Br HENRY '.l. STAIILE 39" YEAR. • Terre. 3 of the "Compiler." • . pui)lisheil rver qui:l - 10, - IfEs ICY 4. STAtii.E. at ~ 1 / 4 1 . por :Latin !Eat , in per'anilum if nut paili iu a(lvanee... Irr fittl).' .rrti;cioil,{liFLGfnut! 1, u.alusi.. the cominn Of t until all zit:roar - Liget; as,•c.paid t•tif-.l.lrerrisPinentr, insert-0.1 ut t)w u-lai. .4,ph ' done, neatly, cheaply, awl with ;li,l a - toll. s ,al) Italti wore streilt, gliiTet iy,opp(sii,olVampinr'..; Tinning 1 7 . , t alAklnnt.nt, one :134 a half frulla the C.)urt-house, Sul the sign- - s,Sec,l •ilii3c'ci44?!l. JUDGE BLA.CK'S ADDRESS: We hie rnad vith equal pleasure and protfit H 'kit S. BL.scx's address to lir, Pl/Er:J.l.n k.osiLtin . S.?witty of Pennsylvania , 14dive.red at the -.annuAl "Dent, "St :Itimil+er 17, 1855. ..Su 4;4! 13I.AeK's subjeet 3.iherty," 'which he has Svith greztt a:131111:\ - , evivetin4, through -our. and przirituncl thought, 4....xprvr , i-1 in 1-„tuguage which is at ioux.t 41t.il'Itt. a This Lv4t production from -3 11 , ..xch's 1,44 i) k woz•thy'of his high eharaxter ass Juan and as scholar. The head gut' this heart h o t0 ,, t4.11e- , shows - • tittire,(l - With ;Lad the piiikos'Ophy of artiir ti) , t.:l.) , t•ve the itmetietii •dutie, ti}" The ra•ist is made ii4 : ;ful for the pre-cut,3.1.111 h„tt rt er o.hstrilet the theme., leo 'kilo eau reali the :1(1 Iressirithunt soeing its 1 , ,r the time , . and apir:eeiatifig the. truth \‘'ll ; ell it 4'1111.H/ie... Judi lli..us very 'happily starts , with eorrect idea tiflivious :trial in rio ti.i4c..ards: tile. common use Of tho •iti ion,' a IY ItICEI he emt , hley.:..:z,lxlph es .that we 'lA;rive whatever re freedom we have iron' the ienncessions .of the government: ‘viierexs, iso far from -lift ing tt peaital privilege, it is a natural alp4iilute right - goyernillflt, may protect, IA t Clllllll/t eiklier' l xivt? or withhold. -This . it:st tl t further in el , ..tar away tie. oloseurity of 14010'1%d Judgr lit. tea. noxt take , nii the itogina that% (.1 kiitility' is part of our youtli , iii low and he sliirws its utter 'f as it rears to any supohrt Li.kerty is sappoSed:' to derive irc,tn fruit* the.“..A.eli er:kl;j:,!:;. tAI.:CI illl iii"7 . rhente_ and shows • , ;•(:,1; orilL - L•7t , 1 , .;•:, ()It vc:iiLd) are 15 . ..0'p! It ball: at .'7.lat.e )vitlowt rt.digiftN. zillar,!!) 11 it).tout J 1 1 ,140 131 Art: rtarce 'aturiarijitati itt= is a and :t:+ a wri:t.r. IVe cannot. ,-,j ) :lre room enough ti umiee 10 . 1 :4th argtEllutut, nor cola:lake, the iixtracts :which have iur 11.4 hr their,boanty awl truthioi: c:ntlication of tliv charac ter of PENN 4 ,z , lnt . the , : aspershlllS - Of .M.Ar.X4.: LEY. Wtql i)ta his sketch of 141::ER. WIL- L) %% i s is Nvor• tity , if the Lone of our het ti. 1.1 CAI EHr, are silt : q. , l Hat 1...1 the th.ee "nallieii that ve:let:ated as long :3,6 CWltill il, 4>ne crie.tpl trf human liberty. Of NVic.t.iA.sis, ,at 7,, MiTS:trintlq rltitivti to your syeeial notice. ter At'd - iion 'N;I-; t hero hi • the highest sense of that mu , -.): aliso word. Of ail the men that cver the _teal fight. OW frf"e(loni of .opinion.. he curried the most glittering welt p tu , firm.2,-lit the haTslest battle, an , l \VoB the tli cst I:Hlli:int triumph'. Single liarulel „a! d :11.onl. strove af - rainst a inninlivtous throng, of-c. 10611 0 ,, p .esse 1 up in hi In in femit. a:14114:1k, and rear. -till never yet• was a hero 5I ,11,11OLLL'Il;11.11;!? iii Vit;tUrS. ; (Jr in :Adver t, t) stn fils , t to tittli , e. 1 I . n. eh:a -t:4:ler is \-- itt_Ve4.ted with that peculiar interest, whsc• t we u I than. CC In a gr.tt.at 1./litire. witose iii its are the \voile the..wrongs Ite -:t_nifered aye the statue:, of the titnek, he intellectual saw fle truth at it- La ar_e_an ceptie; it. wlt.hout lie:itatinii, pushed ji at 'once to it: titin-ate eon:cline:nee:. His elo quence. was remarkable fur its clenrile. and fervor: he had a steadiness of purpo.c opposition , oily made and no dangers that ever thi,ikened aroutol hi in, could tante the auditeitr -ef hi:courant-P. Tints :rifted, he C.1.111e. to 2fla ,-, :trIIIINettS its tite Vi•:"OrsCitf him ear ly manimod, i/Ilmeiliately took up the de htlice of wlist he called the '•sauctity Of eun selence.- It ‘vonld have lieen safer employ ment to denotmee Malt.iinetaniFon in nay p trt of Turkey. 3Ltry Fisher made a fair trial of hntit. She. went t' 13:i.-ton. awl she went t•t l'onstainiuople. Sue publicly allainistere I to the Sultan and to th(t ritan the rebuke, which, in her oliinitni, wa: ncotle-i by cried' and her report of - the comparative trelltinent she r e cei..eil, giveg a 410Cickti -lint:fel-once to the Turk:. The intrepid spirit id hoirvever, t to be (polled: his iduinneiation of tyranny htutame riore, itieitetring in proportion as the threats . .11.4.1 inst hitn:elf grew Inthier. Suelt a. man could not fail to have friend: among tile peo ple but those who wieldel the political pow . - r a:ol the eecle:fin,:t leaf influence of the eolonv were against him in a ciaupaet ly , uly, and ha"..FI him with that !litter ititeas:ty of hatred, • tai :11 reel itiou- higntry :done can iti , pire. At fr.:4 - Lacy i ia (letiate, but that soon en-ied , fur loHe went through • throttgli their tiiiu-y sopliiitry, , a: a ham t...-rin.; ram would go thriokgli 'if b.aird. It \Va.,, nu: :Lt ail safe to silence hitt), • they 11.4hinsuri..Nary Pyei-, amid by hatigin; . ; hiru; for Lis et:arta:ter knosii a 1 ! 11.ifthire I, aild c .w•.y'l CpAZ icC^ a 11.• is,','”7l , li lit- %ik.4.: auxi , tu,y t 0 0. ,; it,- ul;:, tI rn 6elve II tS the!N 'nigh Lica without Inr.ni..^r;:g The . , . ,•„„, .„ .. rl --,- 6 - , - , 7777 - .7 - • - •• - ..-7,7 - 77.1"... - .7. ••-• 7777 - -7 . •-•---- - . , , . , . - • . , , . , _ ._. .• • ' ~ • . . Allitittet. •' • ~..,' t. ' -, i • .... . 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T .,- :L . ------_--:.:_- - .L. - ---- -: •:,-..:-",.-_-:-:„.: •,- —,----,-,-, : -,-, ; ,z,- -- - - ------_--.7-..;:z.7-,-_-.2-,„7,;.-::-..,_7:-.: - :•, - . --- ..t.! - ... - _ - _=7.1',.7. -- -.77:. -- .7. - _.72. -. : - .77.7._ __ .. .7".: ..:=7 - . —...,- :::=7.7-:, -- - .....—:::-:-:- . Z.:- .-- -: 7 -:--:-:::: - .1:::::,.." :::-.:::* -- --- --- - - -- -•-- - E4hpiill ifebsOpei-- 7 -j)ebole.3 is .hi'g'h ' 'agiiegiitli-e, fcite iljOkets, ) . I..oeqi 44 tleqeilii brie4i9e,vei - ?,.oiiiies,: Wbei-ii,s(o9 . ; : &e. From the P•chtiNylrrtuian made a layr ou purp vse to catch him. 1 1' ruk•Ner would 11, , ity their right to puny f,r viui a creel 41ifier.mt from their ...... m e m fo r_ giving him shelter: they contist...ated the lands of a congregation for hearing him preach ; tl ey maligned his character in every possi ble way : they P&) ltoisemed, the mind of ' own wile; that even she for a time deserted Then---when was all alone—when 'every one who should have aided him was i t a nsu b da i s sion--L-• when no friend dared to stand up heside him--:when his life's blood had hem? lied awa3, —then they sot their lin nnul blood-houuds upon him, and drove him forth to perish in the wilderness. For four teen week, in the hitter thp' h of - winter, he knew not, as he himself declared, •'what bread or bed dill mean." But the Italian re membered-him- well,- -as the—bold, ,just,-man,-, win): had 1114)1.43 than once interposed himself between them and the wron . *. meditated' against them by the whites. His quick intel led had already caught their language, and he svol:e it. I.klt. a fluency which surprised and flattered - tMa. Miantonimoh, the chief of the Narrarmnsetts, received hint with open arms, loved him like a brother to the last,'aud gave him a large tract of his c0w1:..3., includ in!. a beautiful island'in the ten. There he boca me the founder and' iaw-Titer of it new -arm ince, which was, in reality and in truth,. areilsylum for ell i'yere uppressel it is h»possible to give any - just ide.l of this singular man, (or his oppanents either,) with out calling your ato ention to a subsequent fact. 'Not long afterwards, 11assaell etts was threatened It a danger which appalled the brat ea. of the defenders. The Indiarrs---were burning. for vengeance. All tot.' nei - ghboring tribes sad those who dwelt in:the fit: interior,. were formiag a league to exterminate the col ony by an ittdh-criatitiatc massacre of all ages and 1 , -ev,es. On the day NN hen this terrible truth was realized at Boston, the. name of Roger Williams trembled upon ev cry 1:p. His iatluenee could dissolve the ; ex eept him time 55 as no power on earn) to save Oteta. Rut would he do it? Straage to sav, they never doubted for a moment that he wotthl tly to their rescue. They had basely injured ; hut they knew that Christiani c had lifted him far ht ITV U l :,:ar feeling of re‘enge:• It was' rriious, too - , to rush :thine hetween the enraged Sia; ai44‘!:j. and the c imims of their vvild wrath; Litt in that noble nature there was ITO taint of sehishuess-,--no toaeh of craven fear. The breathless messenger on lie M•issachusetts authorities reached him at his island home -in a stonany winter's night. 1 ar‘i the -- iniploti-rtg—ttitiseat,a-ad—witluut word of reproach for a ll tl l e, ; r i nn ! not .l e lint sqtfer, and without a rumneut tinnecessar tlelav, he girded up his loins aJtl started tut hip ilati;rerous inissiun. Ile reached the Junin latul in a (train - boat, ail thence he bent bivs SLOW; through the triicklessforeat to the camp of the Naora i 4an.etts, where tie hostile chief. , had uliTtnly v in furiateJ-11r his lire elite. Ilk throat was not ',tie from tite;r kill% es tor n moment, protect e'l.thougii he was hy the imitiuence of .triotitu- rd a t o t i,, A wen. 0...t.;:•5„ 10, it it t llhtrt7 l I,rotheellou , l and it.;act , sit, uu with his lift; in hi s b a wl, aod .h)r three . rt./cf.-es:4re (lto,s pletktle.l - the ••anse i;f their er.enti , :s tt.ol ills own, with all puthetie eloquenee of whielt lie was sy 'TWA' a toaster. Ile ! llaiiCil a la.:t.; the ;tta.g.tte was dissulvetl, zuld ..‘,l.4Lssat•husetts was Soft', t. It wits 1,1 be unjust tit the memory of the "Pilgraa Fathers" not to•mentimu what g: at ittele they be-tow el oil their illustrious hene favtor. T r.v showed it, not in w/ird , :. axtions. • Sin/whim- they gut }mid of him fi;lus devote I and faithful friend AI iAn u;niteoh. Him they delivered up to a .riva! chiel, with the distinct and clear underAtand ing that he ww, to he hzt.:ely and hrutully mur dered : and the deed was (hint. Ilefore the eves of their Commissioners.. A confederation or • - 7 • 'l , . 10 ri2Wl.l_lor tual proterti again:4 the Lot tin v refused to admit Kliode Island, and thns did all that in them lay, to exp , The Williams and his people to that very fate froni which he llatl saved them Iry all act (.1' heroic magna niniity, 5)14 :ts no OtllP . l' watt in tailli , 4c- W(add Lave perc“llat'tl. Ti/o tried to extend their tyianue-td jurisdietion over die free coil seienec of his province, and Lu prevent it, he was cot/yelled to cross the Atiantic and get a charter trout the Parliament. W'hen he re turned lie laude , l B ; and though the rt.LL e ' ta' common people lealeri to the greeti3g of their grt.lt &di 0 4i perK -4•l;turN 5t.,0,v1r , 1 ):1 it)/ all the Linllgnity Uf curnuer Su et! w it s If Ay grandly iin humane ard. genen•us F pirit ekrnutreCs witil h.S coten,i) irare , :. Uf t i,„ with their sour teinners and their evil pa - simls lutlfits of per , ceution: tory has pa,uted: nu pi:,:ture of virtue which stands out in sneh clear and beautiful relief from OK: gl ):any 1,w:1,g-round IT a dark and higuteil age. Thu. A nierivart Will) can hear his name withoUt emotions of re , pect and grati twk, like ti:e man, • Who Lath no mo.ic in ltim r 1S I. fit fur treason, stratagem and spoil,m; - Let such man Le truste•i." It is I7PII sail by a shrewd observer, that there are some things evili, it every titan lia t.i learn for himself, wonld emu as if the f illy of inilor-da: , what is talli.l.live.oninishi t.oil paper was one of them. ren. of thi•ns iitel, have lieen raini-1 in this way, vet teas of thousands :dill continue to praibtiee ir. 'Who indorse paper with impunity for „%earm, di , e4ive l:. at la , t. th.it thy also, iv spite of their assertions that they w er lie dicer he it, are brime-lit to lankruptev by it. Sir Walter Scutt. who hail gone o:i, friini year to year. adding :ti ren) aorP, 1:11111 one morning to find himself ruined, tbrougls his indurseinentli en Constri.ble's paper ; amid the rest of his life, shortened hy exet ; ,si% e (I , n -, itel, itot to edr-yill4 out the favorite dren 11l of his ainhitioit, lait to the debt. thus eontraeted, Even Baranin,whose naale liar syn,inywow, with :shrew' .s,tel I before delosiveliabit. ....f4'3••A Southern ;11: , e - r ;rive , : an ae,:ount a courage•nis but indi,•creet bull dog- that at tackad an allipator WaS• rou-ed out of the mud. Of a ha you flulving into CA! Tll ,, hlliga! ,, r hi , thror_ , oa the wit; [Lai, ti,e last of GETT STURG, PENNSYLVANIA: MONDAY, NOV. '24, 1856. Indorsing Notes. Col. Benton on the Prosidency and 1 0- Dien Shul2lll. From ont's Nomination. Colonel Benton, in a speech delivered by I tintv_on,_,th_day=lieft iro-thioulcetil_all hiB friends to vote for Buchanan, and depre,- cated the election of Fremont as it beetional candidate. The following, extract trout his spec •h will he fain] interesting; "Next is Mr. Fremont, standing near t oe, in a relation dear us it could be to me not to be my own child. lie has had an eve»iful life—great difficulties, great dangers, great trials to undergo. I stood by - him. in every one of them, as a father would stood hy , child. (hang continue(' ..apidause.) Nor, golitletnen, did lie ever have need that I did not administer to him to the extent of my means, There lire persons now on this plat form that know that I spared nothing which 1 could rai , e and-deliver him, in order to corny him throirit the eventful life in which he lies engaged. tWarm applause.) All that wits paternal, nil that was naturo—nature actin!.:, nature speaking, nature at liberty to ohcy its most f:eelings. (Cheers.) "At last he has permitted himself to l,e put np candidate for the Presidency of the United states. 1 knew it long before you did, long before any hodyilid, v nad there. are per sons on this platform that ki.ew what. was my conduct ; that its a father speaks to a Child, in ro,•ni 1,37 k jai:44'lf; at the hearth. thieve my warning voice "was against it. I Loud are plaiise.l Ail sylvive, all my rk.nuoustrances, ' were useless: for, in the lint pla:ai, 1, wilt) Ilan had a near and close view of the .Atnerican Pre , idents: -I, who have seen all the Presi dents in the chair. from Madison to the pres ent dil'rt — l;e7hrn — urct - seen them all in their chair, and.heen intimate with many ofthem ;- 1,. Who have received from the lips of many of t hem, --w-bile-they_w_ave sitting there, the over :towing e xpreiiions of their 1103:1:43 ; who have seen all this, who have been near enough to see the in,ide vieW of them,'did not hq):,en todinve that high opinion.of the enjoy ment of that place which a great many peo ple have. "It ne%er appeared to me to be a place that I would not wish to sec any gOoll man in it in preference ill- myself or-any of my family. I never saw the day in-which I did mit:prefer to see any good man there then any one et toy connection, and far more than to be seen there myself. I. could at leastdmve been tried for this pace. 1 oathi ha , e been nominate(' for the place," on some occasions. I put it , down as sung' es it wag mentioned: to me; be ! cause I had no inclination for the thing my , selt. I knew - good men whom I preferred to ad,ttere fore,_unale_way_for those "ood men. I have never seen the time. from I Mr. Madison's administration to the present one, its which these wore not my views. It was, therefore, repugnant to my feelings to see him bet•inne a eallidaf4e, eVell if he was a leandidate on natioold views ; but, knowing I front the be , :inning—knowing front the first 1 that Mr. Fremont was to be the candidate of I a se , ...tional party, I :old him froutthe ihat it WA' , i11114 4 / a Sible that I could support any nt.minittion. [Cheers.] "NI) Mart w must imvP, a vision thnt eould Ink liver the Union. Ile must not he 4)11 n dividing line----he 1111V:i lie on one side or the ether aif a dividing line—h 6 must na . tional,or rannot only not support iiitu, bet I must take ground puhlielv against him. All this wits said many towitits. a1:404 hal [a year_lielore tin' public knew he wns ( 'nndidate, and fruit) this 1 have never departed." - • A Second Jack Sheppard. Ge,orge W. Tow nsend, who wooa sfilueneed to two ... s,eiirs in the Delaware State pri , on, at I Npw c a ,:tl ( .. for roLbing, the post - utii-e at I Wilinington. Del., has succee+led, as atre'aily siace(l,. in I raking jail a!r;:in. Ttlis ih tie fourth time lac lias . eseaped front this prison.' tiriA tiine,while in 'prison . waiting Ili: , trial, bit liyolie jail an() let out three other ur :,ev,tia stores inoiten into in NVilmingt.m. 'Shortly after this escape Town:scud tvas'rceng nized and arrested in Philadelphia, and a por tion of the p!.(4 , 1s tnken from the stores we, lound on hi , person ; he also hal on his per son the pistok logiv•ily loaded, and a l u r itv dirk-knife. in a lew (lave; at ter he \vas lodged '1 the ()IA tilmrthrs; c , inti bed from 'Ms cell atml had re:iv:led the top 1 .11110 wall, and 1 0 1 1 a , in the net 4,1 junipiog; down on the onts..ale he was dit-eovered i y the sher iff: the sfierifY tired at him. and he NV:is cap tured. 'liortly- ilf;er this setamd attempt U escape hk trod came On. PA:6,re lII' WWI SPII - he made a stising appeal flir clemency, that he teas sorry fi,r what lie aaddute.:, would refi &e. 'Aiyait a month utter - lib was I•entenced - he made his third- eseape frein the prison; this tune he iet um two other prisoners with him, and on this same night the post office at 1,1)1- roliheiL he was m i.:0;411:7A by the Csolductor, while in the ears bet ilutington and (211e-ter. The con ductor locked ends of the ear, and 'when, they reached (;nester an officer was pro tired iron T•iwilsedd was again arreste I. One of the persons he had let o ut 01 prison, tianie.l -Uysier wici wit t hint ill the car, awl he was also arre,te.l.—Townsend was ta ken lik 4 k to the prism', aai this time to make sure of liiui. he was lint ta doll tile irons, wit ich weans inclocidis awl or leg iruns. lie was ficiic.,l in his cell awl cla,civ watched. Notwithstanding all this pre::autioat, he again -ifecie.l another and a fourth e: calk on Fri daynt ht last. This time he had ,fiied or saNved oil' his handcuffs and legdroits, and cut ting a. wile-through the oak .lour of his cell, Lc desceniled into a room t.elow, from there he got into the prison yard'. mai then scaled do wall, which is about twe»ty feet high. !Ls feats will rival those of Jaek, Sheppard or Si_iteca Siring Jack. Ile is certainly the 111 e-t, j'all-brCakt:r thil+ Cotilitry has p7telin cd, and while lie is now at large, will 1.0 doubt improve on his past experience. Townsend is a young man, alanit 19 years of age, about 4 feet 6 inches high, well and com pactly buiit, light hair and complexion, and blue es . Piz /1. E Cir(lod'llio fa ry l'rice . fifr .1 4 riplex.—T;ie Nash ville I Tenii.) Gazette e:tatc." that some apples raised in Coat Scare, and ex.llll,ited at the late fa: r, wf•re soid I,y tiw half (19zell, awl as much a. 4 p:r fur The w 1 0,1,, 1,,t, about barrels, eoLisistiug of sr:el:t varieties;, brought ,clll. " TRET/1 IS MIGHTY, AND WILL. PREVAIL. MOLE rurnlmmemi ANOTHER AWFUL CALAMITY. Terrible Calli3ien4 at Sea he l'eench Steam er Lc Lywinaiu Run Down by an Anterima Suir-i-inv at St-a.--Deaili 0 Tien 0( . tic Nunber.—titatemod of the Second We announced under our telezraphie head nn Saturday another awful and heart-rending disaster rtt soa to the• stenitt ship Le Lyounaise,. similur in many of its details to that which liefel the ill-fated steamship Arctic, aat d lay Whit:ll more thall hundred perFon9 met with ar wat ery trrave or 4►erishod miserably of cold and Inittae.r. r hhe foram lag deta.ils'we copy from the New York Poet, of Satordav afternoon On Sattfrdav, Ni.v,•mber Ist, tlie iron screw steamship e - Lrt anu Capt. Devuulse, sail ed from this port for Havre, with thirty-eight passengers. a crew' consisting uittuty-fottr awn, inelailing the 011iers, an assorted cargo; rained itL sl/ at 845..262, and $211,000 in Nre- Oa the night of Sunday. the L.'gl instant—the night, being very dark---,Nautueliet light-ship hearing. N. N. W., atm( distant tit) miles, the ship was run - into by an aid:nowt' vessel, winch immediately bore 'away. apparently -- without being much injorril, but without of-- ferink; any assistance to the steamer. Le Ly 011tlai SO 11 - 11 . 5( strin•lc well oft, nrel her alter compartments, which Nrtire cry large, imme diately filled with water, and went down so as to throw her how high -in the air. The ut mobt confu.ion prevailed for a 'short time on board the steamer, but order was soon restor ed, and the crew immediately set about virri- . strutting a raft. 7 (reship was provided with si __.bo_ats,____two_ef. which_ were: 6)116._ (inc of the latter only has liven beard from.. On Monday morning.. at day-breal;, it was det ided that it would be no longer safe to re main up oi the wreck. About forty persons, including pa , :sengers, were gut On hoard the raft, and the boats IA ere then launched. One of these was broken up immediately and those on board clambered up m the raft. it-is sup pt) e(( that the raft has 141 Me to pieces and all on board peris!md, but there is room to hope that some of them In:', hate beet STATEMET OP MIL LIOUIERE, SErOND MATE Or THE IXONNAISE. We left New York ou Saturday. Novembet• 1, at 'l2, o'clock. All 'went on pit'ltsandy un til 11 ,'clot;}[ ou Tuesday night, Nov: 4. s:i miles t the northwniti the litrllton Nan tucket ShoAlc, when, just immediately after the intssengers ;did many of the crew had re tire,A, leaving the wateh nto deok, >t three-atiptt ell vessel wog oltFerve.l hearing dowit upon os. We did, all in our !tower to avoid n with her, hy ringing, our itelV; - nittfidowint r itTie -.tenni-whistle to worn her ()flair yieinity. hot before we could Iniad off she struck us ntoid ship, tearing out au eatire Square of the plate inn). The witter rushed in with great force, aud although 'et.ery of was made to stop the pluggin . g ct with inattrettsett, pillows, Sc..c., it was. discovered that the water was gaining 111)01 Half no hour hall hardly elapsed ere the tirety)t the furnace were (mooched. -The' steam pumps having I)cm-it-so-sly ehooketl-with—eoltd—were of little service is freeittg the ship. All on beard were seized -.6th puoiL,, Att od it was with Ml •,:ulty that the t etilm-t he fears of the pacLengers ill'] IL 0 tin , crew to lade the :411111.-11e tinullc nitNtereil the crest- to gether, viol with the aid-of the pitsgencocs. who f0.m . 41 in bailing parties, rigge4 a cable in the (odd, and by thit, means was able to ,e,tch the water. . Toe pipzsetig'ers erew wivrl.-.01 hproically omit wel) inn, nnit finding. 'the water gaining tot them nwitll3 7 , ut ELI' early Initir the inllow ing tit 'riling they cninmerice..l eonstritcting. a raft, and I.v -1 P. M.. it ‘t.a.- At this tinic the \'l' , s(.l sinking: 711 rii(Ey. E' ;5 ct 7 elook 5 boats (the! miii!i's ilivp'ement , were ;old quielQy paNsen gers. —The cal. ta r elit direct ions t in,r,i; in the t the North wa The however. were utiprovithr , il with CMIIIIHNS/04 ant YacA y provisionet . to va. ttl ItP e • ha% ing spoiled the lexad, and otlie:- p,•ox kions coul . d not he olttained .the sttintroom nil account or storm. Hardly had twit of the twat , . loft the steam , ititi than they wont down, and tho•c who a ero on hoard f.ndt , :iyoriql to reach the raft, which was crowded with & f ont persous.--Maity, in their efforts t o re-, serve their lives in thim death-struggle, n11).1k to ri,r ill) more. (ff lie f . k.rty- 4 .lve or fifty per ...ms in these boat.t, at least two-thirds welt. drowned. I proceeded some little distanee towards these - un ftwtunate -]offeror,, awl with toy boat tried ti) thND, I,utout having !lily oars, or even anything that would serve as a paddle, I was obliged to leave -them to their floe. -Night—coming sight_of the other two boats and the raft. By the dins light ti! Moon afforded I saw the steamship s. , Me distance ofr, but gradually lowt, sight of her. I left the captain 'Oll board the vessel, and f a t tl I have no knowledge. A few of the crew re omitted by birn. I forgot' to mention that the, vessel that came in c dlision with t.s..although apparent- I ly uninjured, nuole no effort to render ass;st-' ance, or even to n.certain what injury we MN.. rained., but steered away. Little do I know, however, but she, too, ha , sunk into the depths of the mighty deep, and all on hoard perish 1. On Tuesday morning the weather begatt show unfavorable signs, sod ILI Midis - 1y it com menced snowing, hailing and raining violent ly. Judge of oar pitiable condition, in an open-boat ; -leaking at the rate of-eight barrels !lei' eontinually We suffered set erely. the storm increasing in violence, and next davdawned upon us no bet ter off than the day before. Our :wants- h ap. ply of cotanies, wnich c ,, nsiclefl only , /f pre serves, were greatly diminished. We had water, and it was pitiable to hear the cries of my poor companions they were such as to make the stoutest he:tri quad. The nest day our huiferings were augmented by the renew al of the storm, which pelted upoa - Us That day will he long remembered by those in the hoar. To imagine rho ac:ony td :in ( dd •rntlen:an of misty Years qtrugqling with death nai,t, harrowing a,pe,q, will fail to real ize the svelte. Ile died before nightfall. Ma ny begaa to think that they Wullid 141141 i ft:ll.i\V I,int to eturnity. Daring the night a ~ eaman an I myself found it diffi keeo ~ur com panions alive. 13, dint of nuirh however, we succeeded. Several. however, including; mv4olf, were se‘e;ely frostbitten. We were now entirely out of pr. visions, itarratiun trig iu 'the face. Want water compelled us to drink sea water, but, this, of only inereastii our thirst. 'We now Lunde up our niinds that we were indeed lost. It is nnposzible to describe our fright condi tiou—l-tio' foodT-ele to our barks, feet wet and frozen, and Ntrellgth exhausted -with bailing out the beat. Saturday morning we 'discovered a sail. Oh ! haw glad were our - hearts at this sight ! but many of my pair companions We're. t o ot helpless to see even this common succor, • On makiny, signals to her by the raising of hands and a handkerchief, she bore (lowa for us. She proved to be the bark Elise, ';(_'apr. Nor ihoist,from Baltimore for liremen,who tfink us on I,oard, a nd did all in his power to alleviate our sufferings and make us as comfortable as he could Under the oireunistaticeS.' We con tinued to fiuffor severely from the. offects_of nor privations and exposure. Capt. Nordon- Imist,found it inclini ement to aecommodate so large a limber, and wished to transfer us to mono vessel hound to the United Shoos. lie signalized tun American .ship, supposed to be bound, to some ,011,M ern port, but he paid no at tention to the Si;1,11111. On Hondas morning last, having brew two de) R on hoard the bark, we spoke the Ham burg bark Elise. .Capt..Noilson, bound from Hamburg for Now York, who sent a boat • alongside. Upon hearing of our misfoitan, , ,, an d rn‘ . enrtaining inn". wish. to proceed to New- York, It kindly offered us a passage in his vessel. All but two of us went on, board 1 1 14 boson ble -ship. where we expe rienced the utMost kindness at 1i s hands, and that of the passen gers and erew. Mr. Schuler and lady deeided _to_proieed to_ Breineii : the `barque, unit thenee to their destination. ' We cannot give too much, pritis2 to Capt. Neilson for his humane treattnent cif ns. DominegO, a passenger, an Italian,' is so much frost-bitten that his life is'desraired of. Flora. Solomon and Wile Ernestine Benoit were see. erely injdred by the eoki,intt ars re 7 oorerny,l4,. The crew are progrestling - as WO Its min be expected, Or the fate of - tbose en the . raft and in' the two tioats, together with that of-the captain, tio3 felY Of the crew remaining tits 'the ship, I know tinthitig, but I -surmise that the boats woro . pieked up by einnie'liio,sing vessel. 1 do not think the raft could . have floated in It'eary sea. that-rolled , the first ight," and rin afraid thut all on board wont down with it. -At the time of the collision'. the night Was' dark arid a st ro g g The Al lights were p, 41.11 a Qvcry pree4lo.iim, glad t),K.O taken, on board the steamer. After the passengers and twist of the creW had left - the .vessel, the captain renutined• on :board with rour sailors until five o'clock in the afternoon of the next day.. All the boats hail sails and 'provisions, and - the captain's 'boat hail iiont pivise.:. The vessel could be used 41nlyliti buoy to keep ti -boats and raft steady, and was fluidly abandoned because it was thought she wool( ! sink. - • The Twat in eliartte of the l ritte. left the wrotk at 7 o'clock, P. M., fur Monday, • and lost sight 4EII the others in half an litmr.— The- mate' says the boht was badly - broken up' the sea 'before they'w'eretrescatil. and was indy raced Irian slvainpityr by a piece of ow. 7:U•. Wilith happened be rw in the boat, and which was drawn over the ^outside tOlteep-our the water. The weather was very ront ,- ,h - , -- tind 'the hap less voyagers suffered terribly, They encoun tered several SI-Mir - StOr/114, and were short - of water. They. had claret wine. MO lbs. of his coit. and some PreQervod meat. The mate-is an old Criincan soldier, and wears the English medal. Ile, says he would ratlyer .have been at Sebnsti:pol than in his frail Isom. suiferinl - 0 of these unforttmateB may he imagined. At present- they tire likely to recover, but their limbs are frown and trefol len,, 'rho ladies suffered terribly, but }dire up wit t n•• - le IPP Lich th , no air le tonna(, ,ear c ,whtett tinguished in the presence of real danger. ,New. 4 of the other butts awl the an"rionslyexpe: , ted. There were two mumps' pcovisions on hoard the ratt, and jf 'Wham not ; row) to pieces those upon it may have been raved. The steamship Marion, Captain Porter, of, the Chit rlesttot line, has been eliartered to gc k in search of the raft, on which -a majority (if . , the ail ft .rtti t late passengers are known to htive sought refuge. The Marion is provisioned for a ten days cruise. She will be well pro. vtrn .1111 -1 lortv,sersi-and- every-other requisite to tow the ‘vreok of the Lyonnaise into port if it should he dii;covered, afloat.— Site wlti to have sailed yesterday. The Ex . stlys; The Lyonnaise bad five water-tight com partmenk, but when the, collision took' place the water rushed in at the stern with irresis tihie force, breaking, through the first corn mrfinetit and then into the secuittlat the same time, so that all the steering apparatus, with the propel were swept away., When the Lyonnaise was last seen she 'WAS still afloat With her hews high out of water, and the Mu r' Poirrer, her agents, are under the impression that she is 3611 tallit. Safety of the Vessel that Run Into the Le Lyonnalee. BosToN, Nov. 17.-=-The vei•sel that, came in collision with the steamer hyminaise, was the barque Adriatic, fro!u Belfast, Maim., for Savannah. The steamer's lights were seen by those on board the Adriatic about twenty minutes -before the collision, occurred. The captain, who was on deck at the time, suppos ed the steamer had stood away on her course, and he was not aware of the injury done her. The barque arrived at Gloucester, Mass., yes. terday, haring sustained but little damage. The Captain went immediately to Belfast, where he reported to the Belfa,st Journal that he hail been run into by an unknown steßtner, which passed on without rendering any as sktance. Tile collision happened on the nightof the 2d inst., off the Smith Shoal. Lie _liaileiLthe steamer, and requested' her to lay by hint, but the lights disappeared in 20 min _ te.i. • o,n.nibuti Fares and Hoop.y.—lt. is contem plated to rai , ,e the price for ladies fare. with g)p- , ,-61'eer , is fur dwindles and 3 cents for the notpi, as an omnibus holding 12 ladie,s forup,nly cau now scracely hold 8. 13e,ides. the gentlemen complain of personal iujories from the hoopP.—* r: Express. TWO DOLLARS A-ILAIL 1n.6m6u4 . 1 - _ rlrf "Elder Tltenunk .U'uttn, o f ',"; t r i v Loroii Connecticut, snys he. Wants a line of Tel . 1 . , ,,r111)11. wires constructed • to llell, thnt lie icoulit een4 `itskinir,liim to stand aside ,ithol make . xuoin fqr Frunkliti Pierce." . The above we ••ee, copied extetisirely in tI:F newspapers' of, the country. When' Posters such as Beecher ,& CU., and Ehlers 's'inib Thomas Swann, are guilty of such irreveyetee, impiety and indocency',lti . they 'have othibit ed during the lato contest, whet can be export ed from the &efts 'of which they are "(min.- s . ce rs ?" — 7 -Pen my, idn. A 7' rue ,Ptnawrcti.—Jahn Pevis, an old llerUkutionary soltli" , ,r, 104 years on-Tlesdny r t4Tl,l. milt's. without a canc. 1( 1 the . poll F in Ineasnnt, township, in this ,ocon - ty, anal voted for Buchanan nudßrectimik;e_ That is Democracy for you, and a trey of the littionT • 'Emig lice the old soldier atoi lot or of Ii s'oountrit =Ohio Si/de:anon. ; „ Uirl..;eneral natiouid brit, "Ti rz flag 0f,91.47 llniun ftirever," proved tt Enet4 N al 1111,tk ",toeutnAtit"..dit ri lig the lute eauu vuss. It tiottetked the ristit,tpi,rvetpirl . i . . 1. t a tli rit) apattiotirink thr9llghwit the rolotih - tio . : "A union of hikes—a meiiiri of 1:11)d:,-- 7 ,. A union of STATEN,,IipT!‘ , May Never; A 111601 i -of heart--a union ..r hand , Atid - ttie ttax mir I;rll(itifcci:e4i Now Connftrfrito.--A, mew counterfeit I * : dollar bill on tltogi•yttrd Batik, Pl2l littgluade iti optic grant ituty deceive. the unwary. It is easily Lit:wet-tit 'ins buying', on the right-halo! oml Voo., nikte a group enusistin2 of a matt ut.vl Nxotf.urt„, in place_ of the • Intalallhat head. of •;tepit.on- Givat.d„ which-appears on both onus of the 'genuine. In :other .respeets it, i .11 tolerable 'imitation of the good.'nttte. Tte s:gisaturts,.. , however, •aro stiff,: and the general exueurioek. is rather, coarse'', the note gleteeted.is. -- July,loth,, 1656, letter It, $7O, - --; , • . Doptruetive Flood in India J• , Otyr 14-a ' it Tiontsqii,l Cuttlitta e6tiespifivitiht cif the Landon tiliitee 'of ()et: 4; gives the folioTs9 lig N. 31- oott:it OI It ditolgtrousfroliot,iil : • The rains this year- have been ersa'gy severe. Tile downpour inhfljOmits : tan v‘bol .unprededeitted. Atio tqFPctt. ire gall lo ' Thotorront of water whirl+ , at this heason , rolls flown the water 4., noon/ of the Indus gradually thou overtt , q,- !pecl the hanks; ant then ► burst on plaWt with a force which . swept whole toWto, the flow or the' krtir.--l'ho et:tutor - talent tittosltera, • enly half built; vas earric*L'iswirc. 'lite great, eantentnen .4(.4(14; lia zee, h att was totally ruined, the fill tik)iirut of'the melting iu the . tlod. • The 4 l,tinit...l.' kykr, whieh defends I,ein, burst, and I.ein bloc lisuppeared.• The loss otlife bus _not, boon-in proportion,,44ooo or 5,0i.0 ill agerif , not, i:out-t -for Inueli in India, I the depArtietion . . provei.ty it 4 7,i7 Sle(e)tinif.--(Jel. Hay, of the British army. recently tried his hand with tnr Voloanicittlwating •hetol, a Yankee inven tion. The s pistel useiton the occitsinn lyas ain 8-inch harrel;t'vitielt Ifischarges nine latils rapid Emcee:Haien. - .The Colonel-fired the arse tilues,teliking a, number of would do credit r ut 4 . iitletnan. Ars* Bred' at an 8-ittetk diatrietcr target at '1011:y1od:4. putting nine' bittlEr inside the ring:: - thee moved latek ,distance 200',,ittrq,11ild. ilre4 "' talk ". )11tt, tri sO. I, nine halls levy!, hMlng the target mn, - ....14 times. IL) then ninvi;,l heel; 100 'yartlN 'Fo , r e'er, of :100 Yards front - the mark.' awl Owe& firil .. 2t-Ntlin . nine laills:in,,hle the , ring notl hitting tin; "hulrs eye" twice. The luau who bea4s chat may brag. " • terThe Planet Jupiter is do W the tuning star, and will contiriiielui until Apiil 1 1 4851: Jupiter the liirgestof sill the pitoeiN t . auol, next to Venip;„ Abe nlest briliiatiit, It is orno • thoibasid . three hundred fithestlfe earth, is about feui• hundred awrninety-liNf' Lill 10118 esg it itirl( ref (1,15:1111 nil r. tliy tunt froth the'shit,r hitt] imuti:otapanied by fi n er mouth., which help it to 'li jg.t vt: yettrm irJ revolving. it r:hohl thi! suni, atvl 0111.3 • . gives it n veliwity at it equator of fonitikiii sand six hundred eight utile:t itw a minute, or a speefi of two thousand tiinei greater than , that of,a carman b a ll. Its axis being nearly Reipetitlieular to the plane of its 4,rhit„ the sun is ultunsb 'always in the plane of its equator. --,. The, Earth and the Sun. Some German paperit are endeavoring to prove that the' distance liettreen the' earth int(' seri inif.reasing annually, mot ttrpte from it that the inerett;iog ttttnnolity . Of some Aunitnert , and the loia of fertility hy the earth to he tit triliutol to thiA e iretintAanca, In. the, course of gix thot4anil years froth the prevent time they asinnue that the dktunee will be Ng) great-titittllilly.,-4/11e-eighth-cpart-oF the warmth we enjoy from the slut, will he euremanieatell to the earth, and it will limit he covert,' with eternal ice. SenJtible CuB;unt in ad Eitylisl4 London eorrespondert rof the New rt;Tic indPpen /fn.', says :—llere we observed fur the first tints., _what afterwards bet:ante a eight—that in entering, whoever came first, whether i.tentletnan or Ia:lv, moved the head of the T,ow, and those who mine latetook the reinttining - seats, preventing the dia turhance which occurs , so often .in_ cur chur ches at home, When a gnitlentatt, or of them, must sttn) into the aisle to give tt Cu= dy the fancied seat abettor. - „ . Hoopv.—More is the lust mood thitg about the huops . : .-Ma, what bl bush?" i'Whyouy de:tr.? why do - sr u ask?" • "13eeau-;e_ I nslzeri siiter yestordllv. what male her 41r OSB . Ullt-51.4 -Anti silo said, `hush " , I= NO. 11
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