-'"4 T" j..-. .... .r c----v. - V Stye 3cffcv5onion. "thtjesday, NOVEKBEE 1M5 irp A Toflnir will be held at the Satur- iij 5 -i i crtHf'htirif. on nay afternoon, Nov. 25th, to W J ... - m,l Soldiers of Relocate to represent iu Monroe County ni ihe convention, ni sec cverv old sol- We I'pe to d'ier iu the County pioent upon that in teresting occasion. For particulars rel ative to the Convention, to be held at Easton, see notice in another column. Mail Robberies. The son of the post-master at Wcllsvillc, Ohio, has been arrested and taken to Columbus for trial on a charge of robbing tbc mail. From the Detroit papers we learn of the arrest in that city of Henry Gumming?, post master at Harrison Valleys Potter coun ty, Pa., on a similar charge. lie has been sent to Pittsburgh for trial. A Villarous Fraud. The Ci ncinuati Enquirer narrates the following distrcs?ing affair that occurred on Thursday evening last, near Osborne, Ohio : It appears that about three years since n. farmer named William Ricketts left bis family to seek bis fortune in the gold mines of California. About seven months hiuce Mrs. R. received information from a person representing himself as coming direct from San Francisco that her bus- baud had died. The wife believed the j-torv and manifested much distress of niiud upon the receipt of the intelligence Her informant, whose name is WHUan; T. ' Gaylord t inanife.-ted much sympathy for Mrs. R. in her bereavement, and fre quently visited rue house to condole with her in her affliction. The unsuspecting wife, appreciating the kind nets of Gay lord, tendered him the hospitalities of hei house and home. Gaylord, with an ap parent indifference, declined the offer, but finanly proposed to accept the same on condition of marriage. The astonished Mrs. R. at first declined, but afterward.1 agreed to let the matter stand open until Gvlord should call- again. In the inter- im Gaylord abstracted from the post of fice all letters directed to Mrs. Rickett-; and one from her husband he opened. terued. and then destroyed. The letter etated that he did not intend to return home for three years, but was very anx ious to see his tvife. Gaylord again cal led on Mrs. Ricketts and insisted upon an -answer to his proposition. Mrs. R., nftei a few moments' reflection, consented to the union, and the time for their marriage vas set. The day came, the- were mar ried, and by their marriage Mr. Gaylord came into possession of a farm valued at cveral thousand dollars. Soon after their marriage Mr. Gaylord proposed to his wife to sell out and move to Kansas, and there locate for life. The wife consented, and the farm was adver tised for sale at a sacriGcc. The adver ment was seen by Mr. Ricketts in San Francisco. Enraged and chagrined, Mr. R. took the first steamer and arrived in Osborne on Wednesday evening last. 2Ir. R. made diligent inquiries, and learn ed the facts as above stated. Arming himself with a knife and a brace of pis tols, he went to his house about 10 o' clock at night. All was quiet. Ricketts raped at the door several times. It was finally opened by Mrs. Gaylord, and Ricketts entered. Mrs. G. threw on her drcsp, and, lighting the candle, turned to look upon" the. Btranger who had come at such an unseasonable hour of the night. A shriek, and the expression of 'Great God 1 Ricketts is that you!' followed, and the astonished, affrighte d wife fell insensible to the floor. Gaylord, who war in an adjoining room rushed out to sec what had happened. Ricketts immedi ately seized him by the throat and plun ged the knife into his tide, and then went to where his unfortunate wife was lying, cut her on the shoulder and neck, and nnM.unL Tim trtfVv roffncnrJiin informed tho neighbors of what had trans pired, and itnmcdiato search was made for Ricketts. He has undoubtedly made a successful escape. Gaylord was lying verv low when last heard from, and the probability is that he must die. ; A Drunken Husband Murdered Ms Wife. At Topham, Maine, November lt., Chas. Crisp murdered his -wife in a most brutal manner, by pounding her with a piece of a sleigh shoe. Several who Eaw the corpse say they never saw a human body so disfigured, being lacerated and bruised from head to foot Tho misera ble, brutal husband, Bays she died in a fit. There is reason to belive that after the fatal deed was.consumated, tho villain hauled the corpse two nrilosin-a wagon, washed the blood from it. and returned it to tho house. The man is a drunken scoundrel, and it is said she was in the habit of drinking with hitu at times. j The murderer is in prison, i'ji i W rn Elections were held on 'lluesdann of the Northern- States, which-clcot sixty B')tbti of Corigres, ;-cw York, Nvr Jersey, Illinois Michigan, Wisconsin, ami Massachusetts. Mh.ois.Wc have very little informa tion from this rtate, but what there is, is encouraging. The movement is Anti- Nclia?ka thus far, but news has not Dcen received from enough counties, nor defi nitely enough, "to indicate the decided re suit. IViscottsi'n.rSo far as heard from, the Republicans elect two State Senators and mx Asseinbhrnen. and the Democrats one Senator and 6ve Assemblymen. The movement is Anti-Nebraska and Anti Administration in the Congressional elec tion?. UlirJUan. The New York paper? say : The returns indicate that the State has goue Anti-Nebraska by an over whelming majority, and the election of the entire Anti-Nebraska State and Con gressional ticket. Nav York. The election in New Yoik was for State and local officers, members of Congress, and of the Legislature. There were fourteen State tickets in the field. The four principal candidates for Governor were, Seymour, (Soft Demo crat) the present incumbent, who was al so supported by the Rum and Foreign in fluence; Clark, Whig and Temperance; Ulraann, Know Nothing; and Rrousou, Hard Shell DvMnocrat. The latest returns for Governor, as given in the Tstbunot of yesterday, are as follows : Seymour, Seft Clark, Whig. Soymour ahead, 127,825 25,037 2.18S Kiie Jersey. The election in New Jer sey was for Congiessmen, members of tho Legislature and local officers. The dele gation in the present Congress stands four Democrats to one Win. In the next Conjrrcis it'v.ill stand four WLijzs to one Democrat. A Whig gain of three. Indiana. The Indianapolis papers give the official vote for members of Con gress in that State, from wuich it appears that the Nebraska men are elected in nine of the eleven districts. The Anti- Nebraska net majority in the Congrcs- s-ioh tal vote is i-i.ou. JSInss'tchuseVs. Gueat Know Noth ing Victory. As far as we have the re turns of tlfe Election in this State, the Know Nothings have elected their Gov ernor by an overwhelming majority. They have also in the districts heard from, elected their Congressmen, Assem blymen and all other officers. Anti-Bank. The Warren, Pa. Mail informs us that Gov. Riglcr has signed the bill to incor porate a bank at that place sice tiie election. The bill was passed last wiu- ter, ana uas ueen in excellency s. pocket ever since. It would not do to sigt. it while he and his party were crying out against banks and professing hostility to all such institut'ons; but now that the e lection is over and nothing further is to be gained by playing false, the bank charter is signed, and the good citizens of Pennsj-lvania have one more rag mill' in their midt-t. Wc trust its paternity will be duly remembered, notwithstanding the coyness with which it has been acknowl edged. Pittsburg Gazette. Suspension of tho Citv Bank, Columbus, Ohio. BurFALO, Nov. 10. The City Bank of ColumbuF, Ohio, closed its door this morning. The liabilities arc understood to be large. Hard Headed. A Southerner gave a party to a few friends, who, happening to converse about Sambo's power of head endurancej the genilcman said ho owned a negro whom no one in the party could knock down or injure by striking on the head. A strong burly fellow laughed at the idea, and as Sam, the colored per son, was about entering with the candles, the gcutlcman stood behind the door, and us he entered, Sam's head received a powerful eockdologer. Tho candles flickered a little, but Sam passed quietly on, merely exclaiming, 'Gentlemen, be careful wid yer elbow?, or dc lights will be distinsuiahed !' u. 'The victor' is not alwa-s to thestrong,' as tho boy said when he killed a skunk with a brickbat. . The virulance of yellow fever at New Orleans continues unabated. During the week ending 30th ult., there were one hundred and seen deaths of this disease, and among the victims was Lieutenant. Gov. Farger. At Montgomery, Ala., the disease has entirely disappeared ; and at Charleston and Savannah the authorities have adopted resolution; that the fever has ceased nr an epidemic, and that it is perfectly safo for absentees to return homo. A mother and son in Detroit, Mich., were convicted of stealing. When tho mother had been sentenced to five years' confinement, the sun arose and begged tho Court to release her, aud imprison him for five voars additional, which of course could not b? done. ?3 F&diers of 'the War of 1812-14. ; - "National Convention at WAsnia TON. The defenders of the country in the second war of independence who still survive and tho children of such as are. dead, arc requested to scud delegates to the city of Washington, to attend a Convention, to be held there on the 8th of January nest, 1855 to adopt such measures as will induce Cou- ress not only to do ju:tice to them, but uHo to the widows of those who have gone to their last account."' Ry the above it will be seen that a convention is to be held at Washington City, on the Sib day of January,! 855, to your interests. The soldiers, volunteers and militia, who served in that war, resid ing in tho Congressional district, com- posod of the counties of Northampton, Carbon, Monroe, Pike, and Wayne, arc requested to assemble at the Court House, in the Rorough of Easton, on Ihursuay ovening, the 30th of Nov. hist., at & o' clock, to take measures to have the said district properly represented in the said Convention, in order that justice may be done to them and to the widows and children of their brother soldiers. James M. Porter, Peter Nunscsser, Conrad Heckman, Philip Reichardt, John Ludwijr, Adam Hawk, Rcuj. F. Arndt, George Rcichardt, Chriitain Mclzgar. George Straub, Samuel Wiihelm, Abraham Miller, Frederick Mattes, John Yohe, John De Hart, Samuel Walter, William Walter, Andrew Wilbour, !'Io!'n lossr Valentine Deily, Stephen Raines, Samuel Rachman, Peter Everhardt, saac Carey, Simon Frantz, Jacob Walter, j Nicholas Dawnlt, Michael Kichline, John Luchcnbauch, Samuel Moore, Gharles Genther, Joseph Horn, Mclchoir Horn, George Dingier, P. F. R Schmidt, Joseph Weaver, Peter Lawall, John Correll, Jacob Kilpatrick, Eli Mettlcr, Adam Ward, James Barnes, George Hess, George A. nice, Wm. Joline, John Soloman. Hcrrible Affair in Philadelphia. A woman is under arrest in Philadel phia, charged with infanticide, having killed several of her children, at the time of their birth. It secmst that the mother of the slaughtered children, whose name is Pamela Snyder, has lived for a number of vears in the neighborhood of Rising Sun 'Village, in the Twenty-Third Ward" She was in the habit of perfor ming domcstis labors for families in the vicinitv, and for a number of years has been known to have given birth to several children, but thev generally disappeared mysteriously, and rumors were rife that they had been foully ncait with. Within a few days Mayor Conrad re ceived by letter an intimation of thc- nianner in which the woman has made way with her offspring, and he immediate ly despatched limb Constable Uiark ami Special Officer Seed to ferret out the facts, and if the circumstances would warrant it. to take the female into custody. The woman was accordingly arrested on Sun day last, and she voluntarily confessed to the officers that she bad, difierent tunc within the paat six years given birth to six children, which had cither died about the time of their birth, or had been mur dered by their mother ! Tlmco r.liilflrnn wlm-Ji werfi nil of course neaitimatQ wcre tne re5Uit Qf intercourse j with different men ; and to make the af- ! fnXr. nynyn c Vi l nr I no" tllO linflO ff t Il4 11111. crable woman, a man named W. Snyder, is charged with the paternity of two ol them. Snyder is now in prison, having been arrested yesterday, tie is a mar- ried tran. He is also accused of having been an accessory in tho murder of some of the children Pamela, after her arrest, made a full confession of her crimes. She lies very low from the combined effects of her late accouchmcnt, her after nc-lcct and exposure, and her more re- cent excitement. The miserable woman is but twenty-two or three years of age, and is said to be quite prepossessing in appearance fc .ii i - rgyThe American party in the Leg islature of Pennsvlvania proves to be much stronger than was supposed. There arc sixty members, (says the Harrisburg Telegraph,) of the next Legislature known to belona; to the American order A Model Banking System. A letter states that of the banks of Indianna, " there are two or three, the entire body corporates of which are car ricd in the hats of the owners." Some banks are situated in inaccessible parts of tho State, requiring a week's journey on horseback to reach them, -.and therefore the notes caunot be protested., These banks ficure with large capitals in the statement published a day or two since It is probable the capitals thus stated are not in existence, as the mnahitants ot the inaccessible parts of the State do not get uiany discounts. StiiUheir notes are sown broadcast over many of the Western State., inflating prices of almost every article to the highest pitch ; then falling almost worthless upon the hands of their deluded holders, and finally bought up at a heavy discount by the very speculators who originally issued them and received dollar for dollar. Verily,- this Indiana Free Banking system may well be term ed "free swindling." " Cholera at Messina. A corres pondent of the Boston Atlas, writing from Marseilles, states that the English Coun sul at that place had received reliable information that the most fearful rava ges of cholera wero dovasting Messina, no less than Fixteen thousand persons have fallen victims, out of a population of 40,000 ! A mortality hardly less than during the prevalence of the great plague, in 1743. o Dreadful State of Affairs. In the town of Crockett, Texas, there is said to be not a single marriageable female. What a chance for old maidb ! Foreign Sews. ONE WEEK LATER FROM EUROPE. Arrival of the America at Halifax, Sebaslopol not yet TakenTrouble be- tween Austria and Russia toulo not Allowed to Enter France. The Royal Mail Steamship America, Captain Lang, from Liverpool of the 28th ult., arrived at Halifax on Thursday af ternoon. The Collins .steamship Atlantic, from New York on the 14th ult., arrived off Holyhead, at noon, on Wednesday, the 25th, but could not enter the Mersey un til 3 o'clock on Thursday morning. The St Louis sailed from Southamp ton, for New York, on the 25th ult. The screw steamship Alps arrived t Kingston, Ireland, on the 23d, with troops frotu Halifax, and reached Liverpool on tho 25th. The ship Triton, from Glasgow, bound to Eoston, was abandoned on the 11th October. The crew beiug taken off by the North Wind, arrived at Havre. The London Times says : 'Wo are in formed that Mr. Soule, American Minis ter at Madrid, was, on Tuesday, the 25th, refused permission to pass through France, on his return Irom England to Spain. The London Morning Post, announc insi semi-officially the acquisition of Sa mana, says : 'It" amounts virtually, if not absolutelv. to the annexation of St. Do mingo. The acquisition, by the United States, of so important a position in the West Indies a position threatening on either hand the Spanish Islands of Cub and Porto Rico, and so directly affecting the British West possessions, cannot be received with indifference.' A letter from the Hague of the 21st., mentioning the departure of Mr. Gibson for America, states that he took with him the result of the conference of American Ministers at Ostend. The War. Sobastopol is not taken. The. latest advices show that twenty days elapsed between the departure of the besieging armies from Ealaklnva, and their opening fire upon Sebastopol. Roth tho French and English had their batteries ready on the 15th. On the 17th fire was opeucd on the nlacc from land and sea. The bombardment continued till night. Th Russians lost 500 killed and wounded. Admiral Kornileff was killed. The Rus sian fortifications suffered very little On the next day (18th) the bombard ment was resumed, Irom tho allied bat teries only. Russian dispatches say that the garri son make frequent sorties When the mail left Constantinople on the 10th, five steamers had arrived at Balaklava with men wounded in repelling a creat sovtie of 20,000 strong Generals Radian and Canrobert had formally summoned Sebastopol to sur render, and required women and children and sick to be sent away, and flags to be hoisted upon the hospitals. So far as is known, the Russian Army is concentrating on thn Upper Belbek, and already numbers 45,000. The allied army is divided into a siege, army and. army of observation. The let ter i? posted on the extensive table land whioh separates Balaklava from Sebasto pol. accessible only from two points the ravine of Tchernaya on the nerth west, aud pass of Balaklava on the southeast. 1 Im position is defended by sixteen redoubt? The Russians are hovering on the out side of the allies' positions. On the 7th, thev made a strong demonstration in the northwest extremity of the camp, but were kept iu check by artillery, and re tired without giving battle. On the 2d, 5th and 11th, the garrison of Sebastopol made sorties, and destroyed some small works. On the evening of the 5th, a convoy of 4,000 Russians succeeded in entering Sc bastopol. The city docs not appear to be yet surrounded, but only on two sides. The Allies now numder 110,000, and 8 000 additional French were ready to embark from Marseilles on tho 21st, and 8,000 Turks from Varna. Letters of the 12th say that the nature of the ground a foot of earth on solid rock renders scientific approaches im possible; that the allies have, however, 300 guns battery, and after a few days fire will attempt to storm the garrison which is estimated at 40,000 men, with plenty ot ammunition ana supplies, it is supposed that although tho allies should carry the town, the Russians can make a protracted resistance in Fort Gonstan- tmc. It is true that the Russians have sunk eight ships across thfi channel, which is 700 yards wide, and fine-of-battlc ships, anchored close to the shore, complete the barricade. Altogether tho prospect of the speedy fall ot Sebastopol is not so favorable to the allies, but nevertheless intelligence of tho victory is expected by the people in England and France from hour to hour. Admiral Machimoff, who commanded at Sinope, is commandant of Sebastopol. He has published an address, saying that he will defend it to the last, and any one is welcome to shoot him if ho don't. Advices from Constantinople, of the 13th, ba' that the Russians had retaken Eupatoria, and that the English garrison of 500 men had retired with the loss of one gun. This is denied in tho English papers. Au allied force i3 sent under General Bosquet and Achraet Pasha to Perekop to prevent the advance of the Russians. Heavy rains had retartded the advance, but tho weather was again fine. A rumor became current in the allied camp that on the 11th the Russian army trom bimpferopol would attack them, and that the Greeks in Bulakalva would sim ultaneously fire the town. The Greeks were consequently all expelled. Danube. There is no doubt that tho Russians have re-entered the Debrodja in force, but details are wanting. Austria. Affair3 look black berween Russia and Austria. A great council of war was held at Vienna. The Emperor presided, and Rarou Hes9 was present. It is reported that Austria-summons Russia to withdraw rom the frontier of Gallicia. The whole Austrian army was to be put on a war footing on the 20th. The garrison of Vienna has orders to be ready or march at forty-eight hour37 notice. Russia, meantime, continues to menace Austria. The Czar hn9 pone to Warsaw. His eldest son took command of the Guards. Gen. Rudiger commands the Grenadiers, and Prince Pashkiewitch Comnnder-in-Chief of the asmy of the WTest. All are concentrating on the Austrian frontier. Little doubts are entertained at Vienna that, ere long, there will be actual hostil ities. Prussia. Austria has returned an answer to the last dispatch of the Prussian Government, rcnentinfc that Austria will adhere infiox- ible to her policy expressed in tne noie u tti an.1i fipntpmher. The action wmcn Prussia would take was looked tor wun nn viotv. The Princo ot I'russia nas accepieu mu ... . . i.jii.. commana oi tne icucrui luiuwa i- . i .i . i r n.. at o t? ence. Great Britain. The British fleet ia to leave the Baltic about the cud of November, returning in sqadrous to Portsmouth, Sheerness, 1 ly- luouth and Uoric. Five floating batteries and twenty gun boats, drawing four feet water each, arc building in England for spring operation. Another Polar Expedition is to be sent next spring to bring home the remains of Sir John Franklin s pari'. Vr. itae wn have the command. A fralvanic apparatus was being con strucU-d at Ncw-Castle-on-Tyne to blow up the tulips sunk off Sebastopol. An extensive Ore at Liverpool had dc stroyed six warehouses, and property val ued at 20.000. bclonsnns to various . J 4 Of merchants, but chiefly to Messrs. Holy rcux, Hutchinson & Co. 40(30 bales o cotton and a large quantity of naval store: were burned. At Manchester, the warehouses of Had den, Searle & Co.. and Thodc & Co., had also been destroyed by fire Tho national subscriptions for the wounded soldiers exceed 10,000. France. The Emperor has written a letter condolence to Madame St. Arnoud, aud be.-tows a nension of twenty thousaud X - francs as a national rceompens The whole camp of the South is to em bark for the East, as required Spain. Mr. Soule's return to Madrid caused nuite an excitement, and a clamor jva -j being made to induce the Spanish Gov ernment to solicit his recall. Queen Isabella has abandoned the idea of abdicating. Cabrera is in Paris. The legitimists are preparing for a movemeut. Austria. Austria has just concluded an immense financial operation, .by which she has transferred to a company of capitalists, represented by Messieurs Andre, or Par--, Sinn and Eskclcs, of Vienna, all the railroads constructed aud woiked by the Government iu Hungary and Bohemia. The company pays 200,000,000 francs, on which the Government guarantees five per cent. The Latest There ia nothing of importance, via St. Petersburg, from Sebastopol. On the 21st the operations of the be siegers continued, and their fire was ef fectively answered. Tho fortifications were little damaged. Trerizond, Oct. 19. The Abasia Chiefs have refused to receive Shamyl's Envoy. Hazif Pasha has, consequently, cut of? all communication with the coast of Abasia. Paris, Friday niht There is no con firmation of the entry of the Russians in to the Dobrodjn, it is therefore doubtod. Sir John Burgoyne, on the 1'lth, fixed the sites for batteries which will destroy the Russian shipping. They are to be mounted with four, eight, and ten-inch guns, about 1'JOO yards from the vessels. A Russian war steamer had been cap tured bythc- fleet. The Moniteurof this morning contains an accouut of a victory over the Russians near Gumri. They lost their baggage and thirty guns, and a Russian General was killed. The Turks began to besiege the citadel of Gumri, when the Russian corps which formerly defeated the Turks at Bajazid, advanced to the rescue from Erivan. It wa3, however, repulsed, and shut in a defile, where it suffered consid erable loss. The clipper Visson has arrived at Liv erpool in 103 days passage from Hong Kong, with the first cargo of new teas. On Friday noon, a countryman nam ed William Walker fresh from the sandy soil of New Jersey, was attracted to a well known Peter Funk establishment on the corner of Greenwich and, Rector .-treets, by the vigorous cries of "going, going, gone 1" Unsuspecting, he enter ed the eeller, and found himself away at a rapid rate for a "choap and splendid nold watch." He reached the sum of -$35 in bidding, and the 'gold' watch wa knocked down and handed to him, and the dollars promptly paid. With his prize he started-for his friends at Wash ington market, who had been selling out their produce, and who on examining his purchase, saw at once how he was duped. Taking their friend in company with them, they Ftarted for the Funk rendezvous, and, without any notice whatever, fell to heating them with the butt end of their whips. The Peters left the premises in double quick time, leaving behind them five fine watches, from which out hero selected one worth S75, and then left the premiies.-r-jV. Y. Sun. A Wealthy Woodsawyer. It in stated that there is a wood sawyer in Boston whose interest income is $800 per year, and that his occupation yields him an average income of 54 per day. I0SS OF THE SHIP NEW- ERA Frightful loss of Life, tU 9 o'clock Monday morning, Mesara. Charles. C. Duncan & Co., of South-st.. received a telegraphic dispatch from onir Branch, on the Jersey Shore, in- brminff them of the loss of tho packet' shin New Era, consigned to them, with " i f 13 rpi. passengers ana cargo irom xiikmku. uu first dispatch merely stated the bald fact that tho 8bip had grounded on the outer Bar, off Deal, some 12 miles to the outh , of Sandy Hook. The consignees immediately teiegrapn cd to the steam-tugs Achilles and Levia than, then lying inside of the Hook, to go to her assistance. Subsequent telegraphic dispatches inform . us that the ship went ashore in a dense bg, with over 400 passengers and a crew. of 30 men on board. It appears that". the ship lay thumping on the sand-bar-through the night, firing signal guns for assistance from the shore. But owing to the fog, the darkness of the night, and the heavy sea tnen on, it was impo38inio to approach her. At daybreak the beach was nneu wnu tho fishermen, wreckers, and surf-men who had congregated from many miles a long the shore, to render assistance to tho stranded ship and her unfortunate passengers. The roughness of the, surf, however, prevented them from attempting to get on board, and as the ship was broadside on, and thumping heavily, tho ca all the while making nearly a clean sweep over ner aecKs, me ouiy avuuuuiv means of assistance were the mortar and- life-car. The stake was foon driven bm- ly into the sand and the hawser secured to it, but up to our last accounts, after re peated attempts, owing to tho great dis tance of the vessels Irom the shore, wo learn that they had been unable to send a shot and line over her, so that the life car had not been brought into use. The fog, which continued to prevail through the day.occasionally lifted, when thesccna from the beach is said to have been truly appalling. The screams and cries of ter ror from the passengers of the doomed ship blauched the check aud made tht? stoutest hearts quail. The hardy coast men almost raved in their utter impo tence, and frequent and desperate at tempts were made to launch the surf-boat.1, but each effort only served to show the impossibility of keeping a boat afloat in such violeut breakers. As the fog now and then cleared up for a few moments, the pcoj.ie on shorj could see the poor emigrants clinging to various parts of the ship, to sae themselves from beiug wash-, ed into the sea. 'J he bulwarks had been washed away, and men and women, clamp ing their children in their arms, implor ingly beckoning and crying for succor, might be seen scattered over the upper deck. And then a tremendous sea would sweep over them, washing numbers from their frail hold into' the boiling breakers below. A few of these sot ashore alive, but the greater- portion were drowned. Those who succeeded in reaching the beach had lashed themselves to planks and spar3 or clung to fragments of the bulwarks, and by their aid managed to swim past the undertow, when they were caught by the surf-men and saved. The captain and some twcny or thir ty ot the passengers were said to have i cached the beach in safety, but no names are given. It is stated but the author ity ia not given that nearly one-half of the passengers were drowucd in the steer age shortly after the vessel struck. It certainly appears that large numbers of dead bodies were washed ashore during the whole of yesterday. At last accounts the steam-tog Achir los had reached the neighborhood of tho New Era, but the strong sea renderd near approach impossible. A later dispatch to the consignees states that the ship was fast breaking up, and that some 380 to 400 passengers still remained on board, nearly one-half Qf them drowned in the 'tween decks; end though every effort was being made, but slight hopes were entertained of saving the lives of the remainder. The New Era is a new ship of 1,340 tuns, having been built at Rath, Me., in April la.t, and was on her first voyagu when she went ashore. She sailed from Bremen with a cargo of 600 tuns of chalk and 400 passengers, for this port, con signed to Chas. C. Duncan & Co., of No. 52 South-st., consignees of the illfated Powhatan, loss off Barnegatt last spring. She was commanded by Capt. Thos. J. Henry, formerly commander of the Cor delia. It is not known whether the Ne. Era had any cabin passengers on board or not. The vessel was owned by Messrs Ilitchcocktfc Co., of Bath, and hi'r cap tain. The Mutual Office, of Bath, Me. have an insurance of 10,000 upon her; the remainder of her value, 70,000, iit insured in Boston Offices. A Startling Statement Last Sabbath evening the Rev. Henry Ward Bt.eeher delivered a sermon on the recent disaster to the steamship Arctic, and in the course of his remarks he stated upon tho authority of individuals deeply interested, that during tho last twelve mouths, more than four thousand Amer ican vessels, including those on the lakes aud rivers, have been lost. During tha same length of time, the number of ves sels lo.-t throughout the whole world was ten thousaud ! Up to tho year 1850, tho average uumber of vessels lost all over the world, averaged 3,0l)0 a year. The a inount of iusuranoe paid by the Marino insurance Companies in New York, last year, amounted to twelve millions. Tho los-s on land by railroads and otherwiso amounted to eighteen millions, making the total loss by sea and land, to be thir ty millions of dollars. F. Glcnson, Esq., has disposed of his. interest in Gleason's Pictorial and Flag of our Union news papers, to Maturin MT. Ballou, Esq., for the round sum of $200; 000; This is tho largest newspaper sale ever effected in this ooantry. Mr. Bal lou has been editor of the two, publications since their corainenoament.