4 1 1 "WE GO 7HE3E DEMOCRATIC miNCIPLES POIKT THE WAY ; WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, YTE CEASE TO FOLLOW." VOLUME IX. EBENSBURG, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1852. NUMBER 9' T E El 31 S. TLe "MOUNTAIN SENTINEL" is publish- i vcrv Thursday morninp, at One Dollar and Fifiv Cmts per "annum, if paid in advance or within three months: after three months Tu-o pilars will be charged. No subscription will be taken for a shorter ,.erir4 than six months : ami no paper will be I ont macl until a.'l arrearage arc patd. A NLlure to notify a discontinuanc at the cxpira tVn of the term subscribed for, will be consid tr ", -;s a new encasement. r' ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted it t..e"fol!owing rates: GO cents per square for tve j-j-j.t insertion; 75 cents for two insertions: f i r throe insertions ; ami 12") cents per square pvcrv subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. A'l nlvcrtisements handed in must have the trover number of insertions marked thereon, ertla-v will be published until forbidden, and sLcrire 1 in accordance with the above terms. Ml letters and communications to insure mention must be postpaid. A. J. R1IEV tV' 1 Mil C 1 1 S V II T. ArFF.XSPEHCER'S Ul"1 LOVIi EXPEHIliSCE. BY COLLIER. r,.;i, Tnt vr.sh te rartter mit me, I can't tell, put,' sure r.s I lief, ieh wasnioht very veil ; Mt'.n stomach vas right, mine head vo vas ache, But all de night long I slept wide awake. First I thought be vas pedpugs; but dere i mis take, for le pal all de ped-close and fillers did shae. Ami looked in te craks of de fed nil around, But not a single pedpug she did fount, Trn s ir.epoddy pay, vich I no tink was fair, p-.'.t mein complaint perhaps vas de night mair. But Iknow'd dey vas wrong, 'kase niein pony's a her?, AtJ slee ps in tc stable of coot Mr. Morse. Ben I thought of te "rappers," dem spirits dey say. Vnt nrs all de people's pood senses away ; Bi-.t J;:'t no voibl do ; de truth I must toll Mciu rapper is made nut a string and a bell. P:n I vent to de toctor, and stated mein case, H felt of mein pulse, and put on a long face ; 'You're pizened," he said, "and vill surely go tead. - la no swallow did pill" 'pout bo pig as his head. liooke l at te pill ; and thought he wajokin; Icr.n no swallow dat mitout great ehokin': EiTs he. "Never mind, but shut open your ' jaw-' Ah' down vent te pill, mitout tastin or chaws, Ob. vat a pirn he tid make in my pelly ! Fi cymt as honey nor pine apple jelly I'cn i'e swoat he roll down, and I poos to sleep, Al' more as a veek mine pod I did keen. At." ven I pot veil I vas thin as a shad; !rin chK vas toe pip. and I looked very pad : Tut he nil vas f.-r good, for mein Katey did say But ven I gut strong I might mccshun de tay. Den mein eyes dey vas open ; I knowed right nwny, De nifitt' r vas Jin toy no pefore dat vould say, An' ' n I pot f"rorg and picas before. An' Katey ish mein, to be parted do more. The XftTlti of Hie Crfiit Powers. In 1S"2, our steam force in the Navy consist ! cf o steam frigates ; 3 first class steamers : ill 7 loss than first clas, viz: the steam frigates Vi:ss!ppi, 10 guns ; Susquehanna, 8 ; Pow hwtan, (say) 8 ; Farmac, C ; San Jacinto, 6. 1st class steamers Fulton, i guna ; Michigan 1 ; Alleghany, 2. Lrs- than 1st clfss Union, 4 puns ; Vixen C; Kater Witch, 1 ; total, 15 steamers, carrying pv.ns. The steamers Massachusetts, Gen. Taylor Engineer, and John Hancock, are for surveying purposes. Kelative steam war force of the preat mari-t-ir.e nations of Europe, in 1848 which is the litest accessible account though the force has keen considerably augmented since that date : Croat Eritain, 141 war steamers. France, C8 44 " Unssia, 32 " 44 At this period the commercial marine of Great trit ain under canvas, amounted to 3,004,392 ns, and 175,001 men ; under steam to 113,978 tons in 9C0 vessels. In lSGi, the total of the registered, enrolled Ifi'l licensed tonage of the United States was E.772.439 tons, of which the steaia tonnage was ;53,C07 tons. Judicial Dignity. The following conversation is said to have oc tttrred between a venerable ohl lady, and a cer quondam presiding Judge of this county. learned disciple of lilackstone was support f i on his right and left by his worthy associates, ken Mrs. I. was called up to give evidence. '"Take off your bonnet, madam !" "I had rather not sir." "Cut, Madam, I insist upon it, take off your bonnet, I say ''In public assemblies, women generally cover eir heads. Such is the custom elsewhere, and refore, I'll not take off my bonnet ?" "Io you hear that gentlemen ? She pretends 10 tnow more about these matters than the iQdge himself! Had you uot, madam, better e anl take ti seat upon the bench ?" "So, eir, I thank you, for I really think there " old women enough there already." Cinon- THE FAIRY'S WARJfWCi liT JOnX BROOUAM. Once upou a time, a mighty long while ago, wheu Ireland's green fields and pleasaut valleys belonged to those who had a natural right to them before her Saxon neighbors overspread the beautiful land, despoiling the rightful pos sessors of the soil, heaping mountain loads of oppression upon the poor inhabitants, and then deriding llic-m because they could stand as straight as they did forerly there happened to live iu the town of Clonmakllty, a well to do, J industrious, and kindly-hearted weaver, whose f . .1. rv?n :l Now, at this time, there wa3 not a country in Christendom could produce sm.h splendid fa brics of every description, from the heavily wo ven cloth of gold down to the exquisite linen, whose texture was so fine that yards upon yards of it could be drawn through a weddiug-ring ; and amongst all the looms in tho laud, none turned out the equal of Canuach O'Dearmid's aud mind you the weaver then, was not the hunger-wasted, gaunt phantom sort of death-in-liie object, one may now see occasionally peering from a miserable aperture called a win dow, iu the very centre of Ireland' onc3 proud capi'al. No, indeed! He had h:s servants, aud his grooms, and retinue like a nobleman. Audit' the kings aud warriors had their bards to chro-.icde their hih achievements, and inspi red miustrels to ting them, so had tho h iudi-crafts-mau Lis, to hymn the still prouder deeds of holy labor. A fine, high-spirited, happy and contented people were they then, until the insatiabie and cunning isUndt-rs close by, after vainly endea voring by open warfare to subdue them, secret ly introduced the fruitful elements of discord, whith unhappily divided those who never mcie can be united. Colonies of a strange and ut terly antagonistic blood and creed, were plant ed in tluir midst ; a new religion, brought forth and nurtured with ecclesiastical zeal, that most fatal of feuds whico results from a difference of f.tith ; is it surprising thou that, robbed of their inheritance, and driven into the woods and sav age hiding-places, their hearths usurped, and their "trs desecrated is it to be wondered at, that the poor persecuted people without shelter, without education, should slowly but surely have rctrotded, wheu all the rest of the world Las advanced, until centuries of oppression have al most dvpopulateol an et.tire nation ? Hut to go back to Connach. He happned, IVrtunie'y for himself, to live in a time when every man held his own, in quietness and pace; there were no "evictions," no homesteads level- j led to enlarge my lord So-aud-So's CBtate, no j middlemen and agents to plunder equally the j unfortunate tenant aud absentee landlord, no intr'.gucing double-faced demagogues, no sellish semi-political priests ; but contentment, like an j atmosphere of perpetual summer rusted upon ; the land, and amongst the happy islanders uona had more cause to be so than Connach, the wea- j ver ; a benignant fate having placed him in that 1 most enviable of all positions cheerful and : well-satisfied mediocracy too high for triva- ; tioa to reach and too low for envy to assail, with just suiiicic-nt intellect to compreheud aud j enjoy everything enjoyable in nature, and thor- j ouglily impressed with that instinctive religion of the heart which causes it to expand in grat itude to the benign Giver of Good tvue, loving : and considerate in his family relations ; free i with hand, liberal and conscientious in his i friendship. Such were the characteristics of the repre sentative of the O'Dearmid's living in his time ; and with but slight modifications of tempera ment, such have they been through succeeding generations, even up to the present time ; for amidst the chances aud changes of conquest, colonization and foreign absorption, the old house, land, name and occupation have been j transmitted from sou to son, in regular desent, and in the town of Clommackilty may be seen, at this very day if the tourist should ever dis cover it a tolerably good-sized, but curiously patched tenement, bearing an exceedingly old tashioned sign-board, on which is painten "Con nach O'Dearmid, Weaver." The cause of this strange preservation and uninterrupted transmission of name, property and occupation, for such a number of years, i3 satisfactorily explained in a family tradition, which I had the pleasure of. hearing from the present representative ; and as it appeared to me to be more graphic in his own diction, I shall endeavor to present it to the reader, as nearly as 1 can, in hi3 words : "You know, sir, I suppose, that at the time luck fell upon the uame of the O'Dearmids, uiakein' somewhere about, it might be a thou sand years ago but the date doesn't inatther a thawmeen ; however, the fellow that owned it thin was a bowld-heartcd rolhckin', ginerous divil-in ay-care boy, as ivcr lived. Nell sir; the fairies, you know, was flintier thin nor they are now ; by raysin, 1 suppose, that the ground was trod upon by the real ould etock, and not by furrin sckaniers andyalla-hcaded in thruders. More's the pity ! A'most every fam ily or daciot behavior thin had Bomethin' or I mother iu the shape ov a fairy visither ; some tad maybe a 'Puckaim,' thini the divil's own lounds at mischief, turnin' house torisy-turvey m' larropin lazy huzzies ; others might Btumble ver a 'Liprechaun,' and if they looked sharp, .'or thiin'a the greatest chates out, would pet leaps o' money. Thin there was I'koukai, Fei kes, Banshees, and hundhreds of sich likes ; to some families they coma as warnins, to others is luck signs. "But I'll tell you how wc got one, sir lontr life to him ! He's here now listenin' to every word I say hd reverently lifted h'i3 hat as he -poke an' if I tell yoira '"word ov a lie, he'll make himself known somehow. "Well, you must know, sir, that my great an eesther that brought us the luck, was oncet ri lln' home from havin' ped a visit to his sweet heart, for he was coortin at the time. The night was murdherin dark, an' he was a little appre iiuEhus ov the 'good people,' for the fear of tLreadin on a 'fairy circle,' or may bedisturbln' a froiie ; so I12 rodo mighty slow across the turf, for there was no roads at the time. Well, sir. al ov a sudden the moon bruck out from the black clouds like a red-hot ball from a can non, an' began to run wild, as I hecrd my father say, right across the sky. He had scarcely ga zed an' instant wid terror an' wondher upon the quare capers the moon was cuttin', whin, on turnin round agin, he saw a phantom horse man rid'm' close beside him, that imitated every action. Winn lie gaiiopeJ ; wmii no lanca up, it did he same. Fear nearly paralysed him. j He tried to say his prayer, but memory had ; ;ouc. Still, however, he urged his horse along j rapid!; au' a; tho' the sight froze his very. blood, he couldn't keep hia eyes off the black ri- i j "On comin' to a sharp turn in the road, what , did he see but a little ould woman sitcin' upon a j stone, right in the road ov the l;ors:ita, I hi ; side, now roTn into a solid tangibility des pite of hid own terror, my ancesther shouted out to hi;; strange companion, " 'Howld hard, you black fool ! Pull in, j won't you. Don't you ee ti.e oM creator in . the road ? You'll run over her, you blackgard, you will !' "But uot a hand did the othr nioe in re etraint. On they went, full gallop. " 'For the love ov Heaven, ould woman, clear the ro-t-t !' cried my ancesther, but not a peg would the stir. Auother instant, and the black horseman crashed right over the poor oulJ sowl, and knocked her as flat a a pancake. " 'Ah ! you murdherin villain, you've done it ; I knew you would !' shouted me anccsther, burniu' wid indignation, anlrainin' up Lis horse as soou as he could ; bo did the other. "What wid the cruelty and the impidencc of the fella, me ancesthers couldn't stand it any longer ; so, turniu' his horse round, he let dhrive at him, but unluckily, one ov the big black clouds gradually swally'd up the nioon, an' in the darkness the black horseman cut a cross the fields, and vanished out ov sigh.t. As soon as ho was gone, m.C bowld Connach groped his way back where the ouid woman was rua over, an' to his great surprise found her bittin' upon the sumo stone as quietly ua iv ncthin' had happened. " 'God save, ye stranger !' said the ould crca ther. " 'God save ye, kindly !' says Connach, 4sn' I hope yer not hurted much V " 'I'm uotkurteJ at all, Misther Connach O' learuiid, the weaver !' says she. " 'What 2 you know me then, do ye ?' says he. 44 'Betthcr nor ycdoyerself !' says she. 'It's a good fortune that ye deserve, Connach, an' it's a good good fortune that ye'll get, both you an' yours, to the end o' time ; for you're respctful an' kind to the ould an' the helpless. You're loviu' and dutiful to him that gav' ye life an' its blessins ; you're open-handed to the poor au' the needy ; an' honest-hearted to the whole world besides.' 44 4Bedad I'll come to you for characther, iv ever I'm in the want ov it. Bad-cess to me, av you haven't brought coals ov fire into my cheeks, in spite of the crowd weather !' says Connach, blushin' like a girl at the ould woman's praisin' him. 44 'I'll do you a greater sarvice nor that,' says she. 'I'll tell ye yer faults. 44 4Fire away !' says Connach : 4let us have thini.' 44 4Get down from yer horse, an' sit by me upon this 6tone,' says she. 44 4Wid all my heart,' says he, jumpin' off in a jiffy ; for he was a little sprung, you sec ; the curse ov Ireland, strong drink, was even thin in beiu'. ' 44 4Now for thini faults,' says he, wid a laugh, as he sat down beside the ould woman. 4Iiow many have I ?' 44 4One,' says she. 44 4Is that all V says he. Tooh, I know bet ther.' 44 4Stop !' cries the ould woman, 4hear me out. That one, if suffered to remain within yer heart, will soon breed all the rest ; for it's the fruitful parent of every crime that has a name.' " 4Murdher ! how ye frighten me, says Con- Ml I'ml i l I nach. 'Whet the divil is it ?' 44 Trle Jars of stror.j drink ' says the culd woman, sarionaly. 4You behaved kindly to me, an urged oslv by the feelin's ev yer kindly na ture. I have the power to save ye, au I will, from Ibid hour forward, as long as time exists. It will be.tUe fault of you an' yours, if misfor tunes, other than those nature demands. 6hould fall upon yer name ; for yer faults an' vicious inclinations khall bo pointed oat to you by fairy power. 4 'Lord stve us !' says me ancesther, fright ened aznot fut or his zixm senses, 4ar you a fairy ?' ' : " 4I am !' ays she ; 4behold the proof!' wid that the ould Tags aud tatthers melted away, an' instead of a irty-lookia' hape of deformity and wretchedness Connach beheld a diminutive form scarcely as b'g as a blade ov grass, and as bright as if it had been made out J sunbeams, stand in' and kiss in" its love to him, while ihe tiniest an most musical little voice, like the ringin' ov f airy bells, tingled upon his ear, so Bmall, but so distinct, rarewell, Connach ! thou hast had thy warnln' ; I'rufit by it, an' be happy ! "The fairy thin vanquished, an' me anccsther slept upon that identical stcne until mornin'f but when he woke up, he didn't forget the fai- ry's caution f or not cnl v did he never touch liquor, but he left it in his dyin' directions, to be transmitted from father to son, through eve ry generation, that bath house an' lands should get the uama ov drunkard. "An', to osr credit be it spoke, we haven't had one yet, though some have needed and re ceived tne fairy's warnin' for that, a? well as other faults, m' its very wonderful the various ways they took to tell us ov him, that' been runnin through the family histhory since that time sometimes in a parable, thin again iu a dhrame now cne way, an' now another. Me own grandfather got his warr.in in a quare way. His prevailin' fault was harshness, an' a strong incliuiu' to cnjel conduct. lie threatened me father wickedly durhi' his youih, au' at last, be tas be maiT?,,! unbeknownst to him, turned hhn right out cv doors. "Well, it wasn't long afther that, grandfather was sittin' mopin' alone for, in spite ov Lis hard natur', he missed his child whin all at oncet, whin he was tryla' to nurse up Lis angry feeliu', who should he see come in the door, bat a favorite cat ov him, that had just lest her kit- tents, tenderly carryin' in her mouth. al.ouno:a, 1 ..(.,M'li.'!-.nnn-l, young rai en, jjrajiuiiiiuvi uaiuiau iwu the cat was goia' to make her supper off the rat ; but not a bit ov it. What does my bould puss do, but takes the rat into her basket, an , pets it up, an' plays wid it in the most motherly "At first, grandfather laughed till the tears ; run down his cheeks, at the fun ov the thing, to j see the rat taken so mucn care 01 ; nut wum me cat rowled ever on her snie, smgin pur-roo, winkiu' at grandfather, an' puttiu' her paw as gingerly over the rat as if she was afraid ov breakin' it ; he knew immediately that there was some maneiu in it. It was thin that it struck him all at once, that if it was an unna- tural tlmig to see a cat uoursuiu a creamer maw H,jnt tbeir ncconiB.0j.llion :lt Laif past 7 o didn't belong to her specie at all at all, it was , c1qc a m to rctaru ou Thursday morning more unnatural a mortial eight to see a father j e,ir, vhh lTOxleloliS for t!l3 huaJreds of suff turnin' his back upon his own flesh an' bllood- I crs WItLuUt nieaug to j.r0CTirc fooj or 44 4It's a warnin' !' says he. j pl.ice to lay their heads. This humane course 'Tears that he had never shed afore for Le 0f yir. nunt will be long and warmly remenib was a hard man fell in showers from his eyes, j cr0l p,y Sacrament'ians. He placed $1000 in an' he prayed for grace to conquer his fau!t3. j tbe iuda of the Mayor, with directions to send . .. . .1 "Well, sir, before the night fell, my fatneran his purt3' young wife was in the ould man's arms, an' greater joy and happiness seldom echoed through these ould rafters ; for next to never doing any wrong, the most heart-satisfy" in' thing in creation is, to repent tho wrong you've done !" Steam Navigation op the Scsqueiiassa. We understand that among the many schemes of improvement on foot, some enterprising gen tlemen in this State have it in contemplation to ask a charter for a company to remove the ob structions from the Susquehanna river, so as to make it navigable for steamboats to Columbia and the Chesapeake Bay. We are told that engi neers who have examined the obstructions, are of cpinion that the thing is entirely practicable, und within reasonble cost. The Su&qurhanua canal runs nearly parallel with the river, has ne ver paid a dividend to the stockholders, nnd the stock is now worth but about 33 per cent of par. Notwithstanding this, the greater expedition of a steamboat navigation, in thc opinion of these enterprising gentlemen would pay well. The estimated cost of the proposed improvement, is from four to five millions of dollars. Ball. Sun. The Bight Docthixe. An exchange paper in speaking of appointments to office, says : In dispensing thc patronage, we trust that Gen. Tierce may remember thc hard working Democracy. Heretofore it has been too often the case that the parlour politcians, who, like the lillies of the fi eld, neither work nor spin, when the battle is won, have bcen permitted to array themselves in all the power and glory of Solomon himself. To that modo of dispensing publick patronage we etand opposed. Tl Great Fire In Sacramento. We clip From New York and Baltimore pepers the following further particulars of the late great fires in California ; The Sacbamesto Fire. The annexed ac count of the awful conlagratiou in Sacramento, is from the Alia California of the 4th November; At 11 J o'clock on Tuesday evening, a fire broke out in the military shop of Madame Lanos, J-st. near the corner of Fourth. The Inrpector3 were quietly conntirg their votes, and a numer ous crowd awaiting tho decision of the judges, so that much time was lost. With astonishing rapidity it spread from building to building, up and down and across the street. On both hides the street, and bearing down the length of the city southerly, the flames ex tended, soon reaching the Orleans Hotel. The buildings around were blown up with the rapid ity of magic, carts standing ready with loads of 25 lb. kegs of powder. The Unic office next fell, the proprietors savin two presses, type and paper sufliciently for a few days' supply. The Tehama block, consisting Tag?, Bceou & Co's, S wift's and G rim's Banks, were saved by the wind blowing directly nero-js ihe street from them. J. B. Starr's brick store also made a wall to prevent the spread of the fire in thi-t di rection. The number of lives lost, that can be ascer tained, is six. Madame Lanos, where the fire originated, was sick, but was rescued. Three men of Engine Company No. 3, fell with the roof of Reynolds & Co.'s store, aud were swallowed up alive. The confusiou of the day, and scat tering of people prevented a roll call, to ascer tain the names" of the gallant but unfortunate firemen. A lady next door to the place where the fire originated, also is supposed lost. The number scorched as enormous, all of which were careful ly cai-ed for by the eureons on the Canianche. Bvery assistance possible was proffered by the captains and agents of the steamers, whose ves sels were crowded with females. The levee was 1 strewn with goods ot every Uescnption, ana tne Wlllil DIL111I1 sl'Ullii:asi liucl llic S?J' aiuau th-3 good, ell of which were eavcJ. At & o' clock the fire had nearly ceased, the smouldering embers throwinghuge volumes of smokejandjinrid flashes, that brought desolation to the hearts of all who witnessed the sickening tight. The los ses cannot be less than o,OtX),000. Notwithstanding this enormous nnd frightful loss, orders were given, while building and pro buruh; t(J lace themi;i thc lnor. - ning, nnd of the most substantial kind. The irreatest cheerfulness prevailed this morninjr at uin3 0-clockj and the pcorlc who have bcen un. gubJueJ hytwo floojSf caunot be set back by a cycn tI0Ugh it t:lkc3 a clc;m swecp- The election went off quietly. The ballot for prefi;,IeDt fca1 bec.n countedf showing a net whig mJ1jority of fiy0 hundred. The ballots of the Firgt ani ThirJ WarJs wcre remOTe(l to a place of safety in time those of thc Second Ward were supposed to be destroyed, the fire catching the building in which they were counted, in less than five minutes from the time it originated. The Confidence brought a load of ladies who ( have been burnt out, and the boat sent by Mr. all destitute of food to his storehip. , , , . and reccivea all the ladies who sought sheitcr and Rid many in feeble health from recent con finement anil she will leave at 10 o'cloce with a crowd of jassengers. The Antelope, Captain Eushnell, received a full freight cf ladies and children many of thc latter separated from their parents, aud who were hunted up by himself and officers. Their kindness will be long remembered, and their ser vices rewarded. The hook and ladder company and fire com panies were promptly on hand and worked man fully, till of no avail, when all wet came miners and blew up housi after house with the precis- ion of veterans. The constant boom of these explosions added b:the terrible confusion and horror of the night. THE SAN TEAXCISCO F1EE. Again we are called upon to record a terrible conflagration in our doomed city, which has de stroyed thirty-two buildings, and ruined many persons. Oar city has justly earned the mourn ful title of tho "City of Conflagrations." About half-past eight o'clock last evening, an nnusualy brilliant light was discovered in the second story window (on Merchant street,) of a woeden building fronfiug on Kearney St., and occupied in part by Sandy Marshall, as an eat ing and lodging house. The firo originated by the bursting of a camphene lamp, and though the cry was immediately raised, and the Monu mental engine bell immediately rung, the flames in a moment had burst out of the window, and the fire had taken a fair hold. Our brave firemen turned out promptly, and were ca the Fpot with their UMial alacrity, but it was at once evident, the building being of such alight and flimcCy texture, that it could not t saved. Thousands had congregate the Ila za, to witness the aful scene; an ! it was but a moment until the whole building was in one roaring blaze, casting such p.n intense light that a sea oCjUpturned fuces could be us easily dis tinguished as on a bright noon day. The flames soon communicated to the building occupied by Dr. White And family, and barely gave them time to escape, with a part of their household goods in a daniHgcd condition. It was then ascertained to bo a fixed fact, that the neighborh'p building, too ,must bo des troyed, and the inhabitants in that vicinity, in hurry and confusion, commenced moving their pffects. The drays and wagons went clattering through the street at a gallop ; the engines and hook and ladder companies, ruuuing to and fro, in every direction; the firemen shouting, and the bells ringing, the timbers cracking nil com bined made it a scene indescribable awful. It was thought, for a long time, that the Union building, on the opposite side of the street, where the fire occurred, would be saved, ani long and nobly did our firemen battle against the destroying element to protect it. But th smoke became thicker and denser, until the flames shot a lurid glare through the roof, ani the fate of the Union, was sealed. The fin billiard eooon nnd bowling alleys were swept away at a breath. EfnThe correspondent cf the New York TrC luw, mentions the following heartless conduct connected with the Sacramento fire : While the fire was raging, four or five men chartered a steamboat and proceeded to this ci ty with a view of purchasing and monopolizing all the lumber here, and all the provisions their money aud credit would enable them to secure. They were landed in a small boat from the ster mer off North Beach, and she remained a few miles out in thc Bay, refusing to land any other passengers for several hours, until those had . time tQ nccomj,.,ll tLiw nuh. The steamer then came to thc wharf, and the news of the fire became public. Lumber went up, in their hands, to four hundred dollars a thousand more thim 300 per cent. Flour advanced to 5r, Tork to 5555 and CO, and other Provisions in proportion. The Sacramento Union has the subjoined r msrks in relatiou to thc fire in that city. At the time tie fire broke out it seemed as if the elements had conspired for thc destruction of the city. A norther had just set in and was blowing a stiff breeze fiom the Northwest, which, after thc fire commenced, increased al most to a gale. The point where the fire start ed, too, was the very one for sweeping the citv, and before it had been burning five minutes "it became evident that Sacramento was doomed t destruction. The fire companies were promptly on the spot ; but in the face of such a wind and sea of fire, it was seen by all they were power, less. They exhausted the water within reach, but produced not one particle of effect on the fire. It had obtained the mastery of man, and liis puny arm was as little felt by the roping flames ns it would have been if directed against an ocean tempest. Men gathered iu crowds, some looking on the waves of fire as they rolled from house to house and street to street, bewild ered, fascinated nnd apparently paralyzed at the terril.de work of destruction going ou befors them, while others were hastening to save their poods and effects before the fire should reach them. Then commenced a Eccne on thc streets which nepgars au description 11 en, women, .-,r.d chil- uren were seen desperately ena-e in p'Tr tn Kave Komi-thinn- fr,., t,. f.. ,Zrt ' element. But in matt instances their efforts were frnitles.-, and hundreds who retired on Tuesday night with the consciousness of having plenty of the comfort of life around them, were landing the next morning 0:1 the place whert Sacramento was, without one dollar in their pockets, and with only tne clothes they had on. It was an awful night, and God grant that we miy never be called to witness another such sight. The destruction of goods has been very hea vy; thc amount, as near as can be ascertained, wc publish in another column. But there ari hundreds who have lost their little all, from whom the public will never hear. Had the fam ilies of one half of the business men been in the city, we hardly know what could have been dono with them. As it is, thousands arc left house less and homeless, aud for two nights past hav slept under the wide eauopy of heaven, many of them without knowing where they were to ob tain bread to cat in the morning. Goods, fur niture, &c, arc scattered all over that portion of the city north of J-streetand on tho levee, their owners standing by them in the day time nnd laying by them in the night, with not even a canvass to cover them. This, to 6orae extent, may be remedied in a few days, ns the owners will be compelled to re turn to first principles and build tents cloth hou ses, as we done in 1849. Surely a terrible con flagration iu any other country than California, would destroy hope itself; but such is tho won derful energy and recuperative power of the 0 ...... a ji me 'levouranir n rr people of California, that misfortune only seems to stienpthen their determination to go ahead in spite of them ; and as an evidence tliMt this spir it pervades the sufferers in this tempest of fire, we know of instances whore meu had houses to begin in again before the old ones were fairly done burning; others too, who, contracted te have buildings put up on the lots occupied W those destroyed. 1 ; - V