ratfol`t 24(tpotitr. Towanda, Wednesday, April 26, 1848 FOR PRESIDE:4I" a, VICE 'AItrASIDENT, Nominees 01 the National Convention. • 131:113CTONAL TICKET. Wrt..tt ix Hi ot.sa,of Clearfield. DAVID D. WAIVIVELIL, of Northampton, Sena ' . °rid ' I. Henry L. Benner. 13. John C. King. 2. Horn R. Kneasa. 14. John Weidman. 3. Isaa"hunk. 15. Robert J. Fisher. 4. A. L. Ronmfort. 16. Frederick Smith. 5. Jacob S. Yost. 17. John Criswell. 6. Robert E. Wright. 18. Charles A. Black. 7. Wm. W. Downing. 19. Geo. W. Bow=man. N. Henry ljaldertian. 20. John R. Shannon. 9. Prter Kline. 21. George P. Hamilton 10. B. 8. Schoonsliver. 22. W. S. Davis. r 1 I„.Vl'. S wetland. 23. Tirnothe Iveq. • 12. Jdnah Brewster. 24. jamis G. Campbell. FOR fintil, COILIIISSIONER, ISRAEL PAINTEIt. Or WE TMOVLAND COvrrry The Two, Clayi. ._. . --- in ouf columns, this week, will 'be found two ' very important, and somewhat singullr, letters.— One from. the Hon. HE'xitv . CLAt, notifying the country, and his friends particularly, that he will be tq, , atn a candidate for the Presidency. The other, an answer, from Ctsstes M. CLAY, reviewing Hen ry's letter,. and touching rather bitterly upon the course pursued by the great ,“ Embodiment." . It appears somewhat singular, that the leaderpar ardlence of the Whig party, who has Alit 'ahe last quarter of a century, been striving for the Presiden cy. Should be obliged,aithis time, to issueithis let ter assuring his. friends that their-entreaties have pre vailed upon him reluctantly once more to become a candidate. Cater wits more modest still—he "thrice refuse:l the erownr—the Americas pet - 'pie hare already twice refused it to fleti4 Clay, and shouldlthis pronunciameata now be obeyed, they will show him for the third time how futile are his calculatifins. Mr. Clay, after gracefully yielding to the "demands" of his friends, from the great "obligations - he is ender to the Whig party, proceeds to-ti,gre out his election, in a manner for which Whigs' *e peculiarly celebrated, by assert ing that his fnds had Jepresenteil if he would cotaent tq the .of his name, that the great States of New \Ork aid Ohio would, in all probability, n,i e cast their •Oles or him ; and that there is a better prospect thati has any time before existed, that Pennsylvania would unite with them : and modest - ly asserts that his frie r g&are44tvinced that he is *Atmore available" than t''' . 4 - alididate that could be Fresented to the American people. That Mr. Clay is the most vulnerable candidate presented for the consideration of thelVbig Nation al COnvention, we firmly believe, and should the Democratic Convention place in nomination any ... man who has not made- himself obnoxious to the Freemen of the North the great States of New York and Pennsylvania will repudiate Mr. Clay, and his, monstrous doctrines by an overwhelming majority. Cassius M. Clay, in 184-1, was a zealous and ac tive friend of the, election of Henry Clay . —visiiin'g Ohio and..'New York for the purpose of persuading She Abolitionists of IhoSe States to the support of his relative. He now favors, we believe, the pre tensions of Gen.' Taylor, although he is a slave-hol der, and cannot be - suspected of sympathy with - abolitionism. He rebukes his distinguished rela tive in strong and indignant language,and ridicules his hopes of being elected, white' he characterizes his letter as an attempt to assassinate Gen. Taylor. We invite attention to it. - t . At Act Relative te..Publie Schools. By the following Act passed at the late Legisla ture, it will be seen that the common School Law has . been extern Those districts led over the whole Commonwealth. ,which have hitherto refused to ac- I now do well carefully to examine l e new law. One of the provi,ions !- that the directors of the several .hall not be required to admit chill 'tools who are under five yearslcof wept the law w the,d l otails of of the late act ttchool districts aten-into the age. the "Act to provide for the ordinary government,! lite, approved April • Extract from ! ' expenses of • th, 11, 184 S:. For- the support of common Schools, two hundred thousand dollars, to be paid on warrants issued by the Superintendent of Common Schools, to the seve ral accepting school districts in the Common wealth, in proportion to the number of taxable inhabitant;, in said districts respectively. That the Common School System, from and after the passage of this act, shall be e deemed, held and talc eit be ads pied by the several school districts in this Commonwealth, and that the school directors of the respective school districts from which the undrawn school ainopriatisns were taken, I y the act of the twenty-ninth of April, one thousand eight hundred and forty-four, entitled ".An, Act to reduce the State debt, and to Xncorporate 'the Pennsylvania canal and railroad company,", shall during, the month of May, of the present year, lev,y and assess a tax as reqpired by existing laws to enah:e school districts to receive their portion of the State appropriation, and each of said school districts in which a tax shall be levied and assessed as aforesaid, shall therefore receive its portion of the aforesaid appropriation of two hun dred thousand dollars, and shall be entitled ‘ to a de coction of twenty-five per cent. of all moneys paid into . the county treasury by such district•for State purposes during the next ensuing school, years, which - money deducted, shall be paid to the board of school directors of such school district. and shall be exclusively appropriated to the erection of school houses in stitch school disOicts. The Mail Routes were recently let - . for -it fourth part of the Union. A reduction has been made in the prices, so as to effect a saving Of more than t 3100,000 per annum. We are glad to learn that an alteration has been made in the Tniikhan nock and Athens route, which is to - he run daily, thee giving us an expeditions route direct to Phil adelphia. The contract was taken by Messrs. Mar wows, of Oen°. • The Montrose route was let to 31r. smrrit, of the state of New York. The Cantoo route to Mr. Dome, of this county. Aarrtmorr or Taxes.—By an 'advertisement in stn other column, it will be seen that the Commis. sionera of Bradford Cowry propose to s give the be nefit of the 5 per cent. abatement upon the State Ta.:, to - all tax payers who will pay their State and county Taxes by the sth of July twit.. tttr Capt. Small, of the First Peintsylvaniarlrol-* toneers, will return to Me'deb on the 22 of May furlough then e‘piree. The Lenity - eviller Thalass t is. Below,.will be found a itto act of the Pennsylva nia Legislature, autborizit,g The Court of Common Pietro of this county, to appoint ,tutathas to awl! the grails of the Leltaysviilis Mho- The Et silo contains some important provisiorrele Me* to obligors and obligees width_ we publish : SUPPLEMENT to an set. entitled "An act relative to the Leßsysvil P a OEII, , passed March, iSt7, assi tehture tb oaltiors and obthgees SonTton 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and/louse of Rei&sentatives of din' Commonwealth t (Penn sylvania in General Assettibly met, and it is hereby enacted by the a uthority qf the same, That the .1 udges of the Court of Common 4Pleas of Bradford county are hereby empowered and required, upon the ap-, plication of any person interested, to appoint three trustees to settle the affairs of the Leßaysville Pita lanx, and that the trustees appointed under the pro visions ofibis supplement alien have all the powers, and be subject to all the'restrictions, as were the trustees appointed by the act to which' ibis is a supplement. ' SRC. 'l. That so much of the first section of the act to which this is a supplement as names Gould Se)'moor, Daniel Daily, Isaac Seymour, trustees as aforesaid, be and the same is hereby repealed. Ilse. 3. That when a judgment shall hereafter be obtained against two,or more co-partners or joint and several obligors, promisors, or contractors, the death of one of the defendants shall not discharge his or their estates, real or personal, from . the pay ment thereof, but the same shall be payable by his or their executors or administrators, as if the judg ment had been several against the deceased alone. Sec. 4. That in any suit or snits which may hereafter be brought against the executors or admi nistrators of a deceased co-partner for the debt of the firm, it shall not be necessary to aver in the record cr prove on the trial, that the surviving partner or partners is or ate insolvent, to enable the plaintiff to recover. Sse.6. That when a judgment shall be hereafter recovered against one or more several copartners, joint, or joint and several obligors, promisors, or contractors, without any plea in abatement that all the panics to the instrument or contract on Which 'the gait is founded. are not made panics thereto, such judgment shall not be a bar to a recovery in any subsequent suit or snits against ans , person or persons who might have been joined to the action in which such judgment was obtained, whether the same shall be obtained amicably or by adversary process. ♦ Nan Drowned. We understand from the Columbia Democrat, of the 22d inst., that the body of a drowned man was found on Saturday, the 9th of April, lodged against a tree, on the head of Clark's Island, some two mileA below Cattawissa in the Susquehanna River. An inquest was held upon the body, by Joscpu Baosir, Esq., but nothing was elicited by which his name or residence could be known.— The deceased is supposed to have been about 25 or 30'years of age, had on only a pair of eassinet pantaloons and a flannel shirt. The body was "partially decomposed, having ev idently been some months in the water, and came down the North Branch. The friends of the deceased can address Joseph Brobst, J. Y. , Cattawissa, Columbia county. The Foreign' News. The news by the Sarah Sands, which we publish to-day, is,of undiminished importance, and will be read with interest. Each arrival from Europe, brings further accounts of the convulsions which are shaking the political systerns of that country to their centre. Years wilt probably elapse -before she shall become tranquil--and the progress of af cake is looked for with intense anxiety by the peo ple of tips country. We shall furnish our readers with a full and accurate synopsis of the news re ceiveid by eackarrival. By the Electric telegraph Crow Irought vrithia a short distance of us, we will be enabled to do this, in most cases, in advance of its reception in the city papers. . Muvrotnt MILL REst;sten.—The Danville Intel ligencer, of the 2 Ist inst., says—The fires have been lighted up in the Montour Rolling Mil, and the work of making iron is again successfully un der way in that large establishment. The Furna ces of the Montour Company arc likewise in full blast, turning out more pig metal than is produced in any other iron region in the United State. LErrrsi....--The President of the Penn sylvania Railroad Company advertises that propo sal& will be received at Huntingdon, untilWednes day...the 17th day of May, for the grading and ma sonry, upon about 36 miles of the railroad between Huntingdon and LiWistown, and also for the heavy work along the little Juniata. Baoice JAlC—JameiSickler, arrested for robbing the mail, between Towanda and Eaton, has escap ed from coifinement in the jail at Tunkhannoek.— The Sheriff of Wyoming county offers a reward of $5O for his apprehension. CONTESTED SEAT IN Cormagss.—The contest be tween Messrs. Jackson and Monroe, from N. York city, for a seat on the floor of Congress, has result ed in declaring the seat vacant. A now election will probably be ordered. Wcsr Poivr.— Frederick M. Crandall, a eon of Dr. CMndall, of Pike, has been appointed a cadet to the West Point Military Academy, from this Congressional district. 0:!7- The Daily Owego Gazette will again re ceive our thanks for the important Foreign News, published this week, received some days in ad vance of our city papers. Kr The Hon. LEWIS Case and the Hon. ions A D►x, of the U. S. Senate, have our thanks for vain able public documents. COI- VICTOR E. Notts:T.—We were pained to see tin the 'Anita of Wednesday, a harsh attack up on ibis gentleman, well known as an influential citizen of Bradford counts . and wane of the most intelligent and intrepid lientoenes in this State.-- The allegations of the nines have ~been so ' often made in the Federal papers , and so often refuted, that we cannot refrain from the expression of our amazement, that our cotempomry . should deem a repetition of them necessary to defeat the re-nomi- . nation of Col. PIOLLET to the position of Payrnat. ter it. the army. Of his repeater by the Senate, when nominated by the President to the same place. we are not now disposed to speak. Effect ed in his absence, and at a time when his friends 1 1 did not expect it , the causes that operated against -him, in the minds of Senators, were left to do their mischief uncorrected ; and he fell a victim to mis representations and enmities of the most extraordi nary character. Our respected friends of the Tunes wilt not. we trust, deny to Col. Plotter the oppor tunity of vindicating his good name before the Sen ate and the country, especially when it is well known that there are Senators mil° voted against him under gross misapprehension of the facts. The part Col. Protr.wr took in the McCook af fair, bitterly and industriously as it was misrepre sented. wi.a warmly sanctioned by the Democrats of Bradf county, who re-elected him to the Le gislature by a triumphant majority, in the midst of the clamors of the opposition. To this day, we be , hii 3 Oigk r , to, be a great favonte with the sterling de. m ocracy of That county. No man bus • trarmer friends, or more sterint; enalities,- than 'Cot Piot tr. r.—Pr,tuyr/frl ~ Three ititys later grow Europe. Arrival el the resist Darkest De Orlie Ire" real Excitement is P-atis . 4 Havre--Reisabise htutekV ad ie Preilkt !--The Army ef Brea ortiii4ll Magian "•-•- •Nier Your., Aptil:2o 11148. t , The 'Packet Ship. Ttutchess de Orkn's, *rive& this morning,' She.sailed nem Havre on the 264 e oh., bringing advices from Paris to the 26th, and London to the 25th. The most important intelligence by this arrivid is a report that Prussia has declared herself a Re pnblic Capt. Richardson states that the greatest excite ment prevailed in Paris and Harm ; and that the rich are-in daily expectation of being killed by the por. Gallignani's Messenger of March 24th, publishes a despatch dated Menne, Mating that a Republic bad been proclaimed in Bettie, and the liingdethroned, lits majesty and Ministers having been arrested. The news was confirmed in Paris. That paper says, this time, the fact isotfieial, a telegraphic des patch having been addressed to the Provisional Government, and posted up at the Bourse, which leaves no doubt of its authenticity. A Berlin letter states that the dethroned Prince had left for England. Before his Bight the people demanded that he should renounce all tight to the CrOWII. We learn from Berlin that all Polish prisoners in that city had been set at liberty. Accounts from Berlin op to the evening of the 22d ult., state that the capital was tranquil; The date of this aorouut throws doubts over the news received from Mentz of the proclamation of a Republic. The Universal Gazette of Prussia, of the 22d ult., states that the King bad placed the property of the state including Military stores, under the protection of the citizens andjuhabitants of Berlin. A revolution is announced in Geneva. Genoa has detached itself from Sardinia. The new ministryis announced in Vienna. Letters from Munich to the 21st state that King Louis had abdicated, and that the Prince Royal as cends the throne. The King retires to Sicily. 'The insurrection is general throughout Lombardy, aml the Venetian Kingdom. Milan was in the hands of the people. The King otfianover granted all demands made by the people. The Emperor of Russia was much excited at the event,• in France, and - great activity was noticed in •the War Department. The reserved army had been ordered to hold itself in readiness to march' to Po land at a moment's warning. Large numbers of Belgians are leaving reit for home. Arrests have been made for destroying the Rail Rowis. The disturbances are again suppremed between the National Guards and the people: Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte has joined the Na tional Guards as a private. The Provisional Government are adopting meas ures to check the commercial crisis. Four hundred Poles in Paris, had formed acorn pany for returning to Poland. M. Theirs declared for a Republic and accepted a nomination for Commandant of National Guards. There was great excitement in Naples and the Jesuits had left for Malta. The Rovolntion in Holland is confirmed ; and all political prisoners have been released. . The Duchess de Mcmtspenser asked an audience with Queen Victoria; but Lord Palmerston evaded the request. Arrival of the Steamer Sarah Salads! Great Excitement in France! ?-77re E/ediosiv Post ported !—Rovolt of the Workman—Arsenal seised In the Mob ! !—Expitian to Belgian 4. Poland ! The People Patrolling the Starts of Paris !!—Proe lamation tf the Prorimcmal Government I—War rn Denmark i—ilnesuin Troops on the March !—Re palic Dedared in Germany!!-- France and Prussia will unite against Russia !!--The Austrians Defea ted by the Lombards ! NEW Yogic, April 21, 1048. The steamer Sarah Sands arrived this mciming, with later news from Europe. iLivF.RPOOL. Corn dull—better demand, and sells at 26a30 shillings per quarter—fresh arrivals of flour. FRANCE.-41ere is great excitement throughout France. A body of troops, attempting to enter Bkaium, to assist the Revolution of Belgians, were defeautd and 400 lives were lost. , Darnesag.—The Danes are preparing for war. Disturbances are repotted in Stockholm & Venice. The Emperor of Russia has sent large bodies of troops to Odessa and other posts near Turkey. Germany is in commotion, and a Republic was declared on the 21st ult , out no general intelligence was received. The French Elections were postponed to the of April ; and the National assembly meets on the 4th of May. All the banks in France have suspended specie payments by decree of Provisional government. The workmen in the principal cities have revolt ed. They had seized the arsenals of Paris, and La Presse is against the Provisional Government. The Goiernment issued a proclamation to the people, and National Guards, asking them to maintain or der. Consols are St 3-1141. Cotton lower. Outbreaks are reported in Ireland. Clubs were drilling and forming themselves into rifle compa nies, fully armed. Men were wearing uniforms in the streets of Dublin. It was supposed that France and Prussia would unite against Russia. • Sardinia had repelled the Austrian troops. Provisional Governments have been established at Venice and Milan. The French Government is charged with prepar ng an expedition to Poland and Belgium. Paris is in a ferment, and bands of people are patrolling the streets. At Milan troops are being raised to fight the Aus trians. The Austrian army is withdrawn to Lodi. Manton has fallen into the hands of the Lom b ads. Tls Austrians generally were taken pris oners. Verona has declared for the Republic. The accounts of the abdication of the King of Prussia, and the declaration of a republic in that cbuntry, are not confirmed by the news received by this arrival, though the King appears to have made many concessions. He has recognized the expediency of uniting all the German states into one general confederation— has given his sanction to the creation of a Parlia ment, consisting of a House of Lords and a House of Commons, upon a vet) extensive representative basis: We learn from a certain source that there is 'aw ry reason to expect that Prussia and Austria will re store the Polish provinces. The news of the arrival of masses of Russian troops on the (roofer of Poland is confirmed. • The Cossacks have commenced their predatory incursions. Faxsca.—Lmris Blane's committee had aits plan for establishing a system of National t ry, comprising two isisr , to be opened by the state, with divisions of the Proceeds among the laborers. The Provisional Government had supplied the , people with theatrical amusements gratis. A rebel expedition from Paris, composed of del ega of French, had marched into. Belgium, to proclaim the republic there, but no sooner had it crossed the frontier, than the Belgium force gave them a salute with artillery, which put them to flight, in wild disorder, and they were seen no more. The expedition was disavowed beforehand by Lamartine. La Presse, M. de Giranlin's paper, has come out decidedly opposed to the Provos:anal Government. Some angry feelings were excited but no vio• lance had been committed against the Paper or its Editor. The Proyittinnsil Government as making large military preparations, I,rtnidable birdie* of troops .sere daily maribing to Dip' 'which *es made the central military station. • The JA ttetee elya thakihree cams—forming it is Ztosebblibmw 4 106400 men *Mete beestab k Liam from "at. Petersbuqeof iOth knot an nounce that thevity *vein wattle argetmeglslion. Ayistol shot waa t .firo atithe Einperor while passing through the Mew.* Thifxdti# which pass ed through his hat. • Auirrau.—All was quiet at Vienna, the submit siou of the Imperial Government to the demands of the people being eimmlete-and satisfactory. The Austrian Ambassador fled from Rome when the news of the insurrection at Milan arrived. Very late from Mexico. Arrival of Gen. Kearney and Mr. Sevier--.13/rdiorte in Vera Cruz—The Medan of Cong-rees--Brityl whoa of the. Treaty Doubtful, 4c. Naw Yost, April 23, 1848. The U. S. steamship N. 0., Capt. Edward Auld, arrived yesterday forenoon from Vera Cruz, whence she sailed on the evening of the 9th inst. She ar rived at Vera Cruz from this port on Thursday,- the 6th inst., and landed her distinguished passengers, Gen. Kearney and the lion. Mr. Sevier, amid salvos of artillery trom the castle, the frigate and the torts in the cis,. Gen. Kearney was installed as Governor of the State of Vera Cruz, on Saturday the Bth inst was to receive the troops in and around the city'on Monday last. Mr. Sevier left Vera Crueon the Bth inst. for die city of Mexico under the escort of Capt. Tilghman's command, about sixty strong: We learn from Captain Auld that Santa Anna did not sail till Wednesday the sth inst. From. the. Arco Iris, we learn that he took his passage on the Spanish brig Martino. Capt. Auld informs us that it was supposed at Ve ra Cruz that Gen. Scott and suite and Mr. Trist world leave Mexico about the sth instant, " the Court have adjourned its sitting to the United States ;" but in our report of the proceedings of the 3d, we find no announcentrt at such as adjourn ment. Capt. Miletp arrived at Vera Cruz on the sth with despatches ft'bm Washington. lie reports the road between the eapital.and Jalapa to be infested with small bands of armed men in masks, who were daily cummitting depredations. The route between the city of Mexico and Tocula is infested in like manner. . - The Monitor says that fifteen Deputies and three Senators were still necessary to form a quorum of i the Mexican Congress , and op inions vary as to the probable rati fi cation of I y• The elec ti on for alcade _rl city o ffi cers took place in Vera Crui on Sunday, the 9th inst. The Governor was requested to take down during the day the American flag from the main plaza, where the election was held ; but Capt. Auld informs us he declined to do this. He was also called upon to deliver up the public buildings on the same gaze, which was indignantly refused: While the elee tion was going on, the troops composing the garri son, with the exception of what were necessary for a guard, went out of town at 9 o'clock, A. M., turd were received on the beach by General Kearney. The Free American, of the erilt inst., has a report that the Mexicans under Gen. Bruno have been plundering Palizada and Laguna. taking advan tage of the absence of Commodore Perry. We shall, no doubt, hear more of this in a more definite shape. During the week ending the Ist inst . there were 56 Deputies and 19 Senators present at Queretaro. The Monitor says it required only 15 more Depu ties and 3 Senators to torn* a quorum to proceed to business; but we regret to say that some members of Congress had left Queretaro under pretext of re- I luctance to vote for the ratification of the treaty.— I From the very earnest and indignant manner in which the Star mentions this subject, we infer that • the gravest asprehensions are entertained lest a suf ficient number of factious Deputies should with draw to prevent a quorum from assembling. Opin ions are very various as to the probable ratification of the treaty. The Star is urging upon the Mexicans the abso lute necessity of giving it their sanction if they would preserve their nationality. Yet later accounts are even less saire e nine than "he of the glances of a confirmation of the treaty. Upon the whole, we cannot but regard the ratification as at least proble matical, although we hope for the best. The news of the action of our Senate upon the treaty reached Mexico at the end of last month, and was despatch ed at once to Queretaro. The Star announced it on the 2d instant, and gave the full particulars on the 3d. The Ardi-Aholition ..rertemetit al Washington—lm mense Meeting—The Pmprietors of the National Era ordered to Leave—Their Refusal—The Remo val resolved uponnd the Tuneft_red. L WAsinearox, April 19, 10 o'clock. An excited assemblage, at least 3000 strong, as. sembled this evening in ront of the National , Era office, to cobsider the reeent scheme of the aboli tionists to carry off the slaves of the District. Though the excitement was intense the crowd was persuaded to move their position Apposite the Patent Office, where they were addressed by Wel ter Lenox, scl., the President of the Board of Al dermen, Mr Radcliffe, and others, who, appealed in favor of proceeding peaceably in reference to the National Era office. The crowd, however, insisted upon speedy ac tion, and a committee of fifty was finally determin ed upon, to meet instanter an I wait upon the pro prietors to request that the establishment should be forthwith removed. It was also unanimously resolved, that in case the proprietors decline that the committee, backed by the citizens, should pro ceed to remove the office and- appraise the dama ges. The committee was forthwith appointed, and af ter an absence, returned and reported that the pro prietors refused to obey. A resolution was then adopted. amid immense excitement, that the committee should proceed, with the aid of the citizens, to remove the presses and materials of the establishment to-morrow morn ing, at 10 o'clock. An adjournment then took place when the crowd in front of the Era office cried " down with it, down with it !" and the symptoms of an attack were made. The citizens having volunteered to maintain the laws, under the Marshal qf the district, prevented the anticipated violence, nd the storm has appa rently lulled for the time. Wksmearox, April 20. It is believed that the summary , resolved upon last evening for the remo v a l Nation al Era office has been abandoned, as but few per sona have been collected in its vicinity to-day, and all appears (inlet. The propnetors have published a card, declaring their entire disconnection with tee transactions re cently developed, and their determinaiion to do or say nothing until fully investigated. Tears are still entertained of an attack upon the office by the rabble to-night. C►PTURE or rua FuorrrvE SlLAVEll,Wasking. ton April 18th.—The party of slaves that escaped from this vicinity on Saturday night, - were taken on board the schooner Pearl, Capt. Sears, of Philadel phia. which immediately proceeded on her voyage to your pan. As soon as these facts were ascer tained, a steamer was armed and sent in pursuit. The vessel was overhauled at the mouth of the Po tomac, captured without resistance, and brought back to the city. The captain, crew and seventy seven of the runaway negroes were conveyed to jail. The excitement of the crowd assembled in consequence of their arrival was intense,-and the . prisoners were conveyed to jail in hacks, which was the only thing that saved them from violent; treatment. Gcx. Scores Ayres:v.—The Cincinnati Chro. niele says, that General Scott will, on his return, leave Vera Cruz directly for the city of New York, sratticucc to his home at ElizabethtOcrt, New Jer , Letter trim ; Mary Clay. TO THE PUBLIC. ... s ,. _ ~. • ,The t a r iml * d ia" liii l til/ g rely 2ol- ' 4II A hi , * Oman itt iz ~ Pircullponil to my Infentsons vella rel4a ne l respectlo diernextines y, appear tai tustin furnish the proper occasipa for the ftll, - fritir, and eiplich': expointi l ort'Of mr I feelin„,oa, wishes, am) views upon that subject, which it in now my I*. pose to make. With a streng disinclination to the use of my name again id' connexion with that ot. bee, I left my residence in December last, under a determinatkon to immunee to the public; in some suitable form, my desire not to be thought of as a candidate. nmy absence, I frequently expressed irs dillerent gentlemen my unwillingness to be agate in that attitude ; but though no one was au th orized , to publish my decision one way or the other, hay- ing reserved the right to do so exclusively to my- self, on reflection, I thought it due to my friends to consult with them before I took a final and de. Ogre step. .. Accordingly, within the course of the last three months, I have had an opportunity of conversing filly and freely with them. Many of them have addressed to me the strongest appeals and the moat earnest entreaties, both verbally and written, to dis suade me from executipg my intended purpose.— They represent to• me that the withdrawal of my name would be fatal to the success, and perhaps lead to the dissolution; of the party with , which I have been associated, particularly in the free States; that at no former period did there exist so great a probability of my election, if I would consent-to the use of my name ; that the great States of New York l i aml-Ohio would, in all probability, cast their votes for me ; that New York would more certainly be stow her suffrage upon me than any other candi date; that `Ohio would give her vote to no candi date residing in the slave States but to me ; that there is a better prospect than had heretofore at any time existed,-that Pennsylvania would unite with them; that no candidate can be elected vrithoutthe concurrence of two of these three States, and none could be defeated upon whom all of them should be united ; that great numbers of our fellow citi zens, both of native ,and foreign birth, who were deceived, and therefore voted against me at the last election,, are now eager for an opportunity of be stowingtheir suffrages upon me; that whilst there is a strong and derided preference for me, enter. tained by - the great body of the whig party through. out the United States, they—the friends to whom I refer—are convinced that I am more available than any candidate that could be presented for the Ame rican people. Ido not pretend to vouch for the ac curacy of all these representations, although I do not entertrtili a doubt that they have been honestly made, 'alai amt. 'sincerely believed. It has been, moreover, urged to me, that the great obligations under which I have been hitherto placed by a large portion of the people of the United States, the full force of which no one can be more sensible oftha, n I are; demand that I should not withhold the use of my name if it should be requeleed ; and I have been reminded of frequent declarations which" have made, that whilst life and health remain. a man is bound to render his best service upon the call of his country. Since my return home, I have anxiously deliber ated upon my duty to myself, to my principles, to my friends, arid, above all, to my country. The conflict between my unaffected desire to continue in private life, as most congenial to my feelings and rendition and my wish faithfully to perform all my public duties, has been painful and embarraising. ILI refuse the use of my name, and those injurious consequences should ensue which have been so confidently predicted by my friends, I should justly incur their reproaches, and the reproaChes of my own heart; and if, on the contrary, I should assent to the use of my name, whatever the result may be, I shall escape both. I have therefore finally deci ded to leave to the national convention, which is to asremble next June, the t"onsideration of my name, in .connexion with such others as may be presented to it, to make a selection of a suitable candidate for President of the United States; and whatever may be the issue of its fair and full de liberations, it - will meet with my prompt and cheer ful, acquiescence. It will be seen from what I have related, that there was reason to anticipate that I would decline giving my consent to the we of my name Again as a candidate for the presidency of the United States. Owing, perhaps, to this, as well as other causes,, many of my friends and fellow-ci• tizens have avowed a preference for, and directed their attention to. the distinguished names of other citizens of The 'United States. I take pleasure in truly declaring that I have no regrets to express-- no complaints---no ,reproaches to make on account of any such preferences, which am fully persua ded are generally founded on honest and patriotic convictions. 11. CLAY. ASHLAND, APRIL. 11th, 18.18. Cassius! M. Clay to floury Clay / (From the New York Coutter and Enquirer.] HON. HENRY C LAY, Sta—ln the Tribune of this morning .1 find a let ter dated Ashland, April 10th, 1848, over your sig nature. The letter is addressed, I presume, to the American people. If I did not know you well, the intervening space of three days only between its date and arrival here, would- lead me to suspect its authenticity. If your determination to allow your name to go before the Philazlelphia Convention g as a candidate for the Presidency had been in accord ance merely wiih your wishes and individual judgment, I should have kept a respectful silence. But as your determination is bused upon the sup posedinterest of the Whig perN, I shall venture, unasked, to'add my opinion to that of the numer ous Whigs to whom you refer. When I tell you that royalty rarely hears the truth, you will think, no doubt, that repeat a very stale dogma, if not altogether out f place in a republic. But there are parasites in üblics as welt as in despotisms, arid of those you h a very liberal portion just now. Were Ito claim t be your personal friend, I might better, 'perhaps, ACC list my purposes; but as I bare never avowed on cla'ss of sentiments whilst in reality holding anothe ' you frankly that, although from my earliest youth I had been some. thing more than scold admirer of yourself, so tvhen you - stinted, on the 14th of August, 1845, to the Vir ginia Springs, leaving your friends and family, to murder me in my sick bed,' for vindicatiig those principles which you had taught me, in your speech es at least, I ceased to be your friend, and became, by the necessity of my nature, your enemy.. What I shall say, to you now, then, will have the more weight, because you will see the t it comes from an honest„ . if not an unprejudiced man ; whilst I shall attempt to &iota myself of the individual_and creak as the member of a great party. I shall then take up your letter in its proper or der. In saying that you had " a strong disinclina tion to the use of my (your) name in connection with that office," courtesy leads me to confine mv self to the remark that you deceive yourself—lint no one else! So soon as you were defeated in the last election, .a committee of your friends from Frankfort waited upon you and condoled with you on that melancholy event. You: responded in a manner that led me almost with the power of cer tainty, to. emark to some friends that Henry Clay is a rand date again for the Presidency. 'Time at tests iny sagacity. So strong was, my conviction that you awould be a candidate, when letters were read in the Conven tion of tbe " Whig friends of Gen. Taylor" in the State House at Frankton, from the Hon. J. J. Crit tenden, Hon. Charles S. Morehead, and Hon. J. P. Gaieery begging us not to nominate, Gen. Taylor, and thus push you from the track, and saving that you would on your return home retire (sin the canvass,. in the presence of the thousands there as sembled I rose up and declared that although I re spected these gentlemen, I had not the least confi dence that you would in truth withdraw. Tim_e at tests my sagacity. After you had gone on to Nt3w York, and delegates were chosen to the National Convention whilst you were the city's gitest, and it was again asserted that you would decline on your return home, I said no, you refused to go to New York last summer, you would not have gene now unless you had determined to run fur the Pi:widen- NEW YORK, April 13, 1849. fi` CSf. nle attests. the int of the predien om _, You say. that your friends represent that "the wi th. dratwel,ciftain s imme would belistal to their succe s o Vireirmaktrig to y o u, they speak a di ff erent lan. F . • emewhere. I have been told that all the meimberit* Cobras; from our own State but o ne told you . that you could not be elected, and that di. vrills othe*sreWm I could name told you the same ?bin.. Bata these reports be untrue, allow me .. uni.y o u thee' have beard almost universally that your name would again bring ON defeat. Ist th a t - garden Iteocur, and I will give you my mem os I. Ileatione larri'mot guiltless Myself, and because of the bad taste of the thing; l will not urge objections I to your private clummter. Neither will press your prestige dill-luck, in saying that all the measures which you . have urged upon the people, except th e Missouri compromise, have been erased from the s t a t u t e book For wie lament in amnion, the fall of the tariff, the balikeand internal improvements sunder your lead ! I shall confine myself to the clues= j lion oravailability. Three times have we runy o 1. and three times - your name brought WI defeat r g o soon as Gen.:W. IL Harrison bad bree e h t us s . from a miserable minority, where you had left rt e to a large majority, you hurried on to Waali ngoe :" Thew Mr. Tyler under Mr. Webster 's lead was a re i ing good serviee to the country and pane, an d b y attempting to force on him and us the " °b ru n ets Bank' which he bad purposely slurred in the caw , vase, you brought us to a speedy minority! A " long time ago," being too old to perform the • comparatively light duties of Senator, you gave the public a farewell address, and retired from public life. The Democratic party, by the excess of its numbers, was at once spilt into widely separated fragments. Messrs. Cass, Calhoun, an Buren, Tyler, Polk, and others, were all praising their claime r with a bitterness before unknown to the pins ty. Whom the gods wish to destroy, 'they first make mad." They determined to bring Texas in, to the Union avowedly to break down the powe r o f the free No rth, and to make this nation' a slave em pire. The-friends of liberty rallied once more, and in spite of your Missouri compromise, and your constant dentinciation of all real antiedatery adion, your Raleigh letter made yrin, by some tatality, our candidate owe' more. The Democratic feuds were at once cured up by the greater hatred of Henry ' Clay. Mr. Van Buren, who had taken similar ground with yourself, but who could not unite the - p ar ty ? was overthrown, and Mr. James K. Polk substituted. Notwithstanding the claims of other Whigs, I will now restrict myself to saying your equals were postponed, who no one now doubts could have been elected ; we, the Whig party, all united-on you. We fought with the ardor of bro therhood, and with the moral power of a noble cause. Our success seemed certain. Now once more, by that fatality which attends you, you came out in your Gazette letter, and disclaim any sympa. thy - with emancipation: It is true, there was a little inconsistency in this, inasmuch as you had always, avowed just the opposite dx•trine; but as you wrote to me "go on, good Cassius," I thought at last all things would come out right. This, however, was a small affair between you and me, and our aboli tion friends. But all at once,.you game out in your Alabama letter, when you would "notreject a per manent acquisition of territory on account of a tempo. vary institution!" This was a very different affair. l lt lay at the foundation of the, whole contest. You " changed 'front,"X The Whigs of the North were disgusted.. They had nothing left to contend for. The battle was lost. We felt our country's wounds in your person. We paid your debts, we condol led with you in your retirement once- more, and raised monuments to your memory! Once more 1 the excesses of the Democratic party began to ex hibit themselves. The unconstitutional annexation of Texas, and the Presidentiil wrec, began to'stir the souls of indignant freemen. rseeing that we were in a minority, and without the sympathies o f the people—having experience that a peace-party can never have the confidence of a Republic during a raging war—our wise Whig leaders voted sup plies, and the Whigs turned out to the war, and once more ire steadily, brought ourseltes up from a minority where you had again' left us, into a-ma jority. The administration had all the responsibili ty of the loss of honor, men`, and money, by the war; our Whig gener als reaped all the glory. The success of our party was certain. The public, with a unanimity never before sees. in plus country, looked to our man ; a man who, growing too great for the powers at Washington, was left to perish with a handful of men before twenty thousand troops in the enemy's country. But Zachary Tay lor was not the man to die. to accommodate either President Polk or his ally Santa Anna ! The battle of BuenaTista fixed Gen. Taylor in the hearts of the people ! Neither you, nor the wire-workers of party, nor the President can cause him or his friends to "surrender !" The honest old soldier was gener ous enough to give a parting compliment to your name, by saying he would have preferred you to himself to lead us on once more to the battle. You have taken him at his word ! Immediately your friends of the " secret circular," under the pretence of being "the friends of Gen. Taylor," stab him to the vitals. Then, sharp sighted patriots found out that Gen. Taylor was not the choice of the Whigs —that this willingness of the grateful heart of the people was all a sham affair : in a word,' that you would reluctantly consent to rumagain ! I, am a plain spoken man, sir; I tell you I know these men ; they would not rive ventured to take this step without yen& consent ! It is true this is not sal play ! It looks to me like political assassination! Nor will it be cured in the eyes of all disinterested men by the spirit olviolence, which our friends in Frankfort— in -Baltimore—in Cincinnati—andi in New York, hare ventured against the friends of Taylor and " the liberty of speech." The verdict of a jury against your son lately in Kentucky, ought to teach 'Henryvrln arid" them, that we are net yet slaveseven to i Clay. It is true that this in your deep ingratitude to Gen. Taylor ; but you are but playing out your lifelong game; for when did ever.ttenry Clay spare an ene riry or a—friend ! i cong,ratulate you upon your de termination at least to denounce the Native Amen can party, to whom you wrote encouraging letter during the lam canvass ; and which they were kind enough to suppress: you can do-so with impunity ! The Native American party is dead ! But whether, the memory of the Irish and other foreigners wild be as easy in-forgetting a wrong as you are in not remembering a favor, remains to be seen ! Space compels me to Funs over the long roll of your sell advocacy and confine myself to two specifications. You seem to think that Ohio will not go for ens " one residing in the Slave States" but you; sh - d that New York would more certainly bestowilier vote on you " than any other candidate." Ohio went for you, by the Western reserve vote, which I assisted in getting for you, because you were suspected of truth, in declaiming against Slave ry ! 1 had to much respect for your talents to sup. pose that you would again attempt the same shal low game ! No, your Janus-faced resolutions at Lexington, deceived no longer the blindest "fana tics." Besides, if the free North would ,not take you, when the (ration was Clay and no dare ter• ratory. will they take the issue Which you covertly tender them. Clay and NO FREE TERN/WHY With regard to New York, you seem strangely. to hive forgotten the fact that the Whig members O f the legislature have declared that the State will r for n any other Whig," to close the mouth of your partizans here ! The city election of a Democratic Mayor in New york, whilst your friends put the election upon your popularity here, demonstrat e that your name is indeed " all powerful" to chan tre a Whig majority into , a minority at least ! th e Whig party are capable of learning, will read the future. I know the strength of part. organization, and the desperation of those whohri n e -life estates in your person—yon may succee a _ I , pushing Websier, and' McLean, arid, Sewar d . o an ac u in this, the !' Corwin. and Scott, and others from the track .. am e, more—the dagger of your " secret cnnenitt avior ' , your pub lic . inquisitors may kill off Gen - , f . ' b i pal now—bnt the deceiver may himse lf de ceived ! Yes, Henry Clay can never-be pr esident of these States ! I have the honer to subscr i be,,,) . t self, ever a Whig, and your obediecnt sem Thk4 year the national expenses of t4rat Btitiatt are cgintattxt at 'F272,000;000.