FOREIGJT. The steamer Groal Western, Captain Iloskins, wlilcli loft Liverpool on th? lOtli July, arrived at New York about 0 o'clock on Saturday morning last, making the trip in about 13 1'2 days. She brought Bristol and Liverpool papcts to the 16th and Lon don to the 15th tilt The Death of Duke of Orleans. The Prince Royal of France is dead. The In lilligenco reached London on tiio 12lh June by a pigeon express from Paris. The official account stales that on the morning of Oth at half past ten, (lie Duke of Orleans went to Neuilly, to take leave or the royal family, intending to set ofT the next morn ing for the camp of St. Omar. A short dis tance from Neuilly the horso ran away. At this moment the duke, to avoid tho danger, leaped from the carriage; but un fortunately' his spurs, or, as some says, his reword, caught his travelling cloak. This accident caused him to fall, and the Prince received some contusions on the temple and the wrist. A cerebal congestion was occasioned by tho shock, and was succeed ed by a suffusion on tho Lrain. Having fainted in the road, his Royal Highness was removed to the nearest house occupied by a grocer, and assistance speedi ly arrived from the 'IVIeries. At half past four, after having received the succours of religion, the prince breathed his last, surround&d by the king, queen, and royal family. The death of the Duke was subsequently discovered to have been produced by a fracture of the spine. The accjdent may prove of immense consequence to the' peace of Europe, be cause Franco has thus been deprived of an heir apparent to the throne, Louis Philippe of a son, it is highly improbably that the king of the French will live to witness the arrival of his infant grandson at majority, and a regency in France would be an occurrence portentous of the mos ovenlful civil commotions amongst such an excita ble people. The late Duke of Oileans was born at Parlermo on the 2d of September, 1810, showing him to have just reached the age of 32 at his death. His mother, Marie Amelie, the present Queen or the French, is daughter or Ferdinand, King, or the Two Sio:lies,and whomkLouis Philippe espoused at the lime ho was wandering abroad as plain Duko of Orleans. The departed duke was one of a family of sever, children,, to whom Marie Amelie has. becr.ecvcr warmly attached. The Duke de Nemouts Louis Philippe's second son, was horn at Paris on the 25lh of October, 1814 The Duke matried, on the 30th January 1J337, a princess of the house of Mecklen burg Schwerin. By this ladyhis royal highness hasjefl'.two sons, the Count of PariiTborri August 24, 1838;and the Duke of Charlres,born Nov, 9, 1840. A duel look place on the morning of tho 15th July, in the neighbourhood of Ostcrly Paik, between tile Hon. Crauej(?)Berkey, M' D, and cantairv Boldero, M. P. Two shots were exchanged of course without eiteet. The House of Commons arc about pass ing a. bill to prefect Her Majesty from be ing frightened to death by crazy men, and hump-back boys, and rustv arid wont-gooff pistols. Offenders to be chastised sum marily. w3 Comical Run on the Bank of Ent landjs thus described. In the House of Commons Mr- Hume stated that he had that clay made a run upon the Bank of England wit a real Imlf sovereign as a matter of favor had trot ten shilling in silver, The Chancellor of the Exchequer, without pausing to asic Mr. Hume what he intend eo,to do with so much cash, quieted the fears of the House bv statins that the Mint was hard at work upon silver coin snu mat it me honorable members were in fetf days to venture a whole sovereign, it was possible he might get change enough to last him, the rest of his life. Jail Walking Skinner, the celebrated Norwich veteran pedestrian,- had nearly accomplished the arduous task of walking fifty miles a day for twenty successive days- Glasgow papers tells of some operative weavers who returned to Paisley from the United Slates, and who but a short time had left their country for America. An invention has been recently brought forward which is calculated lo have a vast beneficial effect in filteriug, and so purifyi ng, an mo water lor domestic and other he snormous quantity of two millions five mndred thousand gallons every twenty our hours; and that, too, so thoroughly nil tiTiTiiiiiir i.iMB i - ... , J ' ' " 1 biinigtu nun ' ' VVMIIIUBI,!. .VgVIQ- -1 - - , u .i uiigu. auu , "b"t"J IBOUUU HUM! he spring. 1 he dinner of ho Royal Agricultural Ir. Everett, the American Ambassador, ttended; and the Mayor; in an appropriate - I , -iv.W, ivuvu. vronoaen 1119 npn 111. iir aoe a very nappy reply. A -female child, sporting two headsbnt u.ner mpec, periect, is now exhibiting vs. .aj.ir. Direct, new roau, Jjonuon. The Election in France. Tho results the election in France, so far as they vernment parly, which, ir it has not ad d new msmbers lo its supporters' will btj enabled to musler at lent nearly the same majority as in the last Chamber. There' is nothing new from Spain or Portugal. Great Fire in St. Petersburg. On tho Oth of .May a dreadful fire destroyed the old salt works of No"o-Usolsky, .in tho government of Perm, the property of the Slroganoff family. The conflagration spread to tho extent of 2 1-2 vcrsts, and lasted three days. Besides ihe salt works, with its immense provisons of all kinds of fuel made for them, from 4,000 to 0,000 inha bited houses connected with the manufac tory, a large church, and numerous pro ducts or nature, have become tho prey of the flames. From Jllaiers Dates to ihe 30lh June state that the column of Mcdean has second time destroyed tho fortifications of fort Boghez. All tho surrounding tribes have submitted. It returns with one can non and some deserters from the regulars of Ilerkani. THE MORMON EXPOSURE. The promised disclosures of General Bennett.ieeently expellod from Joe. Smith's community ol barnts, has appeared in the Sangamo Journal or the 8th inst. We have not yet received the number, but we learn from tho N6w York Advertiser, who has been more favored, that Bennett has published a column and n half in which he makes Joe appear as pretty a specimen or the rogue, rascal swindler, profligate and vagabond as need be seen of a summer's day. He charges the great Mormon lead er, especially, with the grosest licentious ness, to which 'hundreds or single and married females' have fallen victims, and which was not restrained from assailing even the daughter of Sidney Rigdon, but unsuccessfully, and he promises still further revelations ol the most atrocious character All this must bo very edifying to the Saint, but as Bennett must have known these facts sometime ago, it would have been more to this credit to have told them before. Man Murium .Wartnmr Hn Bennett having exposed ihe 'Holy Juo'and his practices with ihe women, has in turne been exposed himself by the prophet, and; U the latter is lo be credited, the General is as gieat a Lothario among tho ladies as the Holy Joe is represented to be. The latter says ihat Bennett was excommunicated because he was guilty of adultery: that he had a wife and threo children living in unio wnen tie came among the Saints, but notwithstanding llto fidelity that he owed to his wife, he began to pay his addresses to another woman, and, having disgraced one female, ho made the attempt Upon others, and by the same plausible tale overcame them also. Ho also .utempted to . U .1... . ' .cai-u icmi promiscuous intercourse between the Sexes Was a dnctrinn liplinvRil in hv iho Lalter Day Saint3, and that there was no harm in it. Joe, however, detected the General in these practices and prcked him off from the community, Flo preserve the virtue or the Saints from the contamination of such immoral principles. An affidavit also accompanies this exposure, which ihe prophet says was made previously to Ben netts statement, in which the G ennral admits that he was never taught any thing oy omirn contrary to the strides pri.iriplce w. inu uunigi, Ul Ul VII. UC, UT Ul IUO JdWS as given by Joe, docs not reflect much nonor upon his character. Previously to joining the Mormons, he had connected himself with a Methodist Church and became a local preacher-afterwards forsook them joined another sect, forsook that.and was also expelled from a masonic Lodge for bad conduct. When Smith commun icated to Bennett tho fact that ho knew he had a former wife, anil thai ilin spnur.iiinn was causud by Bennett's bad streatment of tier, tne vienerai attempted to commit suicide by taken poison, without, however succeeding in his design, ir these two respectable individuals continue their ex positions, the public will probably do tbem tho justice to believe that neither of them is much belter than ho ought to bo. Ledger. The Florida murders still continue. On the 7th ult.a party ol abuul 50 Indians came upon tho plantation or Contain Robinson, near the Sandy Ford on the Suwaneo river Captain Robinson s three sons and a hired man were ploughing and wero shot dead. Cabl, R. fled toward the house, but found another parly or Indians in the yard. His wife and daughter wore butchered and con sumed with tho house- Ho rallied the neighbors, but too late. This is the fifth o sixth massacre within a year in the same neighborhood by ihe same band. The export of flour last year from the United States lo foreign countries was 1,807,501 barrels a larger amount than has been exported for many years. It is stated in the New York Express as a singular- fact, that a yery alaige portion of tho hard bread that suppliee tho shipping of England, and employed in India.is made in New York. The manufacture here is so good and the flour so much lower than in England, that it is shipped to London in bond, from which it is taken for tho ship ping, thus avoiding iho heavy British duties. Formely, the hard bread biscuit was made round, it is now made square, so as to make much better stowage, which in long voyages as important. " "Tntrrn withoct rsAn IL1TUHII.1V, AUGUST 0, 1812, FOR PRESIDENTS Subject to the decision of the Nationa Convention.) "Tho Removal Bill was taken up late on Tuesday evening in the Senate, and defeat ed by a decided majority." So says tho Danvillo Democrat, but by what authority or for what reason, they alone can tell, as so far from the bill being defeated by a large majority.it was not even acted upon at all. It is true that an attempt wan made, on thelajt day of tho session to get the bill up, but it was opposed by Sena tor Headley, and the Danville party,and by the power of a resolution which was smug, gled through the senate some days previous to effect this very casp, requiring iwo thirds to take up any local bill, tho attempt was defeated. Thus much for tho Danville Democrat's statement. It is in character, however, with the whole course ihe past winter, of those opposed to removal. Mis representation was their grand weapon, knowing that truth was death to their hopes. Their ingenuity was strained lo tho utmost lo invent statements as ridiculous and absurd as they were untrue, to prevent the passage of the removal bill, in all of which Senator Headley chimed in with singular harmony and fellow-feeling. The lunes were chan ged however; lo suit the occasion. When opposing removal, the upper portion of the county was thinly populated, a large pro poition of the land hilly, mountainous, broken and uncultivatable, consequently the population neyer would and never could increase to any extent that ihe largest proportion of the population was now &nd always would be in a.id around Danville a majority of the county was opposed to re moval, and to cap the climax of their mis- ronrpnnntnltnna hqrl 1, Lnn 1. . . 1 1. V --j.. .u.iui.w, ..uu i, ut.ni 1V1IIIWII lllcll Daniel Snyder would hare irritated the re movalSquestion he ncver'wouldMiaro- been elected in the county, as no member or ihe Legislature ever had been or ever would be elided as an avowed removal man, and even went so far as to defy the election of a man in favor of tho question. When .ad vocating the division, which we assert was done both by the Berwick and Danville nco pie, Ihe new county would bp the finest in the state, rich in minerals, in aoncul lure, and susceptible or the highest state of cultivation, and would eventually be a very populous county. Thus changing their no sition as often as was calculated to advance tho interest of ihe division, or oppusition to removal. But notwithstanding all their misrepresentations and falsehoods, the hill would have passed tho Senate "by a large majority" had Senator Headlet fulfilled the pleiges given, by him, both before and after his election, & during the pendency of the bill beloro the house or Representatives that is, called it up, and asked the senate to give it the sanction or law, and to hi n, and lo lun oply.are the people or the cnuo ty indebted for tho defeat of a bill leaving it lo themselves to seltio this long vexed question. The Election this fall in Columbia coun ty will be one of exciting interest to the citizens of tho county, at least to that por. tion of them who are opposed to a division of the county and in favor of a removal, as the Danville & Berwick party have already declared that, that would be the question in tho county, and that they could and would elect a man in favor of division. As thev have Ihus flung rluwn the glovo of defiance, tnos opposed lo division should not be slow lo take it up, and do battle manfully. Their cause is just, and as there is a large majority of iho county opposed to division all that is, therefore, wantintr. is union and harmony to make their victory sure. Lot this, then be tho test question, support no man for the Legislature, under any circumstances who will not nnreso'ved ly pledge himself to oppose a division of lite county and advocate the romovel. It is time that ihe friends or removal should wake np.and assert their rights manfully at the ballot boxes, fon. tug Columbia demociUi. "By tho way, pnttion of Iho proceed' ings referred 10 above, are well-timed and appropriate. Not so with all. The toasts making an unwarrantable attack upon one of the representatives from this district for the gratification ol disappointed ambition written by a knave nnd offered by fools are ill-limed and out of placo. Wo con fess wo cannot comprehend tho motives which induced them to blend n scries or personal invective with tho hilarity or n nation's jubilee. And if they find pleasure in such conduct, we can only say thai we envy not their feelings. Perhaps they may derive their gratification from the couplet, which says ' Wlicro ignorance is bliss, "J'is folly to bo wise." Berwick Sent. Mr. fVcbbi Being present at, tho Ornnge ville celebration, and having responded, with a hearty goodwill. to the toast referring lo the .course of our Senator, S. F. Headley, since his election to that important station, I cannot permit the above article lo go to the world, without some small notice, Had it not carried upon its face however; evidence of having been written by tho Honorable S. F. Headley himself, I do not think ihat 1 would luve considered it even worthy of attention, (as with the nominal editors of the Berwick Senlinol 1 have nothing to do,) much less of an answer, through a respect able journal-but as he has thought proper to denounce a largo number of his constitu ents as "knaves & fools" foi expressing their disapprobation of his treachery and duplicity, his betraying of confidence re posed in him, his breach or pledgesfsolemn ly given before and after his election, for personal pecuniary benefit, it is not only right but proper, thai his baseness, in anath aniatisiug a whole'cornmunity, for no other crimu than publcly expressing their utter detestation or iho character of a man who can thus trifle with the interest of his con stituents intrusted lo him under tho convic tion, that a sense of honor, at least, would have compelled him lo have made some show of willingness to have fulfilled one, if not more, of the many premises made lo secure his election, should be made known lo tho community. What is ihe toast which has induced the publication of the above denunciation of some hundred and .fiftv of as respectable and, woTthy citizens as the county oT Columbia cap produce, and to say the least, upon a par (or intelligence with either of the some half a dozen editors of Ihe Sentinel, not excepting senrtor Headley himsell? Why, sir it is as fol lows: "S. F. Headley Tho Representative who betrays the confidence of his constitu ents for personal benefit, should be discard ed by all honorable men." Has ho done what (he (oast insinuates! for it makes no assertion. If so, it is not knavery to tell him of it, nor does it consti tnte a man a fool to know -its trulh. That he has not forfeited pledges given before nnd since his electian, and that too, in a I point, which deeply affected a largo mnjnri ty of his constituents, residing in Columbia county, he dare noideny over his signature, He may do so in private conversation, but if he is innocent let him rume doldly before his constituents and deny it.as an honorahlo man ought to do, and not sneak behind an anonymous paragraph denouncing as "knaves and fouls" all who have stron" reasons for not onlybelieving.bul for dread- ing toe ellects of )iis treachery. He mav say that there has been no specific charges puuiiny made against him, therefore, he has nothing definite to deny or refute. 'Pl.. u . , ... i inn iic may 1101 nave even this honk in hang upon in fiturp,I will place some char ges upon this sheet; which ir true, and I believe them to be, who will say, that ihe writer or the above toast, and "those who nirereu if are "Knaves and fools" for do ing so? I then charge Senator Headley with having before his election, for tho purpose of securing delegates from removal lownsiups m his favor pledged himself tl, should he bo elected, to advocate tho renin. val question in this coumy, as a Senator.as no Had always been a removal man, and was one still, and that by so nledsinrr him. self, he received the voles of several dele gates in the County CDiivention. 1 hat after his nomination, he r,l,l,.,i himself to .several individuals, tn nm their voto and influence, that ho wnnl.l ,l. vocate the removal. Thai during the pendency of tlm hill : the house of Represent alt VPS. Innuirif it... settlement or the removal question to he de- cue uy a vote ol tne people or.the county he pledged himself to carry it thrn,,i, ,t ' eeuale provided jt should pass Hie house, Thai' after its passage through, the l,out(, refused lo fill fill s&id pledge, hm ho every ihlng ho could to prevent Its passags in tho senate, That ho has betrayed his i-onsliliienis by introducing, advocating, and"1frging ih'B passage of a bill creeling a new county out of parts of Lu zernc and Columbia, contrary to the expressed voicn of a large mnjority of Iho inhabitants residing within the limits of the proposed new county, as well aS 0f the county of Columbia generally, whicV project was advocated by him, more to advance his own personal pecuniary interest than the public good. These charges,! bclicvo can be sustained, if he thinks not, then let him deny them and the issuo will he fairly before the public and he or I will soon be truly branded with tho epithet of "krtave or fool" for if have made theso charges without being able' to sustain them, I shall certainly deserve the title, but on the contrary, should I es tablish their trulh, ho must submit to ba branded wiih the character of a 'political "knave," at Icasl, if not of "fool." Perhaps it may be said that I use strong language toward Senator Headley. Be it so. I am only handing bark, however, with a rough hand.it is true, some of the essence of tho above.'quoted article from the Sentinel, and ir the medicine administered, should stir up ihe bile on the stomachs of those whoso happiness consists in "ignorance being bliss," it will teach them "'tis folly to bo wise" lo that extent as to induro them to1 believe that all men are "knaves and fools" but themselves. Voter. "A man avowing his determination to' agitate the removal question never can bo' elected in Columbia county" exclaimed an agent of the "Danvillo junto" while oppos ing the removal during tho late session of tho Legislature. Can this bo true, when tho names of two thirds of all ihe taxable inhabitants of ihe county can be obtained to petitions for a removal! Can it be possible ihat ihe Danville junto can dupe and deceive the friends of the removal, and prevent them from uniting on a candidate who will carry out their favorite measure? We can not nor will not believe it untiLwo see ihe question (airly tried In tho county. That the Danville junto will mnkp it a question this fall, there cannot be any doubt, in fact they havo already declared their determina tion to elect a man opposod to a removal and in favor of a division, nml it l,nimn,... , the friends or removal also to take a stand and go to work with a united force, and show '.hem that tiny will not be cajoled and duped into the support of any man who will advocate a division, or oppose the remo val. Tremendous Jliot Conflagration and lost of Life in Philadelnhiu. On Monday last, the eity of Philadelphia was a scene of almost uncxampl. d excitement and Riot. It was the day appointed for a grand tem perance negro procession and festival. Tho procession was formed al the Hall in Bod ford street, about 8 o'clock in tho morning.a very great crowd having previously gather ed, composed of boys, men and woman, both whites and hlacks.to look on the pro cession. The boys began to shout after ihe procession, which soon became restless and a fight ensued. Brick bats and other missiles flew in every direction. n,nUn heads and bloody noses soon became abun dant. Tho procession, after a lurd fought contest, gave way and lied in every direo tion. The fight.however continued through out the day in various parts of tho city. Tho piiluary were called out, and several arrests were made. Several men, both black and while were severely injured, and some lives lost. At half past r-ino in the evening the new Smith's Building being erected for a public. Hall, hy tho rich negro lumberman, Stephen Smith, was discovered to bo on fire. It was soon burnt to tho ground. At hair past ten; tho bells again rang Tot firo, Ii proved to ba iho colored Presbyterian Church, in St. Mary street, which was likewise destroyed. Both of which wero set or, fire by the mob. By this lime the negroes had entirely disappeared, not one being to be seen in the streets, and the city became entirely quiet by midnight. The riot was again commenced on Tues day morning, by seveial Irishmen in tho vicinity of Walnut street wharf, nn ilia Schuylkill, rushing on a couple of blacks who accidentally made their This was a signal for a ceneral munrnn. and the mob paraded iho streets, chasing u.m ucawng cvety iiejro who camo in their way. I lie military were again tailed out,