ierthyr Gaudiss.l )Still CRANE,' ESQ. respectable ,gentleman pat dierser..at the, staistalb l 3' Jay, the 23rd of February. Mrs Thomas in bee usual j suisenabled at am o'clock.— ileDotigisirGimgh. of Yeiseedwin. Sag. led, r /t wassabserved by all parties present 1,11 t wiethelirgest ant moat eeapectable din si ti "tneeee4 to Swansea. R. M. Philips, ern a tviimies; ii - itairi. - Viciii•rielldent. liefpa , was' seen Isparkling about freely.— toe cloth was removed the chili man pro ~ 1.., ”...=:, . . . , -.WPM" w i th three tunes threl,iithltik fr with a. pplause ' rails , . . e neat was ''rtie Queen Dowager, and the illie.lloyal Family," with throe times three. Mirry?and the Army." three times three. fain BMW, - 11. N. returned thanes. ale Britaaia," was then sung in 104 style iii._Farndale and Middleton. a Camastax then rose and said—The next he Was about to give was one he was cute tine preteuLaancipated, namely, the health Ay) Web preen that oar Cha9 Alum MI 11:11 by • .1 teas tv of h a respected friend on his right, their honour ed .. caLevers.Craae,gri. Ile could only regret tha a person of greallfirtalent and one more am cus 'mod to public speaking than himself, and one who would,do more jostiee,;to the toast, had not filled the Cheer on -this occasion. He was lie 'ire, relieved in Some measure in the task be had undertaken, seeing himself sorrounded by io -hig ly respectable an assembly of gentlemen, • Soh h •rould iitance convince his friend how his Tr -vereance and talents were 'appreciated.— h y bad met this day to testify their .gratitude to t. Crate for the important discoveries he had lrriii. e in2making iron of anthracite er atone coal. By this discovery this neighbourhood will be' , lii.:4 ly' enhanced in value, and it would be top er. feral on their part not to show In that gentle- Mail some mark of their esteem and gratitude tar l so important. a discovery. The Chanrinan alai it was with pleasure be bad the honour of ad rsoing such an assembly, and was sure they w ald all corthally unite in the 'wish that Mr. C... .iiii may soon obtain as .eniple reward frr his gr - at labour and persevereitime, and that he nisy lo g live to enjoy such a reward. Allier • few 1 of er obaeovationsmanch to Ihe poriinse, the Chair - tp a concluded by proposing the health of George C ea, Esq. of Yniscedwin Iron works. (Nine liiesolne,) Which was received with the great -I.es enth liana sin. mai Stil latr. Crane then gat up and stand on a chair, tde (bribe oecas' at the foundry of Themes rick, Esq. at Clydach, near Swansea, of iron, pee of anthracite or stone coal, and spoke as Testi :- - s I.llr. Clair an and Gentlemen.—l beg most sipcerely thank you for the very kind manner be which o+ have now urunk my health, led niore es cially so forfitat public mark of your aiiention with which"[ am this day teinouredia bVing invited to be your guest at this itilde. From the practice which I have had in mean's , iron ore With anthracite, I entertain much confidence in y own experience upon that subject—net so in tity 'talents as a public speaker ; and as this is tie fi rst time of my appearance upon (here boards ithat character, I most cravelbat indulgence at your bands which is weirdly. kindly mOOlll3Oll to tinew performer, whilst I trespas, .for a short me upon your attention with a few observations hick I have committed to paper. Wheel fi rs t elated this country, as a resident, about IS years nee, a large pornikii of the fuel for the daily sup. lyof the ruisced:w in Iron Works was 'at that me tieing conveyed 12 miles up the easel. at a 'very large expellee, whilst the whole country on, loth. alt Ilia - works stood teemed withienthracite ;.tie question with regard to the applicability ; or ttierwtse, of atime coal to furnace purposes, nat bratty forced itself immediately upon my atten . ion. Eighteen months had not elapsed after my ' rrival in 'Smith Wales, before'l had begun, and ailed, in some of the most serious attempts to aii- O ily anthracite. or stone coal, to the smelting of ?ion ore, which had probably ever before been undertaken in this or any other country, I will not fatigue you with the details connected with ithoe.e fatfures, but will briefly State, that the De. cumulation in the blast fornaces of a dense whits i ash, which I could neither succeed ip liqiiifyine lor consuming, (as it now proves, tram the want lot a sufficiently high temperature to meet the pe culiar incombustibility of this coal.) . completely defeated all my effprta. Some other attempts to apply stone moll to the remelting of iron in the cupolas, ended in the same manner; In the pro ' gross Of the experiments. ar.d in other Pilhati.leßl ' Cones, a variety of circumstances transpired which /red me to believe that anthracite bad gigolo les pc : :entiarly calculated for the production of Enod trim. 7 need not state that such conviction. whit-t it in creased the acuteness of disappfintment tinder, nis , failures, confirmed my determination of pisr. l l 'pose to follow op the object which I have in view' how to apply this coal to smelting purposes, with 'all the little intellect which I could bring to hear upon the subject. 'My attention was with more er less seat, according to the apparent feasibility, or otherwise, of tile different ideas which arose I'r-my mind, tar mxity years almost constantly directed to this subject, until the thooght act:lured , to me which 'has been erreetted with each signal Inniceirs. I have,Gentleiden, the very agreeable duty_ of reporting prngresv. Since the 7th Felt. T ( 4 4 1 .1837, (notivithsta ding the disadvantage. ous positicin in Which I a•We4.heen 'placed fir the want of it more - pnwe lalitid 7 machine, new- a beat° be reanedie ,) not one °omit of any other fuel'hasbeen used` in the cupola blast fernice at Yffiscedwin b i troy Works, called' No. 2, b t that i, hithertb rejected description, cidledatone sl— its twelve months trial ended therefore on Wed. 'timidity fortnight last; and when I have coinant nicated the result, of the combination of heated air with anthracite on each of the three grand points in the smelting of iron ore. namely, on the quantity of iron produced frdm the fu rtiace when eumpitred with its former make—the quality; of such iron; and last—but not least, the economy of the promo% literlieve that we may, with eery great safety. wit mly congratulate each mho , on the results. With respectio the make, the AMace bee produced. on *Ts average upwards of jSO,per smut snore iron, since I resorted to the ectintiina tioo of heated air, and stone coal. than it tint be. fore turned out during a like average with cokes and cold blast. The quality of such iron has been oti.a very' superior desbription to anything which I was ever belore - enanied to produce with cold blest, and the mitie of the bitioninioo veins at the Yniacedwin Iron Works, (arid vi at the quality was of the iron before made by m .is not erdincliva to many gentlemen in Whose presence I am now speaking,)nn this part of the subject the testimonies are moat flattering, a h a loam conclusive. For bars, lam assured that the iron has given mach satisfachon - for Srundry plirposea, - t 6 tlitir it is admirable, " that in remettvig 'it is "Veryfluid," and at th e same time.verf attune." a onion of qualities 'moat, desirable, hut seldotn .met with for wire for, tin plater. and Sat all the other general pcorierta to whit h the metal is tip' plicable. the reports Sere equally gratifying.— The lattreeotilerteriirr of all:1Na dilinions Which I have received, have been - chimutred only' by one Assisfairourtible.. Anthracite. likh vegetable Char coal. being ahnost entirely composed of Imirbon. it was no unreatemablii expectation. in Arbi,cit I i - indulged tbstlbc enalwould be fasted to Predues I ■ , ..-L—_- an irocOmiswerel , _. ' htrittano te a bli ado err-the event has fatly qualified my most sanguine arairripations. With raspect to the econouty of the process, it - will* alarmists% to mention that . I hairenri the area of several neoutler:-MriF dtrod. the tenor r i l i with aboetnnethird of 'The coal WhiCh I 'fore glinted to nonsunie of that °fibs biluipiiii kinds; namely. with the before uniesaild , imantity of if cart, and st i from causes whielt! it ld take me too winch into detail to explain. I entertain the utmost 1 1 "tnnlidentartflatliiliall lin aldete reduce thst ifT tut, L I dawn ORR err mart+ et the average in the ' swelling proverus.. boi 4rretm the importance of twelve mosithe, lam. " oak . likewise In adding. Ana nheo stone anal hcMin use of . the riper/drone of the blast' Terrace m u be este:sited to proceed witti fearer olden, It tuitions, with regard: to the quality of the ; titan ever was my. mite. dentbefore e with othor,descripeitio of hat i Mother result hae chowfrom the curable'. tion °fl ra at blast mid Anthc te. oftno much hil -1 Portance to omit emoting. cedar this process I have been -enabled to use the whole of the icon ' pities or this - calory, without discrimination, end 'mit* produce good tron. &foie ladopini {hilt process, where grey aim was required. I vas obliged to select dome attic eioretworhative ores and use those only of the milder. ir Ina melee. lire kinds. Froy a diffident* in 'trespassing too long upon your eitention, I will briefly nate, that I have upwards of twelve months since, pro. tint that the quality of the iron is so much int. priered—its atiength ip much increased. and the quantity lifted baforetequisite, so much reduced by the introduction of merely.a fourth of Anthill. ,rite in the smelting process,' hat I entertain a },stror.g expectation that those iron masters in the bituminous districts, who are now smelting with heated air. will eventually find it to be their inter. oft* to import stone coal from this district, tortes either with the coal or the cokes of the bitumin. 1 oils vein.; and with the desire to facilitate that object, I have already advised twe or three par ties who have put themselves in communication "fah me upon the subject, that:l have determined dcharge but 64 per ton upon the iron made un r this process Air the use or my pleat right. in all eases where the stone coal must be sea borne. Gentlemen, it is known to you all that we have in this part of the magnificent mineral basin of South Wales, • very extensive deposit. of anthracite Coal, and that we have likewise a very unusual abuodance of Stan stone of very excellrc't spiality ranging in the same' ground with :t. Thet the result of the experiments which I have brought to so hap?y a conclusion, must now otviou.ly open the whole of the stone coal doll rice with peculiar advantages to an im portant trade from which it has hitherto been excluded, will pot now admit of a question. I will, likewise, venture to add that, coaradenng the present enormous and daily increasing eon. somption of mineral. for the purposes of the iron trade (a trade so intimately connected with the prosperity and welfare of the United Kingdom), that it is a matter, I flatter myself, of no small importance in ii national point of view, that we are now enabled to add to its Ammer available resources for ouch trade, a district probably not measuring leas than from 60 to 70 miles lone, anu by something like six to eight miles wide, full °fawn° coal and iron stone. You are aware gentlemen, that I have not any claim to the merit of the itivetitron of heating air; fur that ;.happy thought the world is indebted to an intelligent .practical man. Mr: Neilson, of Glasgow: for the 4iscovery oft e advantages of the combination of heated air, with - stone coal or anthracite yen are indebted to me. Simple4entlemell. el the thought may aftneki, many of you can form bet we im perfect idea, laying nothing of the outlay. ef she sisecession of-he untoward disheartening, and ha rrrrr ing difficulties which I had to contend with, befiire f eduld carry out this simple thought to a practical avid suiteesafirl termication; and if my confidence in the good qualities of stone real had not approached to something like obstinacy, the pleasure of Meeting you on this mansion net. taitily -would not taste been mine. Out of a no. merous ebtablishrwent I had no reason to believe that I had more than two persons, who had any hope that slice/a would crown my egertionr— those two were Mr. Edward Manby, tad Rem Davies, of who 1 should be wanting in grati tude, and shou d do violence to my feelings, if I did not avail myself of this opportunity of stating that she manner in which they both devoted them selves (without any regard to their own personal cornfiat) to assist me ia carrying out my idea to a socces.ful-isXue, will always secure for them, from one, a deep) interewt in their 'via happiness and 'welfare. The large and increasing.demand I corlron, fit railway and other purposes, which has now to ha met, will afilird ample room •for I that additional quantity which must now be shortly made in the anthracite district. hew in. tere-tv can but seldom be created aothout inter feting with thase previously in existence. I here been treated With so much kindness by the gen. eras body of iron masters, of the South Wales and Mimmouthshilo dialect, ever since I use torso. ed one uftheirinumber, that it wield mar my pre sent enjoyment, if (entertained any apprehension that our success would intdrfera materially with .their nen. Gentlemen, you most excuse my in 'trudtrig on your atteidiim foil a few touroote only, louger.;. Indebted as I deeply ant to this nergirberrhuud i and I have great plessoce now in availing terrier of this public opportuoity of soa king the ackleowledgement) for that universal kindness end' attention, with which I have been 1 treated by' all classes ever since I have been a resident in it identified as I am with the inter.' eats--the reeling., (I had almost said) with the prejudices of, the country in which I em living— of that country in which my last days will lie 'Tent, ea far las I can control their diatiniesu I feel a deep gratification that it should, in thedis pensations df the Almighty, have fallen to my lot (as I utile) successfully and finally to have attired a queition of so much interest to the prin cipality. With a deep, a grateful, and a lasting impression df the value of this road mark of your esteem, tshjill return back into that retirement 1 from whence your kindness has this ilsy drawn me;earrYint with me an additional motive (than rn which • ii, e powerful earthly one could Dot have been andertd for my acceptance) to indent ' me still (o continue my humble efforts to do my duty, in that state of life, into which it has pleas ed God Li affil one. I. trust that 100 will now i n .' dividnally tie assured that I again thank you for this high honour which you have conferred upon me, for the indulgence with which you have now heard mgt—;and that you 'sill consider that I now as distipctly drink each of ,your healtbs, and that it is accompanied with every sincere wish for your iedividual happiness and arellate. 'both ' for timeatip eternity. . . The speech was listened to with the gniotesl attention, ind was . cheered throughout. . - N. Painful; OcemTenee.--A serious-mseidero ie., tarred at the Printing alike attathid to _the roe.' thodist .boOk room to this city. on fleturday.l Mr. Ludliin, - tbejsurerintendent of the . powerl prose by 11120 imam !mama entangled of this ns echiner . and wee carded around for soma minulta.lsy the Maio shift `Be was. skate its the romp i t , the time, but his,eniesmooftiwought the when. i nmates albs budding to his. ashen Mace-. 1 extricating him. it was, Coolid - that his him, nkone irm were broken. fle was still dila jt ootwihis t." Con J. - - . • .• . • . . 4, M R 1 1:PRNA ~••••••.- MIEMEI Filially/Alec-le. 4.: - ~,,mthe-/Wns Yaritinpmpr. •. ,-11011WHISEHRRCR ;11/.100R6 • 01 Path illial&FUL TIM Lord, die high and holy Ons„ Is pransitenery where; !• Go ilikthesegions of the mn,;' Anil that *IOW lam Were: fie to the secret ocean came; 'Where Min herb never Mod, ' And there, beneath diefiesbing warm, Will betty tilatier.Gon Flrewlfilyria the morning's wing To diment realms aweyj, Where bird.. in jewelled plumage, simr, Tbe edam' d the day : And where the line seeks his hay, And reindeer boends aldne— God's presence makes the desert fair, • And cheers the frozen *One. All Nature speak, of hun , 1 who made The land, and see, and aby; The (mite that fill. the kites that fade, The flowers that bloom and die : The !Gay maim clad lowly vale, The lasting' West trees, The rocks that battle with the gals • The ever-main seas All tell the Omnipresent Lord, • The God of "joundless might; In every age and clime adored, Wane dividing is the light! WRATH Hinante. A man of my acquaintance. who maser a ve hement and rigid temp.,. had. awe/ Jeell since, a dispute with • friend of his, a professor of reli gion. asidltel been injured by him. With strong A:cling of resentment, be made him a eirit, Air the avowed purpose of quarrelingwith hop. He accordingly stated to him the uattire and extest of the injury, and was preparing, W he ellorward contested. to lead him with a trite of levers re proachee, when his friend cut him sink by ac knowledging. with the utmost readieess and !rankness. the injustice of which be had been guilty, expressing his own regret for thii wrong which he had dose, requesting his fer i giveness. and proffering him ample compensatron. He was compelled to say he was satisfied, and with drew, full of mortification that he hadheen pre cluded from venting his indignation, and wound ing his blend with keen and violent reproaches for his conduct. As he was walking ii.meward, he said to himself to this effect—There must In more in religion than Ih 'ire hitherto Inspected. Were any man to add me in the tone of haughtinhisi and provoca ion with which I Le i costed my friend this etching, it would be ims possible for me to preserve the equanimity of which I have been wittiest', and especially with SU much frankness. humility and meekness, to as knorolage She town whioh I haverion.; so read. ily ask forgiveness, of the mac who I had in jured ; and so cheerfully !promise a datisfectory recompense. I should hpve met his enger with at least equal resentment, paid him reproach for reproach, sad indicted wqund for wound. There is something in the religion which 14 professor, and which, lam for to believe; he feels; something which makes him so superior, so much better, so much more amiable, ; than I cis pretend le be. The subject strikes ale in a map ner„tii which I have hitherto been a 'stranger.— It is high time to examine it mote thoroughl, with more candor, and with greeted solicitu de, also, than I have done hitherto." Freon ithisiii eident, a train of thoughts and' thins con men* in the mind of this man, wh ch termina ted in his profession of the Christian religion,. his relinquishment of the business iii which he was, engaged, and his consecration of himself to the ministry of the gospel—Dr. Dissigin. SOMME ADD iII:CIUDY. I t Silence-end secrets) , ! Altars might still be raised tothem (were this an altar.building time) for universal worship. Silence ill the element in which great things fashion theinseinn together; that at length they. may emerge. full Ginned sod majewiek. Into the-' daylight of life 4 which they are henceforth to role. Not. William the bilent only, but all the eoasiderable men I tave knows, and the most undiplomatick and unstrategick of these, forebore to babble of what they 'were era. tiny and projecting:- Noy. in thy coirrs mean per. plezities. do thou th.jself but hold thy iserrefor solder; on the morrow, how rough claire, are thy purposes and duties; what wreck and tab bish have these mute wet kmen within thee swept away, when intrusive-noises were, uhut out !.... Speech is too often not... the Frenehioan defined it,the art of conceding thought; but not quite stilling and suspending thought, so that there le none to conceal. Speech, too. is great, but nit the greatest. As the ; Swiss inserietien lays Spitting ist saws; Scoweigwe hat gilds,," (Speech is silver, Silence is got golden;) or, as I Wight ratherexpreas it, Speech is oq Time, Silence is of Eternity. , • Rees will not work eteept ( in ark . nen; thought willitot work except in sites ; neither will vie. thytun work except in - sycrny . , Let; not right 4 hand know what thy len bedeeth : Neither t shalt thou prate, even lathy ow heart,of "those secrets known to all." Is not s lime the soil of virtue. *fell good inastners , arid mon& I— n kici Like ether plants, vides will not ' row unless its root be hidden, buried-from the e of the son,— Get the sun shine. on it. nay, dofb t kook at it I privily thyself, the root withera; s d no der 1 will - glade - thee. . ! - il-- it• wrierrne am sinocteitince. Sympathy sad bmaecoledee 4 stitute these finer &clings ot the waul, which t once support and adorn human nature. W a is it that guards our belpkote inGincy„ and learn a our childhood, but sympathy ? What is it tha t norms all the ic caa kind offices of friendship, in ripe wears, bat sym. why ? What is it that coo* us in our last melisnts• and defend' our eitarsati . we when dead, but sympathy? A person without sympathy, and living only for bistweLf, is the basest and at* lima of character.' Catermor Dwarf Tbs bestdowry to solwanasSae marriage a n young lady is, when she has Whey countenance naildnese, in her speech wisdom; in her behaviour modosty,and in her LAI virtues.l Pros the N. Y. rameg a Conan'ati" NM. RICH AND POOR. Connected with the warfare which the destructitres are r a g io g against the insti tutions of the Republic, we have witneas ed, a ith regret ; acrd iudignapon, the course of some of the 7, treasury organs in at tenring to 'ea ire the ppor against the ri ci ch. The origami! loco r as of this city the English Radical; acli the Working men's party of 1829, tta all the evils Of poverty to the first unequal distribution or Pcoperty- They declared that the po- Riad inillenium could nht be expected, that the wheels of revolution could hot be *awed, until all! citizens sh ould enjoy "all eip#ltaittmit jot prOpertyorttif,*sing; •It . dill age of ltaturilY• , Since the itintinii *Moe thoperted.fronitheAigb Cowie of principle, hener,prmeterity, hoppineassixt republicanisai, marled out by /effersom and Mediae& twee the people geberally i haft experienced nothing but;dilappoint•l meat in its course, and have Felt nothing but digit* at thetlysitiatiticelfeet bottle ; progress to ride oiter' r ,tlm teillpf . do, pet_ . ). pie, - we have ? bat too; freenetilly icitmiereell, thou' radial sipaile!io those feelingivof hatred which want is naturkity inch. . . tad to look u pon pesieseion, • I , We speak feelingly on this *abject, bei• eartamovery movement which these agitat Ws may succeed in creating, will user . edly terminate in the injury of, ill e and thepositive destiection of those who it professes to benefit. It is biusead a suicidal to the poor. They require, into . i than any othei members of society, pea , harmony; and prosperity. Plated unto 1 tunately at the verge, they , feel Brst,lver 1 movement which convulses the body • ; tic; and while they are generally vet! I sensitive to their immediate iuterestie • perience proves that they do riot alwa s perceive . most clearly, the ultimate censi T • quenceso : There iv an intimate and in parable connection between theicapitali and the laborer, the employer and dr employed; and we look upon the person i preps that would attempt to disturb t e harmony between them, as a eonspirat r Against the happiness of both, land an i '- cendiary in society. We are led to these observations - b this subject, at this time, by a' eadin ,, e r ticle in the Baltimore Republican, in - whi h while making the usual disclaimer "of • ing the last who would desire to ere to any distinctions for were party s between the poor and the rich," passe at a single bpund to the declaration thdt 'tall other titles of party'differeoctt are 'mere wind I" The little interitening space which we have referred to, as included itilthis boukid, is interspersed with the folloaing amiing other beautiful, philanthropic, and pelri otic sentiments! " Look around us; and what do you perceive? What else, indeed, thanthe Juggernaut car of wealth rolling its giant wheels over our fair land, grihding Lei the very dust, by its intolerance, its prrip lion, its exactions, its inso nt tyre y, mi x, the poor and independent lal xring el. What else than its high priests of the Ts banking interest; what else than the sl . ,ves, the servile dependent. upon that intelrest, shouting bosannas'.,to the gpd of mpney power, and bowing the necks of the plople beneath the crushini; weight, of thilidol, and demanding sacrifices to its worsiiip as abhorrent to free men as they are Wade! to the faith of our rightful poiiticaliwor ship." • ' ' 1 Weskit!! give our views more at urge upon the connection between:these e asses at an early day; but, in the mean ime; we cannot withhold die expression of our detestation of the sentintehtf contained in this extract, or delay the performapce of the duty of holding them up to the eXecra tion of mankind. , 1 17Col. Webb. the senior ed.' tor of thin' pa per, wail a passenger in the, Orest lyestern which left tins port yesterday for Bristat. He will remain a few weeks in England andf on the ointinenta with a view to •rrangemenfis for the paper, made neontsary Sy the ned' relations open. ed ketoses) this country coo Europe, by the sue cesiful issue of the experiment f Attantic.steam nerigation.—N.' V. Gorier. , From the St. Louis Republican, April 30 A HOR4UBLE ENFORCEMENT OF LYNCH LAW. The particulars of the drowning of free negro man, named Tom Culvert, second cook on board the steamboat Paw nee. on her passage up from New Orleans to this place, are as near the facts as we hare been able to gather them: On Fri day night about 10 o'clock, a deaf and dumb German girl was found in the store room with Tom : The door was locked, and at first, Tom denied that she was there. The girl's father came, Tom unlocked the door, and the girl was found secreted in the room behind a barrel.' Tom was ac cused of having used violence to the girl, but how she came there did not very dear ly appear. The captain was not informed of this during the night. Tha next morn ing some four or five of the deck passen gers spoke to the captain about it- ' this was about breakfast time.—He heard their statements and informed' them that the negro should be safely ! kept until they` reached St. Louis, when the matter should be examined, and if guilty he should be punishel by law. Here the matter seem. ed to end, the captain after, breakfast re turned on deck, posed the cook's room and returned up to his man room; imme diately after be Itft the deck, a number of the deck pasaengiers rushed upon the negro, hound his arms behind his back and car rid him forward to the him of the boat. A voice cried out. "throw him over board," end was respo ed;to from every quarter (Obit dick—an - in an meant he was plunged into the river. The captain bearing the noise, rushed out in time to sea the negro flint by. 'The engine WWI stopped immediately. This occured, op posite the town of Liberty. Several men on shnie seeing the negril thown oier,lioard , pushed from shore in a ; yawl and arrived i i nearly in reaching-dista ce of the, negro . as he sunk for the last i me.. The whole Beene Of iting and throw ing bin overinsa - id .scarcely occupied ten Inutile, and was so CM 1 1:1teto that the. WVeels:wet! unable to Ire in thrft . to save liim . * • Several of those engaged were identified, the captain placed a strict Watch over the boil and determined - to-hare them attested on its-arrival hero : --4kime,o, c thetni hew ;ever, Succeeded in effecting_ their escape. Pee who is accusettligas arrested here, (and is lodged in jail fot further examination. jSitice the death of the, negro it has been oseertained by his confessions to anothe r on the 'boat that be- rui -guilty:- There. were between two hundred and fifty 'and Olive hundred deek passengers on hoed.' No bhtme teethe attached to the cap tain or any of the officers. Every thing, which under the circumstances could be, wag done to prevent the result.-11 the captain bad been *ware of the extent of the excitement amongst the deck passen gers, he probably Might have stopped it by having the _negro arrested and lodged in the hold, but of this he and all the officers were uninformed- until too late fur inter ference. We have been thus minute be. .cinse of the .variety of reports =prevailing in the city. Some lime aince we estimated Gov. Rit• nees majority in Allegheny county, at ONE THOUSAND. From subsequent conversation, with our Mantis in the coun try, we are.stronely inclined to believe that the estimate is too low ; if our friends are active, energetic and determined, we can go* better still.—Pittsburg Time. An Honest Confession. —The following iii 'the concluding passage of a long edito rial in a late number of the Monmouth Enquirer, the Editor of which was " born and bred a Democrat."' He is, in the lan guage of the Bucks County Intelligences, one of TENS OF TWousarros who are daily and hourly casting aside the shackles of part', and speaking ont in the voice of FREEDOM and Tairry.—Zr. S. Vas. “THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD DOES NOT AFFORD ANOTHER IN STANCE IN WHICH THE DOWN FALL OVA PARTY HAS BEEN MORE RAPID, AND THOROUGH, 'THAN THAT OF THE VAN BUREN PARTY OF THE PRESENT DAY. THIS ADMINISTRATION WILL BE RECORDED IN HISTORY, AS ONE OF THE MOST PROFLIGATE, AR .BITRA RY, ARISTOCRATICAL AND TYRANNICAL, THAT EVER EMS TED. „A-ND ITS SPEEDY DOWN FALL/WILL BE A CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE OF THE VIRTUE, IN- El 4, 'DEPENDENCE, AND INT LI GENCE OF. THE PEOPLE OF E UNITED STATES AT THE PR, - SENT DAY." Parties in New York.—Tire following account ofthe Whig cause and Whig pros pects in the Empire State, is copied from the Albany Evening Journal: Whig principles now predominate all over the Empire state. All our cities have been redeemed. New York, Albany. Brooklyn, Troy, Hudson, Schenectady. Utica, Rochester and Buffalo, have respec tively elected a Whig Mayor and a Whig Common Council. In Albany, Hudson, Troy, Schenectady, Untica and Roches ter, our friends carried every ward, and we believe that the triumph in Buffalo was equally signal. Nor do our cities stand alone., The Villages throughout the State. Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, Catskill, Syracuse, Auburn, Seneca Falls, lthica., Lockport, &c. &c. are all with us and for us, zealously and devotedly. The New York correspondent of the National Intelligencer writes, under date of fth instant— , Ourßanks announced officially that they resume on the 10th inst. They say, out of &tura, they have resumed, and we all talk magnificently on the sulirct, but there is a good deal of , brag about it, and they are ss a northwester if asked for considerable sums in specie. -What specie the country Banks get here they buy, not liking to ask the Banks for it, and they pay for it in checks on them. As for business, they do little or none. , They keep in their shells completely. Thus their resumption profits noire but themselves. A good shot.—The notorious Rennet of the New York Weekly Herald, a neutral in politics, sets off President Van Buren in ‘he following -fine style : Alas Poor Van Buren I—The Whig victory in Baltimore following on the heels of the one published this morning from Virginia, has, we feat, given Mr,. Van the asthma. Alas, poor Van I Unless I can immediately negociate with ; !Queen Vic. toria for him, he will be-in no position 'to assume her hand. A story is told Nita moinkey inl barber's shop, who watched with:great interest the movements oft man shaving himself. As soon as the man depared, the monkey snatched up the razor,anti-drawing a 63 W strokes acronshis neck, cut his throat.. So it is with. Mr: Van Buren. He has "tra velled in the foot steps" of General Jack son, till, like the Monkey imitating the man shaving, Outten, hti has cut his throat, . If the Whigs„ manage their card well, they will carry New York in November by 20,000 majority. Even this city may be taeed on Om _Wkig side by 3000. We do want -a vetolatton knthik policy of the government=ant limit hale it: I shall. however, be hack in titaitotet up the nine pins in the fall. NM SATURDAY MORNING MAY IS, Itr Paiyfilecii..thedk*. Cris; Bilis qf sisii (*nails ofevery dieskts*rel. steady Ws DA* isshellpisesi cash "nat. Delegates to theilth of\ ,, ont. a • A MEETING of the Delegate.* pointed to represent Schuylkill count laid Convention, will be eld at the h of Henry Stager, in the borough, afternoon, at 3. o'clock, • n busin— importance. Punctual atm, .ance to quested, MANY DELE T • The proceedings of the Pokier CM tee of correspondence, held' on the inst,, at the public house of Mr. Sh ~ in Manheim township,deciounie, Gov w 1 Rimer and " his minions," as they art courteously styled, in unmeasured t rms of abuse and calumny; yet there is a , etri dent want of iiipterialisi or facts, to 11/ , nish the ground work ef charges or accuse ions against our excellent. Governor. The truth is, his official coiirse has bean so pure and patriotic, so able and ep ght, that his enemies are - positively at la It— they know not what to take hold , f as matter of accusation against him. For example' they assert that his is an ' im. provident administration I that , h. has expended upwards of sixi`millions •ed a half of dollars! and that he has issue, pro posals for the loan of 8600,000, mo . Is it possible that this sapient commits e ex. pect to make the .people believe th t Jo sepli Ritner has departed from hi. well known principles of economy and r: 1 °rm . ! the. most ignorant part of the locoifocos know better than this; for all kno* that our Farmer Governor has never ytit, vo luntarily, spent one cent of the pqople's money unprofitably or needlessly.; But, on the other hand, it is alai well known that a most corrupt and profeals loco foco legislature, of which Mr. Firailey, one o f the committee who reported the pro ceedings referred to, was a member, have passed bill "of appropriation' centtary to the exp sed sentiments and wishes of Gov. Ri n r—one of which he vetoed, and' thereby sa ed the commonwealqi from ruin and nkruptcy; and, he othed he was rompelle reluctantly to sign, because there was not time left to pass iittother bill—for the' express purpose of in creasing the state debt and equatidering away the-' eople's money! Andjjyet we are told that Governor Rimer oust to be turned out because his administ tion is improvident! and because they e nd the people's money! The very men tavti . been to a great extent bellied and in their designs upon the publ4 rail - out against the " improvi4 Governor Railer! The blood T suclitt treasury denounce nix for extrao Visitors.—As the period is app oaching when many of the good citizen of our metropolis will make in excursio . into the interior for health's enjoy mant,i .quitting 1 , the heat and bustle of a large and crowded city, for the . quiet fields and per breeves of the.country, we would sugges to such, that the public travelling accommodations have been very much improved t*ently on this route, so that no inconventance need be suffered by t travellers, who 'oily be Con veyed to our ;borough in a most ,aomfotta ble and expeditious manner. When this was not the case, we felt a natulat repug nance to giving invitations to st angers to visit our place, aware of the annoyance and pri,vattotis to which they wo Id be ex posed and subjected on the roil '; but we are happy to say that none or i . things need ,be suffered any longer. • here is no place within our knowledge in Which ifist tors can pass.a few *coke morn agreeably and profitably than this.. Our teiglibdr hood abbunds with local objects of curiosi ty-and attraction, natural and irtificiak--- our rail roads, nanals, tunnel& incli&d planes,-slopes pedatrating siiveril hundred feet lelow 'the Outface, collieries,. dm. nay furnish amtuiementland. profitable in formation—our hotels ate kept in excel lent style and furbish superior accommo dations. ._ So detested is Van Duren's and Por ter's favorite Sub-Treasury Sill, that the party in this neighborhood dare not advo cate the measure. Proposals for , Coal.—We refer our readers to the proposals for coal for the use of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail. Road Company,' which will he fond'.. in ibis pa per. The time is shaft, but bans not g. 7 too late. ; - Ch e ster count) has eppon ate d - a ;solid coltnint , of detegtites tot theldith of iJune Convintion. Upsotrdsof 411 4 4) ; oho, at. tended the nieeting.t The ' Omni state!, that Chester county wilt gkri Gov'ernor Ritner a marority of from VIVO . to ;1500 votes. . " AR' the yan : .Biiren tnem. •rs of ton. greets from Georgia, decline; re•eleetion except Col. Towson. Resign—because, they fannot be re-elected. Mr ? Healer, of Ohio, it Di *tilted in the Madtsonian, declines a, re•eteetion for the estmei Do ant' of his. set. POTTSVILLE. II of ns- i 'mit. ; sth - _ c lassics! IC purse, 4ence" of Ore or the Aga uce! inter iday rear