tuesday.
The money article of tho Herald snyst—Mr. Jan-
don, Mr. Alsop, nnd Mr. Brown, nil of the United
Sintes Bank, arrived here to-day, nnd two or more
of them return by tho steamer to London, to resume
the negocintions of tho bank theso. Tito hopes on*
teitnincd that n resumption would be effected in
Junuarynext wore dying owny. Thn ilircocotn-
mi-fcionor* wlto went to Boston to negotiulo n loan
in nid of the Philadelphia banks, hnd not yet boon
able to effect it. But whether these negocintions
hnvosurceedod or not. it is confidently behoved in
certain quurturs, that Mr Jautlon, on Ins return to
London, will bo able to put matters in such a train
there ns to enable tho Banks to resumo without foil
on this dny appointed.
Ito Pahiol says that tho Van Burkn minority
iu Baltimore City i»3 1. In throe Districts in 13ul-
timoic County tlm Vnn Bttren voto has increased.
VIRGINIA.
There wns n flying rumor brought by a pnuenger
in tho Washington bout, yesterday, that Virginia
had gono for Van Boren—but we greatly doubt it*
correctness.—Courier.
OHIO
Gives increased majorities for HnrrUon.
PENNSYLVANIA
Is claimed by the Wing* on tho faith of their
pigeon expresses." Nothing remarkable for
them."
From the Charleston Mercury of yesterday.
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION-
Tho grent gnmo goes on bravely, hut ns yet afford
ing but n glimmer of light. There were rumors
brought by pussengnrs yesterday that the Admitiis
t rat ion hnd carried New York, Pennsvlvnnhi nnd
Virginia—but theynro only tumors, and in respect
of thu first named State, could hardly lie founded on
n particle ol information. In rogurd to thn two In’,
tor, our opinion is, thni they bavo gone for Vnn Bn
ran. The Cftoi»e of Monday gives return* from AI
oft ho'50 counties of Pennsyluunin, according to
which, the majority for VunUtiren s.V tar.is 1224.
If the remaining counties voto ns tliey did in tho ro
cent Coneressioenl election, the majority would be
iotreusod to 2024—mi hern falling off in the Key
stood State, nnd oil tho more nncomfortahlo inns
much us wouto not sure of tlint.
From Virginia wo have only u few returns, wlricli
we givo bulow:
Richmond City,
Henrico County,
Chesterfield County,
Petersburg,
Van Huron.
Harrison.
175 *
581
398 .
445
017
323
2H2
215
1453
1594
1453
141
3!enheim.
Clnns,
80
Men.
700
Melville,
74
700
A’ellesKiy,
74
700
[Rondo,
40
400
Druid,
I'iquo,
Andiomock,
44
401)
36
400
28
259
Thalia,
28
250
Snmtnnng,
28
259
Volnge,
20
250
Alligator,
20
180
Vesuvius, steam,
20
100
Cyclops, steam,
20
100
Larne,
18
250
-
18
ISO
Hyacinth,
18
150
Cruiser,
8
40
558
5770
Thu Whig majority In tho Presidential election Of
1830 in theso plnoes./wns 308-ruri>*" Vnn noivii**
majority in tho State Wn*7121. It must ho remem
bered I lint theso nio the Whig liend qiinftcrs, in
witich tliey have fallen off so viiluihuusly.
One Dag letter and Important from Kurort.—
By llio ship Toronto, Cnpt Griswold, from London,
the New York Courier &. Enquirer hnvo rocoivml
tho Hampshire Telegraph, published ot Portsmouth,
of tho5th ultimo, which U one dny later titan we
linvo before received. It contains llio tallowing
Important Intelligence, oppnrcntly ju.t received nt
Portsmouth, nnd isconfirmetoyrof tho account giv.
en by the Paris Correspondent of thu Commercial
Advertiser, received by llio lnat stenmer.
PORTSMOUTH, Oct. 3. 1840.
We have received Malta paper* of tho 15th Sep-
teinbcr. Tl.o following is an extract:
Maj.ta. Sept. 15, 1848.
ratification of the East.—Fourteen days lind
einpted without our receiving nny intolligeneo from
Syria or Egypt, und to day by iho arrival of the
French stenm packet, wo have received advices to
tin- Gth instuiid we are lumpy to nnnoYirfCo tliin there
appears every prospector nn nmlenlde arrangement
inking place between the Suhjin and Muhemet AH,
tlm inner having, in tact, acceded jothe iiitimutum,
liy consuming to deliver op llio Turkish fleet, Cun
d n, Adana, tfud lliul part of Syria, which ii is dolor
mired ho shall no longer hold; but ho osks it n* a
boon from hi* “ beloved mustor" that ho may retain
the (utter fur lifu. This is the substance of thu im
port tint intelligence arrived. Tho communication
wns leonivrdby the Sultan's Envoy, Rifat Bey, with
tho highest satisfaction und lie had left tar Constun
tinnnln.
}< is thu* to ho imped that tlds question, which
threatened to involve nil Europe in wnr, will he
brought to n pacific termination, without resorting
to coercive measures for carrying Inin effort the con
vent ion of 15th July. Admiral Stopford hud sailed
for Bey rout, whither uiso Col. Bodge* hnd proceed
ed.
mpkrtloa *f UMr enterprise? No, tar itwaicom
mm*rad- IYn im# went ox, 1000 Illegal votes
----- ilragi
wsra givt# 1 —saws voted iii 10 ivardst Qrinnvlland
111* associates ware elected. Thademocracy in thv
city ware dstasted. Is thsru a man so simple and
credulous as to btltavs that Uh leUsr was wriu» n
l other ms, than that t 9
(or any other purpose or aay o
Two others, rittounknmv, 19 soil.
With this fleet there are 1000 riflmen, 3000 Cem
nrnnmn#,20 transports, Olid a number of flut bottom
ed boats. Total number of men, 10,000.
There wero scvornl American meicbunt vessels
londing nt Canton. Some of them partly loaded
with Malting instead of Ten*. Tho “nucinia L
IimiI lotulod, nnd wns to visit the English ships for
the puipnse of trading off her cargo. There hud
been no change in the prico of Teas in Canton.
Charles Naylor.—This individual bns written n
letter to Mr. Momoo of New York, about election
frauds, which liesnys tho Administration Intend* in
norpetrnto nt the coming ••lection. What next!—
For Charles Nnvlor to pruto of election frauds, is
the very ne plus ultra of brazen impudence—he,the
very mnn who now holrts nnd bn* held for ycurs. n
sent gained bytlio most stupendous frauds over com
milted in tho country, should of nil persons ho the
ln»t to deal in such chnigcs nnd should como in tho
renr, if lie mu*i como «.t all. of the yelping pnek,
who strive by their up/onr to draw public ut lent ion
from the Into disclosures which ore overwhelming
them. Before Clin tie* Naylor indulges ngnin in this
way, let him furnish the public with rx|dnnntb»ns
a l .-out llio election of 1837 nnd '33 in the Third Dis
triet. Whfcre nro the twenty seven lop.died nnd six
ly votes said to have been po.lrd for him in 1838,
in tile first five wards uf the Northern Liberties!
How many of these wero men of straw—were
pound* of “ynrn" nnd tact of “pipo," thnt more
than a thousand of them uro not now to ho found?
ot him answer this before ho tolks ol Democratic
fil'd.—Pennsylvanian.
American Bed Blankets.—The Boston Trans
cript says, the Rochester bed blankets, from tho ex
tensive works of llio Mechanics' Manufacturing
Company, Rochester, N. H., excel nny tiling uftlw
kind for beauty ond perfection, ever laitare offered
in till* market. Tim sliude is pure white, the nap
thick und soft, well raised on both sides, and are
wrought from American wool. This Company took
the gold modal awarded at tho Mechanics’ Fair ! -
1339.
Department or State, !
Washington, October 28, 1840. J
Information has been received at this Depat
ment from thu U. S. Consul at Rome, of iho deaih
of Francis Kinlocli, late of Cbnrlwioe, p'C- In
conformity with the law in suoheaso man* »nd pro
vlded, the said consul has takwi ,po*H»shin of the
effects of the deceased, and will tarward an Invcnto-
•y of ill* same in this Department.
A Belie.—Ur. Lingard recently presented tntha
Right Rav. Dr. Brown, Catholic Bhhop of Lanca
shire- England, tha identical ring worn ly tha cele
brated Cardinal I'ato*
ilia will no doubt be made, accompanied by t»*Vrs
of resignation. So that, whelam Im lb* result, tlie
moment l» critical.
We siated yeitrnlny tlmt tlm decisive war mra*
iitrs could not Im mkt-n by the French Cabinet with
mil an Immetlia e-plit tUtvin, and ilw withdrawal
of three or four .Ministvis. Wo Imvo lust lu |miuw
tlie xriiel'-s oftho ConsiitutioniielsidlhoJuurvHlilc*
Debats cf SuiHlsy t« bu t-onviocctl of thu tiu h of
this.
The Journal do* Debates, tho organ of llio Court,
of tlm Conservative* nnd.of the peace party, though
not of pair atoutprU, dreinte* that ilia events ul
Uoyroui, however serious, 'hole still nothing more
titan tho foreseen consequence* • f llio treaty, nnd
that ihuio who did not qunriel pith tlm treaty
hnve no right n get into a li.rious pn»slon nnd do
claru wni on account of the consi'qiiHiH-e*. Tha
organ ofM. Thiers, on tha contraiy, considers thu
event* of Boyruuia*quite altering ilia question—n*
being u direct blow to llio hope* which iho Fienrh
Im I vnteriuincd of concilinlion. Tlie bombardmont
is represented at suhstanlial violence toward* llio
l’uclio—moral violciicu townrd* France,"
Tho result t.f tlm trial of Louis Nnpoloon was,that
thu l'riiice and his piincipnlcum|>aniuiis iu the in-
sanu enterprise wore found guilty. Tho tallowing
arc iho sentences passed upon ilium t
l’rince Louis Nnpoleon, perpuluul imprisonment
in n fortress.
Count Montlmlon, 20 year* detention; Voisin, 10
ditto; Mosuimn, 15 stilt* { 1'nrquin, 20 dig Uoullut
Montuuban, 5 do; Luinburd, 80 di.; Forrestier, 10
do.
Second Bank --Br.tnille, 5 venr* detentions Ala-
denize, truiisportutioit for iili ,* Laborde, 2 years do-
tent ion; Desjordine, acquitted; Gnlvntd, ditto; Do
Lambert, d<-, lluro, do.
Dor express from Paris nn Monday brings omin
nu* tiding*. M. Thiers nnd hi*colleagues went to
SlCloud with iho tarmul list- ntion of making tlm of
ler of resigning uu ill it day, if certain terms were
not coded lo them by the King !'Hi* Majesty, snr
prised by tho ununimiiy of n cabinet whicli on tho
previous day svusso divided ustulenvo M Tillers in
a docided minoity, may be suid rather nut to hnve
resisted tlnu. have yielded, so that Ministers did not
OFtui go tlie loogtli of llio menace which they intend
od. Tiie King im* thus gained lime, ltwi.lbu
asked how tho Frensh Cabinet so divided on Sniur
day, becama of the sumu opinion on Sunday, nnd
unnnimimin* tu the necessity of strong and warlike
resolvusl Tim answer is easy. On Saturday tho
French still believed, whnt they believud all along,
thnt tho Turks aided by tho British murine, could
not make any deoUlvu impression on tho const or
population of Syria. They thought Mehemut and
Ibrahim impregnable and, deemed that iho winter
nt least would wear away w itliqut thu reduction or
dnngor «f tho Pacha. Thu full d<spntches from
Bay-root, however, which reached Paris onSuturdny
night, opened iho eyes oftho French Ministei*.—
They saw atanceiliut Ibrahim wos completely ben
ten, and would, iflio.iililic* continued bo dtiven
from all Syria, without the nid of a single Riusinn
gun. They trembled not merely for Buyroot nnd
lliu Lebanon, but tar Acre und Alexandra itsclfiand
tlte consequence im* been (lie rosolve to interfere: if
England cannot begot to hold Iter bund. The fuvor
ito plan seems to bo tlintuf sending„4roop« to Alex
nndrin. Tiio Picsse say*, that Minister* ilomnnd
mulling except In tho ovont of Acree’botagut ncked.
Nothing however, seem* tube positively decided.
All tlm Cabinet now con*unt to llio convocation of
tho Chamber.*, though tlm views nnd desired nccom
puniment* to such a measure are different; nnd this
constitutes tho diffoienco of opinion alluded to in
thu Constitiiiionel.
Orders nrugivon at Mesiinn tar provisions for ilia
Froncli fleet, which is to bo stutiutiod there during
llio w-lntur.
Tlie tone of tho French journul*. of Monduv, is ex
coodingly wnrlike. Tho tempest without hod found
nn echo in tho Cabinet, half the members of which
wero for wnr, and tlm oilier half for pence. Tim
King litfudedtlia peace party, whicli, including Ids
Mujen v, comtilued a majority by nsingle vote. But
Louis Pliillipu being something more than nn indi
viduul in tlm Nuiionnl Councils the. preponderance
wns greatly in fuvor of the p.-nco side oftho bulsnce.
M.-Thoirs had qiiilo gone over to thffleftor Odillon
Uui'i'ut pnriy, trusting to mol* influenco to secure
tho triumph of his policy. M. Guzznt, oil tho eon
i rui y, declared fur tho King's side, and advised tlie
convocation of tha Chambers, nnd the appointment
of a new Ministry, 'flmcunlesi in Franco is furl
our; but-cvery tiling depends on tlm Chambers. It
is a |*Uy that the removal.uf M. ThWrs from ufltoe
was nut resolved upon liefoio the countiy wns in »ucli
n fermnntns to tuko thu quostion nf nonce nr war
out of the hands of etiilonnon, lo bo decided by pop
ulur clamour or accident.
Tha Porta jdurri da of Tiu'tifUy fviVe alP^aii re
ceived, and from cxtiact* given in another partuf
tlie Sun, our readers will l.n ubiu to taim a tolera
hie correct conception uf the oseitement which
prevails in the French metropolis un ilia Eastern
question. Tho canvorntiuii of tho Chamber* is
now fixed for tlie first of November, till wlircli time
the King is snid lo have given M. Thiers a curio
blnnclie to rcsulvc nnd to net ns a majority of tlm
C'libinot may deem advisable. This carlo bluncln*
wns given to thu President oftho Council during un
interview with the King on Tuesday morning, after
which M. Thiers produced nn ullimutiimto bo de
livered to tlie Fuur Powers, d> lining the casus liel
li, whiohnno writer sintes wn* forwnrdi-d immedi
mcly to London. Wo do not know exactly ill" pur
poit of this ultimatum,nn I tho question is allog*-th
cr too grave in justify the mnking guess w-mk of the
content* of such u document. If lot warded to Lou
don, it will, us n matter of course, find its woy into
the new* pnper*.
We muy bo permitted to observe thnt iho rumor*
in tho diplomatic circles of Puri* were iliut tho ulti
matum restricted the grounds of war tn three points
—the passing of the Strait* of tin* Dardanelles by
ilia whole, been Inactive, w ith only ■ limited trial!
demand tar Foreign Wimaiat Mm rutrenry oflxst
I ui-sdsy. New Irish Wiicat has L*h u offering 3d
|wr busiiel lower.
„„ , LIVERPOOL, Oct. 3.
1 hn im|mrt of llm work I* 37,5112 Img*; nnmulv,
27 !0» from tlm Unit, d Nut, *, UNO from Brat I,
547 from iho West ludi.s.aid 75tl» from ILimbav.
The sale* of tlm wtvk are 87.IIUJ iMgsot which
tlieioi.ro liken on *|H-(-iilii i- it mini) Ann-ricau -»nd
3l)0 Sum, ami f.r exp.it lull Aim'rieun. Pilre#
ore nitdnlidm-d wiihsii-uiliu,-.*, iJiospttulutiie buy
ing giving relief to the holder*.
LONDON, Oct. fl.
Sugar.—Tlm mmket opem-d firmly,nnd except
ing hi prices fully • quel to tlnnm of Friday itwn*
impos*ib|o to piirelm*!', and lliere wus dceidi'ill)
more life in tlm nnitkei, li-.<h ciocrr* und r« linei*
haying ton fair extent. Timm wus no *npply uf
fluejpi'diiii'st tlm supply is *|io!|.
Foreign.—A gmsl lii'ninml has exl.teil in while
kind* of Brazil, cliuili, for shipping, nnd tint rates
ptiivioiuly e*lnbli*lu-d have Ihcii tally sup|mrii"l.
b’ljjfrf.-Tlii'nt was linlo desire i-vliced on the
pnit of ilm lipmo trade to do bii«ioi'«*, nnd tlm opt-r
ution* privately were onu small scuio in both East
and \\ est India..
KJ” We nro iudcliteil to lion. E. J. Ilr.ACK for a
pamphlet copy of the lie port from the Secretary
of the Treasury, of the Commerce and Naviga
tion of the I’nittdSlaUs for the year eudengliOlh
September, 1839,
Those of our mercantile readers who are desirous
of examining tlm dcluils, can hnvo tho use uf the
pamphlet.
(From a Correspondent.)
M1LLEDGEVILLE, Nov. 5, 1840.
JiotlSKOK RKfUCsKNTATtVIiS, >
Tuesday, Nov. 3d, 1840. )
Tlm Counties were milled in tlmir order today,
and but one bill was reported by Mr. William*, ol
Talbot, which wns for tho pnrdnn of ■ —,
of tho county of Tuib.it.
A resolutijit wn* agreed to bringing on tlm elec
tion of it Judge of tlm Coweta Circuit, and an Attor
ney General for tho Middle Circuit, as nlso tlm
Solicitor General* for the Northern, Southern, East
ern, Western, Ocmulgeo and Flint Circuits.
In tlm Scimia Mr. Miller introduced a hill forth 0
establishment of the Cuutt fiir llio Cnrrortinn of
Errors, which whs rend tho first lime mid 200 copies
ordered to l.u printed.
Wednesday, Nov. 4ih, 1810.
Smite local hill* wore introduced lilt* morning,
mid a set of resolutions by Mr. Flournoy, of Wash
ington, opposed to the sub-trensnry bill, mi-1 direct
ing our Sotiutnrs in Congress to have it rcpoalod,
and also n resolution eulogising tho clinrnctor nndj
claims nf Harrison to tlm Presidency.
Mr. Toombs introduced u resolution whicli wus
agreed to, asking tho appointment of a committee to
inquire into tho affair* of the Central Bank, with
leave tn nond for persons und pupnrs, nnd examine
witnesses upon onl It, nnd to report by bill or other-
wise, a* to tip* nxpodioncy of abolishing thu institu
tion ; the committee uro Muisrs. Toombs, Chappell,
Osborne, Murphoy of DcKulh, and Stiles.
ELEC! ION FOR ELECTORS.
'timsylvuniu nhd Ohio voted 30lh oil. The first
will probably give its thirty votes to Van Duukn—
tlm Inst its twenty-one votes for Harrison.
.Maimj, Nrw Hampshire, Connecticut, Now York,
New Jersey, Rhode Islmid, Virginia, Indiana, Illi*
tiuls, Michigan, Missouri, .Arkansas, Mississippi,
Louisinnn, Kentucky, Tennessee nnd Gcorgin linvo
nil voted on tlm 2d, 3d and 4ili lust., must of them
on llio 2d, while New York occupied tiioso tliruo
days. -
Next week tmr columns will ha full of return*.
Massachusetts, Murylmiil anil Alabama will voto
on the 9th, Monday.)
Vermont «wd Delaware on the 10th.
North Carolina on tho I2th.
And thu gallant nnd Southern Stnto,&»i/A Caro
lina, wlJJ, when her Legislxtnro moot* lids month,
complete, wo trust, the re-election of Martin Van
ittuHnn, rendered eertuin, a* we ho/in, hyjho firm-
nois of New York, Virginia, Pennsylvania. New
Hnmpihiro nnd tho rest ot tlm Dcmocruiio pirn-
liuix.
148 Electors, tlm vxnct numltcr nrcrssary tn
olect were clioiou lid* week, 51 on tho 30lli ult.
and 95 remain to bu ch-isen.
ih Nevrtiih Hlir. I, b lo«- Pine. In !l««iprrstMM l!
wx« found tlixi tlm lumiirrxiehil.il so deep tlmt «
p*»*i id il,e |h-« oimI n u-i le* had M Im iflh-ivul.
Tho Imlr slniw.d gieai fuititud. while tlm o|STntmti
Wn« l-eing |s'ifi>iiniilii'id we are happy to learn is
fx*livcovi-iii'g.— New Vork Am.
I'llESIDKNTi \l ELECT ION.
Fran ilm IVnn*ylvniiian of Solindiy last, we
OAtrari tlHifoll-.wiiigt
GLORIOUS DEMOCRATIC! TRIUMPH II
"/VHN#j7r<fft/>i tales tin I’sn nnd tends to fVcfsrg t”
COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA.
Di'iiiocrtiilc lflnjorliy upwards of
3 i o om
DEMOCRATIC CAIN SIX HUNDRED It
Tim Democracy of the City mill County of Phils
Jeiphiacovoiinlthemsuhex with honor hy their if
tarts yes-eiilny. Tho iriumpluintn's'ilisoftlmelec*
lion of tlm IJihinst. tnoinisu.l much for iho great
and fmiil strngxlc against the forces of tadeinl whig
fiery, und e uro proud to say tlmt tke promUnllieii
given bus been most amply redeemed. Our upno
iteni*spared no elliirtto free themselves from Ilm
monMention whicli they rxpi'rienced at recant re
sults—they brought their inmost forco to the jhiIIs
—no eniionU'*, no imimidaiimii, ho Inst uppoalsio
puriv pride, ueie negluctcd. But it wn* nil in vain
—ilm “piper*" full far short iff thidr loud vaunting*
mill of their nsstnnncus ill it on this hz'lle ground,
tlm 3Uth wus lo retrieve ul|. Iniu-nduf tlmt, tliey
linvo doiiiM veil loss than before.
Wu snlijoio tlie returns from the City nnd Conn
ty. Ii will tio seen iliut the federul majority in ilm
city, whicli wu were confidently told yesterday would
irncli fieirilmuiaiid, nt tlm luust, is only 2881,white
ilm democratic majority in llm County is mure than
8100.
'1 he democratic majority in llm City and County
on tlm J3ili of October wiis (17—tho doom-ratio mu-
joiiiy on tlmUlUh. is over Iteo hundred, showing u
gain lor tlm good exuse inn little uvor two week*
of two hundred and fifty.
Tim importance of tills triumphant result muy bo
osiintuird more closely by our friends when we state
that tn 183(1. the federal majority in tha City wns
872U—tlm donincrutio maturity in tho county was
1510, making in both City und County 1218 tar
Hurison.
But in 1810, tlm tabic* nro turned. Tho wiso
und patriulii! administration of Martin Van Buren
shows a gain in ths district* n-tanedto of upwards
iif 140!) votes.
So much for tlmnllompl lo delude the intelligent
citizen* nf Pennsylvania with “coon skin*, hard ci
der," mummery and litimfuj. They ate, a* wu
have snid In line, ni'itliei to bo intimidntrd nor ca-
, iiled—neither to be ewod by ponies, nor duluded
iy ilio.i-who would “stoop to conquer."
Though not much in thu habit of nnticlpnting.wo
feel nrnun'd from those results, tiintwa muy safely
nnnounen to tho Dumncrncy of iho Union tlmt
PENNSYLVANIA IS SAFE FOR VAN UU-
UEN AND JOHNSON, AND THE IN DEPEN
DENT TREASURY I “Pigeon Expresses" end
Federal “slips,"—appropriate mimes—to the con-
trnty iii.twiihsluniling.
Tlie following from the Bahimnro Republican,
of Mimdny Inst, leads us to expect 5 to 0000 ma
joiity In tho Keystone Statu for Van Burkn.
PENNSYLVANIA.
O. K.
The " Old Keystone" lias ieJ tlm Van In the
mutest and nobly less slm donosp. If llio retiiios
to como tiio of llm same complexion u* llio.o we
have alre oly rcreived, tlm Stine will ca-t her vme
for Mr. VAN BURKN BY A GREATLY IN
CREASED MAJORITY. LET MARYLAND
FOLLOW HER GLORIOUS EXAMPLE!
Compared with ilm t-lcciinu, 13lliOctober, 1840.
—■*“ Fed- gain.
i Hit of 25 “niim
eofJohn
Plillml. City and County
• Backs'
Chester
Dauphin
Delnwaio
Lam-nrter
l.iiliigii ,
Monroe
Montg.iir.vry
Noiilinnipiun
Sciiviy Ikill
York
Dorn. gain.
J15
100
VIRGINIA ELECTION.
In the Clinrlestun Courier of 5th hist, wo find
llio following statement of the vdo in thu e.ountit' M
named, furnished by ono uf tlm pasiungcrs of the
iluntri'B* to tlm editor*;
Ih*dlord county, 250 Whig miij.al'y.
Campbell county, 223 Whig mi^j irfty.
Cuinlino coiiniy, 83 Admioisirmi.'ii mnj<>riiy.
Richmond county, 410 Whig mujoriiy.
Clio*tevll'-lilcmmiy,280 Administiniion mujoriiy.
Pelersliurg county, 17 AdininLtruiinn majority.
Noilolk U'linny, 137 Whig majority.
llunovur nnd Siufford, nearly eq ml.
175
307
93
313
190
290
100
338
92
409
1442
1258
1259
184
Pon'ocrnlia gain over I3th
October, iU4U
Tho pemonrailo majority in Berks is 3,000—nt
the fin m>)r "lection no opposition—compiired with
I83fi, Democratic gain nt the picseut cleetioM over
300.
• Tlm Whig paper* claim Bucks hy 175 majority:
hut nn extra from llm Philadelphia Lcdgwr, a neu
tral papor gives t».u Demoerulio voto n* welmvusvt
it down—ilia extra from the Ledger is the latest
iiiformutiua tlmt could hr. received.
* r* .• ••AN" Title list It headed b* ilk min uf
(.nckranci'l whn I* reprr-. M. .I in llm xffdiv-l nf
Hem),rnidMud by Wilii.m., a* having raid the
former tlist Ih» l.rmqhi mi flftvhi *o from l'hi!a*al
phis (ovule, and that In received $59 or$107 tar
Ids own service*, * ■ • 1
Tenth Paper.—CitmellH tin' reildeima of V
erfi-lt. h sail maker of I'lillsilelj-hU, uh> was |i
Itirnt in these trxnsncilonl,Nil t who l»g I foiledttr
in SteveitMin's nffldnvft, as bolnf a wii.Bdi'ntinl
friend ..f llela II nlgnr, und ns Imvhtf hroughl nn lu *
New York upwards ol iwemy man at #25 or $30 u
piern. Flonu rMt's receipt fm a balance iff llm
it.uncy iluu him tar Id* services, is found among lh«
pipers,
Eleventh Paper — Contains the nnmes nf 41
pipe lavn:s, mnung ilmm me iho names of JarilM
Young, tlm High Sheriff iff Philadelphia, who was
nrrrstcd liore nnd gave lilstastlmutiy.but fonclit af-
ler his tel tun to Philadelphia, to retract thn confas*
xinn which, ill an hour of contrition, hr had tuudiis
Also thnt tff Marks, whose affidavit iff Ids share la
the tiiin-nciion* Imslmen published, who was liber,
nteil from prison by tlm “charity" iff J union Merril,
and rewarded with $25 by the innocent Blntcl ford.
AL.iihul of Reynolds, who accompanied Marks,
mid in Ids exnmitmiioii beforeihe recorder, verified
tit" sintument* nf Mark's affidavit. Also the mime
of ‘1 liornton, n police uff.rer of Pldladi Ipbia, whit
tain slicd Stevenson, in Parker's ovs'rr cell r, a list
of 34 “tdpo hiyers," nine of whom Im maiked as
having been hero in 1838. Thornton hoi since been
procured, lu company with Mayor Swift. Yyuttf.
&c. to swear tlmt he was not here hi 1838, and
knew nothing ortho trniuucilons. His prominence
in iho fraud* is shewn by iho tact, that six name*
uro mnikudu* "Thornton’s friends;" among whom
is Him nf ilm imtorious bully, Andrew McLean,
whose bill for wine, segnrs, &c. at Congress llsll.
nnd pnid by (ilrutwortli, wn* nlso found, n* ilm tblf
ty eighth paper of thu pnrknga.
Twelfth Paper.—Contains n II._ ...
loyeis.' Till* list is (madid by the mime o
Siiuntlers, who is represi-niml In Stevenson's affidu
vll ns lioing parlor r with 'J hmmon, and whoso orif
Inal n'celr.is, murkcil pnpers 32, 34 nnd 37, for nine
hundred dollnrs, nro found in the package. Snuri
d'-rs i* un nilieerof the corpuiniion of Philadelphia,
und onu of the innocent und slandered inditirlunls,
whoso ext ru-jud cial disclosures have bevn forward
ed here incompuuy with Mayor Swift's,to dlrprova
the whnlo trnn-nction!
Fourteenth Paper.—Is a letter from Van Allen,
e respci't'blo whig meichant, to Raymond, leather
inspector, wliusu oliiilnrit is nlrendy published, and
who wn* engaged in tlie elms hou*o, nsklng him to
carry out somo mrongrmcnt for fraudulent voting
in tho 1 Gill Until.
Fifteenth Paper.—1* n lottpr from James H.
Bruim, a wliig commissioner in tlm aims house,and
clini rm- n ofn wnig commil'pe of the 4th watd,and
relates ton slmllxrtianinction.
Sixteenth nnd Seventeenth Papers, contain 14
names of “plpu lnyrru"inurki'd, significantly “iinid"
nnd ns npprnrs from lim memorundum on iho bnck,
by Yiitmg.
Seventeenth Paper.—At the liend of this pnper
is wrilun “voted," nnd iho initials of Sirine. It
shows tlmt on Wcdneidny ond Thursday he voted In
ten words nnd wns challenged In two. The tact Is
conflrmo 1 l y lliu affidavit ofPetor Conrad,the whig
keeper iff thu Park In Philadelphia, which wp pub
lislied yoMoiiluy. Strinu nlso is ono iff thu inno
cent* who hn* published nn affidavit in I’hilndeiphin,
denying till knowledge oftlm uffuir. Ha is u fii.r
specimen iff Mayor Swill's witnesses I
Eighteenth Paper.—I* ono of tho lists of sub
scriptions tn corruption fund.
Twentieth to thirty-eighth Paptte, inclusive,
nro rereipts growing out uf theso transnciiims;
mnnuntl-g in oil to neurly EIGHT THOUSAND
DULL A ItS. Among them ore receipts of Saun
ders, Swim, Millar nud Young, who figured In S'e-
veiison’s nllidavits; nnd onu from Looioy of $700
for “pipo laying" in 1830, This Looney U ilia
man wlm liitaimvdStavcinoti that Im wns the first
mnn In Philadelphia who “ever attempted to poll
Illegal vote*;" that he managed It for three years
before Im lot nny onu into thn socretj furnished Ste
venson with a list nf pipo layers which accompany •
Stephrnson’s affidavit—two iff whom he said hud '
voted in every ward in Now York in 1833.
Thirty-ninth Paper it n cnn-lgnment of “jt|p«
layers" train Rnwn alias Bulla Badger, who tire
mentioned in Swim's receipt, marked paper fifiV !
first. Tho receipts of this Charles Swlnt for $1050.
nro found among tiio paper*, and are alluded to in
Stevenson's ntiliTavit us luring pnrt iff the money
taken nn by Harry P. Huvi-ns, now whig candidate
for tlm Aas-nibly.
Fifty-ninth Paper It a letter from Stentn»oft to
Glentworth; urging him by considerations uf honor
und Justiue to an exposure of ibrio infumoux trnni-
uctions. Ti conclusively refutes tha pretence of con
spiracy, or nl'anyatu-mpr even hy Stephenson li>
influence Gluntworth by improper motives to a dis
closure of lira truth.
t From tale Foreign Journals1
LORD STANHOPE'S PREDICTION OF
ARMED STEAM VESSELS.
In 1704, l.ni-dSmi hofe wddrrssi-da letter toAVll
, . . , be. force on tlm <qnultta^of pence or wnr, likely, I«
In addition lo tiio nhovi-, eleven oilier counties thought, to Im broughnindi-r disousrian unihe
ve been nicolvcd, which show n ih mor.rntic suits- 1 1
ill 23 rounties of 1,(112 uvei llm vote of tlm I3di of
October, nnd n Whig gain over the sunie voto iff
Tlm recent elect inn iu Iowu Territory, for a del*
Russ'nn fleet, nn attack of ilia Allies upon Alexnn- ogale to Congress, has ri'iultcil in tlm election
drill, und tlie uitumpt by the Four 1'owet* to givu Gunerul Dodge, tlm deinoerutic candidate for Coir
effect to the sentence nr deposition pronounced by grcM byubout 000 majority.
the Snll'in ogninst Muhcmot All. Should llm first iff I
Ih... ...uineil L'V.mualitiu* lull.- pl.fr, Klim™ will T)|( , )|n „. j, mM p. B im mo„. (will,) l.n. born
U--«- »r s .„ r
On the other hand, If nn attack ho made on Alexnn from the State ol Rhode Island, in the pliiuu of llio
dria hy the British nnd Austrian squadrons, then Hun. Nehciniiili R. Knight, uho*e term of service
wur will he declared ngninst ilmsu power* without I CK j,j„ ;i „u die 4th of Murcli next,
nny reference tn Rns-in. An idtimutum in Bus uf
fxl would , r n . doiir Cm Ih. Minn .mo «('!»»«»• | jy w . |„ nrn ,„ nl „„ Wra |f „f ,l,„
By taking Egypt under her protection rruticu wotilil | .
nbundon Syria, which wniild thus rovut tn tho Sul Africans taken in ilm Amistud, have engaged the
ton, under thn auspices of England nnd Austria— services of tlm lion. John Quincy Adams, as roni-sr
imssikle rasi/urce* o! France; «,]il |,inti t hrit Eng
land isnut iiivolnerali!i'. His'reds-tis ere 'curious,
und. c,n.'ul. ring llm date, not wltlidUt-ferpretf:
This urtitiiry, Grunt Britain, is VlihionAlo in,,
znmany why*, iliut rim picture is horrid. By lev
ter I will stiy t'otliiug iipon limit i'uh]Cct. 'One In*
stance I will liowrver state,bi'cmise il Is information
you ontinul, ns ye', rscelvu from nny 'dtlipr qunrti r.
tlmugli i ii .two i r th't'i'm nulls from tile ditto iff this
lulti r thu luct will lot taffy established, anil you
inny tlifiih'-pr It from iflltciv. The tiring I allude
to is of pcru'iiir impi rl-ince) Tho tact is this, I
FURTHER AND BETTER ! I know (and inn taw week* shall prove,)that shins
Tim return* from twemy-fo'ir count Irs give air. I of nny s'ze, nnd tar crTtuin* loasuns, tlm larger llm
Van Buren 3,821 minority. Ho isgning nlicnd like Imitur, muy bu tmvignti'd inunv nnrrow or other
n loc'iininntivc!• Twcmy-nlm*riinmiu* tohu llenfd | sea, wiiliunt sail* (il.migli nerariutinlly with,) but
21)91. Tlie strong Foderalcminties, wiili tlm
ception iff two or ilnce, nro vll in; nnd nil ilm other
citiiniius nfilie Sun", niucxpurted lo add to ilia
Democratic vote u sufficient nnuilicr in pivn Mr.
Van Itiiren tlm State liy nbom FIVETIIOUSA.'ND.
The Puniisylvaniii Reporter, (published nt Vluirit-
burs) spunk* cniifo'i'iitly of SIX THOUSAND.
Unr dale* from Huriisburg urc uslntu us Suluv.lny
niglili
front, 21 of vvliich nrudee,dediy Democratic.
CHARLESTON. Nov. 5.
Six days Inter from England.
Tim ship Florida, Cnpl. Moran, nrrived lieic yes
trrdey. By her wu linvo rcccivnd Liverpoul paper*
to llm Pill nnd London to tlm Bill ult Inclusive.
Tliey exhibit still n stata of great, nnd in Franc*,
increasing agitation on the subject of thn Eastern
question. In Euchred the press is nlmo«t unanimous
tar penc«v-in France tar wnr, but tlm “dreadful
note of propaeutiou" in both countries Is swelling.
Still it can hardly l*o suid that they huvu advanced
n step fntlher towards wnr than hy thn Inst news.
Boyrnut has certainly hern burr,landed and taken,
ns well us some other fortifientions; but though
France Im* thereupon quickened, her preparations,
still there is no intimntioft thnt that almm wid bo
considered n cau«c for wnr. It is snid in tho Lon
don Son of the 8th, thnt M. Thiers hnd dispatched
to tlm Engli-li Government Iris uhimnium. stating
on whut terms of forbearance on tlm part of tlm four
powers, Franco would abstain from hostilities,
This paper, tlm contents iff which are as yet un
known, is <ff tho utmost interest. It is however
■mid that Franco will certainly resist, il n Rusrisn
fleet passes into tho Mediterranean, or-if any at
tempt is mndu tn execute tlie decicu of deposition
ugnlnst Mohomet AH. Tlm London pn;H'r< uiso * 0 y
that Russia iscoticcntraring greui forces at Odc,-*n,
ond thnt Turkey hud solicited her nid, nuvnl us well
ns military, in put down tho Viceroy of Egypt.
This is the stale iff tlm Eastern quostion.
Spain is more quiet and it is suid that Kspartrro,
U in n fair way ul reconciling ull difficulties und re^
storing order.
The triul of Prince Louis Nnpuirnn has ended in
a sentence of imprisonment lor life agni'sl llm
Prince nndofdt-tentiuti* fur various pcriods.ugumst
iris fullmvuis.
We siibj in Midi extracts ns ii is in power to
make from papers tlmt came tu hund at a lulo buui-
in tlie duy.
Thn London Sun of the 8ili says—
“The excitement caused yesterday afternoon by
iho wnrliko accounts from I*ranee, nnd tliereporl
that thn Bunk was about lo ruisa their discount to
6 percent, still prevails ta the money market, and
Consol* hnve ogain receded, fluctuating from 80$
down to 85}, at present may be quotoil 85}. Tlm
spcculni >r* mid jobbers nru now anxiously wuilitig
for further intelligence from Paris, to esceitain lists
result of the French Cabinet Council, which was to
be held on Tuatduy, which yte expect will bu rcce
ved in the course of this day.
LONDON. Oct. 5.
Our Parts correspondent writes that M. Thiers
lias already proposed and insisted, iu thu Ununcil,
on aderlsrution of wur, on sending troops to thu
Rhine, nnd nl*o to AUasndria'in dsspilo of tlm bloc k
silo. Un thnsu questions M. Tills-r* was tn llm
imnority- On Monday cr Tuuday similar propo 1 9d per
As for the deposition of Mrhrmct Ali, Englnnd Im* counsel, nnd dint Imvvill make tlm closing nrgnt.i
nottho remotest idon of enforcing such n sentence. , n Stl „ M . mo Court of llm United States,
Indeed webeilevo that were the Vicerojnnw to giva ( , . | nn . mr ,,
up Syria, tlm British Cabinet would employ whnt I " uMogiun, next Jnnunrj.-Acm 1 ork l aper.
influencu il Im* nt Constantinople to procuro the im
iiirdiiite nullification oftlm Impsriuland Erclcsiaslia j A steam Frigmo is building nt PIriluilolpidn. tlm
| paddle wlieeti nru rntircly of wrought iron; 29 fent 8
I inches diameter, nnd lOfin-t bu< ket. The main sliuft
is of wrought iron, 1 foul 5 inches diameter.
Decree, nnd even procure a Firman declaring thn extremo Jengtli of which to tlm figure liend, is 244
Government of Egypt hcn-diluiy in llm fumily I feet, hicndih 40 tact, depth iff hold 23} ii-oi. The
iff the Pacha.—Sun. ’" ’ ' “ ' r ' ‘"" nri r ‘ f '
LIVERPOOL, Oct. 8.
Cotton, per Ih.—Sea Island, 1*. }d. n 2*. (id.;
Stained, 5}d. n ls.{ Bowed GonrgiH,51 i»7t Moldlo, I From the N. Y. Jour, of Commerce, 31*t ull.
5} n7}S TenncsceiS; New Orleans, 5} u9; I ernain I Bin month of August Ihsi, thu Isrig Galen, of
liuco, U} n 9}; Bahia, 8 u 9} Mnranhnm. 7} a BJi I Rostop, for Bermuda,fell in with a sloop cnllod iho
Demotion,7 ull; West India, G} a 8; Sural, 3}a I *]•[,„.„ Sistars, drifting without mnnugemeni. Tlm
5; Bengal,4 a 4J; Egyptian. 0}d. a Is. 1 jjyoj, |,„j onboard lltn-o negroes, only mm of whom
LIVERPOOL, Ocl 8. I survived. Suspicious liavn boon expressed that
Colonial Produce.—Wo have experienced 0 I these negroes wero fugitive staves from iff llinSontli
very fair demund lor Plantation Sugars »i"ce our I ern g, ot ,. #t \v t . hnvs* seen n letter from Turks I*,
former report. On Tuesday last u public sale took I j 0|M j f w | : j c |, nmcd tlmt thn sloop belonged there,
place, consisting of a hoard of IDO h»g.livnd* and an j ,| ml ,he negroes were well known residents
UU casks of verv choice Jamaica, of firm middling
v,., , T y .11. , M.3J Wp,.SMS. J- '1}^
pipe. In E..I Indi. nnd Mnn,bin- Uicro i. lull. | wltl. q"lt-.
to report. Some sales have Imen affe ted in Bra-
so m to go vvitlioot wind, unit even directly ngninst
bmli wind and waves Tlie consequences I draw
uro ns f.dimv*: First, that nil thn principal reasons
ngabisl tlm Frenrli having tho pint* ol Ostrnd.
&n.'cease; inasmuch as a Ficnch IWt, com; o«ed of
strips of thn ubovo mentioned description, wnu'd
cornu outulnil time* from Cheilmurg,Dunkirk, &c.
os well n* from Os end, &o and appear in tha same
sens. Tlm wutor, even at Dunkirk, wiil be amply
From the Milledgcvillr Reetnder,T>lh tmt.
GEORGIA ELECTORAL KLECIIUN.
Tho i-tiuso nf Hurrisun und lUform has, in ibis I
election, gnincri iidilitionul strengtli. Returns from I
35 counues show n gniuon uurlilto Congveasiouiil
electiim of 1702 vot«*«. Thera is nn doubt uf ilia I
e'ecllnn iff our Elwntni el ticket by u majority iff nt I
least sovun thousand votes. Wo congratnlnle our deep enough fur tho purpose of huving them th»r ,
renders ond thocuuntry ut huge, upon thja imppy Tlm French huving (Js'enil ou^ht not therefore—
result, under this new revolution in naviil nfl'uirs,for U will
Tho tallowing returns shew nur gradual increased |, 0 complia i ruYolutiun—to be a bar to peace. Un
vote. So the remark nf our last Charleston Mi rra I def the old nauiicnlsystrm,novel men might have
ry, (hat “when one get* fairly on.h-r way down hill, I reasoned diflerenriy upon that subject. Oat tho
increase of velocity i* very naiural," it tally tonlirm I most importunt conseqimnee wlricli 1 draw from tho
ed, in our elcctimi, ns wo nppieliend will bn found I stupendous fuel moniiunrd at tlm top of this pago
10 bo tlm cose throughout tlm wlmlu country, I tills, namely, lint ii willshnrtlily render a'.l tho
Counties. Harrison Mnj\ Van Bunn Maj. I acting nnvh-s iff tlm world (Inman military navies)
Hancock, 241 | nn lieltei tlmn lunriiiT. Fur wliat can ships do that
zil, n litllo or no variation from previous quo'
GI5 boxes while, and 127 boxes of yrilow Itavmin
were nttempicd by auction this morning, but uu
tale was cfiectcd.
In Rice there are no sales by privalo or by auction
lo report, but tlm currency remains steady.
LIVERPOOL, On 8,
The silk's sinco Friday nmount to 18,000 begs,
of which 4000 are sold todny. Price* have nui vu
ried, although iho market i* dull.—Arrived since
Tuesday, two vessels from Pernambuco, one from
Mobile, mid threo from
into quarantine.
Colton Market.—The *ul«-t on
were 3000 bales; Friday, 5000; Ijulurdny,
Monday, 4000; Tuesthiy,2500; and to-day, 4000.
Tho demand has been to a fair cxlciu, and price*
have varied little, if uny, since our la*t •tntemont.
Holders offer thnir stuck freoly, and tlm prices nro
maintained, genemlly. Tho impmt of iho wock
amounts to 23,534 bull's.
LIVERPOOL. Oct. 6.
Corn Exchange.—The wratlmr *»'t in finn at the
There nre some very strange nnimsi* in tho West
pnr icuiarly the half hur-e and Imlf alligator specie*
w hicli are driven mil’in large ’number* by tiio nn-
nu^l floods ol tlm Mississippi. Tho marine Uni
corn olso of lira Father of Waters, upon whore up
turned lmrn ns lio lies ruminating nt tho bottom, so
many gallant sinamhonis have Imen snagged, must
be as wonderful nn object lu Europcuri* as the lions
of tlm Jordon weru to us,
I'utimrn,
Warren,
Jones,
Crawford,
.Muscogee,
Houston,
Twiggs,
Wilkinson,
Morgnn,
Monroe,
Talbot,
Jasper,
Fuleski,
Gwinnett,
Newton,
Homy,
Cow-ntn,
Greene,
Lincoln,
Wilkes,
DeKnlb,
Fnyelte,
Eibert,
Walton,
Just Praise,—Cnpirrin Moorsnom, tlie engineer
uni . - , rf Uto Brimtafhnm an.I Gb.uces.er Rail Road Com
Egyot, wliiih uro all gone pany, says of Mr. Norris’engines: “I Wish the nblM
" ,l I iy ,ff Mr. Norris wu* better npnieciated than it np-
LIVERPOOL, Oct 7. I pear* t*» Ira ut present. Tho Philadelphia engine,
Tbuisduy iu.t iillliouglt of ordinary site, is doing more work by 40
lurUny. 451)0; I psr cunt limn any engine of any situ that I have
ta.Au*. 4WI0.1 been nbjelo boar wfin England. ’
The Boston Daily Advertiser says, M. A. II. Ev
oictt has not reinrionl to llnvnna“To rnntinim his
investigation* touching the doings of Mr. Consul
Trls'. Mr Evnroit. wo belove, complied hi*
comnri*iiiinaiilhnt subject at thu lima of Iris Ute
visit to Havnnu, and made Iris report' of lim nature
nf wLitrii, ortli" action of tho fovernment upon it,
beginning of the tnouili, und bus continued so, with J
onlv trifliiij interruptions, over sinrn, which i* en-
abling tbo farmers In lira Noilh to svcuiu tha re
nvindor uf their crop* in fsir condition. Wo have
hsd a fair delivery of new Wb#4t from the tanners,
tho irest snmidas of which lievo hrooghi 8* fi I t*» 0-
*91 lb*. Thfliidftlurii'S the wvak has, on
Mr, E hits now gono out
nn profustionai nnd not on public business."
Surgical Operation.—A few duysegu Dr. W, F.
Dulfre, Msss'ed by ()•». C'ondie, Hpackmun a ml
Straff'iid,performed the npniMili>li of n'movint a
s.lmrug* tumui from the riglit bivwsi ofalud) living
145
31(1
107
1(1(1
07
24
209
125
152
4!I(J
MO
033
135
40
7G7
194
83
(tie)
4!Jrt
37
no
120
AVto York Evening Post. Slit ult.
THE GLENTWORTH PAPERS.
Tho«e mysterious document* nrcm lx-t before tho
public, und wo nsk part rulur ultention tu thu facts
which tlmy c mfirm. Do they not rorroberata thn
evidence of Stevenson in nlmost every particular?
Do tliey am care*pond intiiri mimes, dates, sums of
money, inrldont*, fire, mentioned with iho tacts dis
closed in Blevimson's nrigiunl tiffidiivitt That our
readers mny see how cioin i* lid* correspondence,
wo hnvo taken the puins tn exuminu tho papers in
iletnil.nndto compare them with the stmemenli
thot liavo been made u I ready befuro lira court. Let
us are what is tho resulit
Third Paper.—Con-nin* the namo of one of tho
mun employed as a “pipe layer,"
Fourth Paper.—Wolf wns on Aldeimnn In Phil-
sdi'lphin, lepresentnl by Gleniwuithto have boon
en arrive agent in this uffuir.
Fifth /taper.—Contain* a 11*1 of nineteen “pipe
layer*"
Sixth Paper.—Contain* n list of ths names of
fnrty'fivu pipe livers, nnd oftho various ward* In
which tliey bad voted; with ealeulnUoii* uf lira
nmount of moin*y paid tu them. This paper I*
(indorsed whit iho name of Hull, wins was at the
time, dock master of i|ir second wind uf this city.
Eighth Paptt—Contain* ilw w*m?» of ilriitciu
I nru dependent upon wind and weather? against
fleet* wholly imleiinndeut of either! Tlterofore,
I thn boasted supeiiorhy of the English nivylstut
I more! Wn must have a now one. The French
I nnd other nations will, for the same reason, have
I tlioiriiuw ones.
From the New Orleans Pleaguns.
HOMEWARD BOUND.
Hurrah! for the brooze hath como at last.
And thu waters awake in foam ;
The canvas.* swells from the creaking mast,
Three days of villainous calm ore past,
And (Strawsnow is speeding home!
For home—for homo—or ho heedmat where l
No sky is cold to him;
If welcoming smiles ho find not there,
Home is but a name—'..I* heart can dare,
And Iris eye w*ll scorn lo dim,
Hurrah! fora stiff sou* wester now
I*capping the billow* big'*!. "
Tlie spray wc dash from our fearless prow,
Three women are sick in thsir berths, I .trow;
But they’ll laugh at it by au^l bye.
Many a year—nndllio change it vast.
Since first un tho upon sen,
Straws gazed on tlie canvas* laden mast.
And tho wave and the storm cloud driving past.
In childhood’s oc*wcy.
And now a being of heart and hope,
Though wild and careless trade; , v
With o soul w prempi ond an arm tn cope,
He seek* for a field nf broader scopo,
And (hers shall hi* tuaio be read 1
Ajscket and shirt of a broad blua check,
Liks the Mariner eraw around i
He fill* his can with no ihoogbtof wreck,
And wrapt iu his cloak on lira open deck,
HU slumbers are I mra and aound I
Hurrah I here’s a hurricane sweeping oo»
At all bauds! take In!
For topmast, rigging, and salla are gone!
Five minute* lusy Had hi n a U(owning one—
But hurrah fur the tempest's die I