Ir. Buchanan and the Londe•Tiases. "Alltatrev W (=On Kurt ''. -1 1 11.- Pillars 1 The London nines of Nov. l e t, in an gruel, , elite Me.VraPik dunks the elsesion at that Phu of rattersl indictment against the Gov. et i cal "beauty without paint," J. It. Giddings, to and people of the United States, pats fortb the the Simikership of di. Nstpiaal 11,eipe of Re following ridiculous story about the smursoco Pr"entitives , "'mold 1 " . nue elhlueutlY I ''' tit t '' given by our Ministe-, )1r BUcHANAN, to the L. Inade'" We think th. very reverse of tin- English Court, of sympathy and, if needs be, No sea wheesseresins the attrommia sentiments co-operation i n th e quarrel of the Allies with contained in this t ztract from .ine a of Gidding's There is food for deep reflection in the pro- & a i m speeches, is fit to preside over our -Nati , mal Le gress and victories of Know Nothingism. Aaidegislatnre, or even occupy a seat there: ''When the war in the L ast first b ro k e out . from its achievements in Pennsylvania last .Yeezt and England found herself in new and unwon- "I look forward to the I lay when there shall and in New York and Massachusetts this, we be. ted alliance with France, and an equally uuwon- be a servile insurrection in the South; when the have there is no record of a triumph that is not ted hostility with Russia, there was no Power idea man, erased with British bayonets, and led wr i tten in blood I t ,etrrie,/ Bt. L ou * b ut it from which she received assurances of support !on by British officers, shall assert his freedom,. more ui hea rty , hn more satisfactory , . and more spun was over the bodie: aud through the gore of adopt- neoes i and wage a war of extermination against hi= from the United States o f A nten i, l master Wheit the torch of the incendiary shall Minister of the Union in this A d wiz e n, Its next fi eld of exploit was Cin Eve° the - i cal light up the toicas and cities of the swath, and blot °moan, sad seeing that it was shout to be pros. 1 c ountry, unless we are misinformed, testified to ; out the host eee•age of slavery. And though I the cooloa sympa th y of the Ca b inet of Washing- i may untied, it resorted to the revolver and the bowie-not mock at their calamity nor laugh when and the nation over which it presides. He their fear eohlethi yet I will, bail it as the dime bailee—to the destruction of ballot boxes and I e t l o pressed ea apprehension as to the durability ing of a political u" .1214 " n * . riot—to accomplish its end. It failed; though 'o f all . w ith France and our ability alone our lanCe W WA until blood had been spilled, and the sane-i and unaided to resist the overwhelming might of I WHAT A Win/. —The New York irilitne City of the ballot-box had been dese:rated. Lou. Russia. But he desired us to be under no ap- gives an acconnt of an accid - oit on the Harlem prehension on that account; for the United States isville was its next theatre, and ita blood-red dwellings, were wi ll ing . to make our quarrel their own, and Railway near "Boston Four Corners," on Mon record, lit by the flames of burningday evening, in which a hurricane, it is alledge.d, I a idas with thousands of stout hearts and brawny and made memorable by the shriek' of defence - i arms as ready to pluck down the despotism of turned over a train of four cars. They rolled less women and children as they were hurled back ' the East as to subdue the wilderness and level down an embankment some 30 feet in height, into their burning -homes by the demons-of "Sant," the giant forest of the West." making four complete summersets Two men attest well by what means that achievement was We notice this slander upon our Minister were killed and fifteen men, women and children socomplished That we may not be am iis being pretty generally used of copied, and in most injured, some of them seriously, if not fatally --.- coloring this picture too highly, we quote from the 1 cases by his political opponents without a word Only thirty passengers were on the train, and it .Vatianal intelligencer, a paper which standsl of comment. The secret of this is, that the dui- appears a wonder that any of them escaped Of confessedly at the head of the opposition to Dew- tinguished gentleman whose good name is thus course we don't doubt in the least that this sc ocracy in the Union That journal thus speaks I impeached, stands a pretty sure chance of being cident was c a used by the ivied—but still we on this subject We ask the candid of all par-' the Democratic candidate for President next can't help thinking of it very strange that it spent ties to read: I year, and the impression thin secretly sown itself entirely on the ill fated train ~t. cars. We Th broad east will be good capital against him. e "After a careful examination of all that we have no / account of its doing damage anywhere have seen bearing on this point, after an unpre- 1 National istettigencer, how e ver, a ca ndid and re- else By the by, was'nt it the wind that caused judioed study of the articles that have appeared 1 liable journal, thus puts an extinguisher upon on the sulject in the L)uisvilis journals, we be- . t h e whole the accident at Gasconade river 1 whole story. Says that paper: "The course lieve that the blood of the slain is on the hands attributed by the London Times to the American of the Know Nothings The proofs - are many Minister, as regards his acquiescence in the en and convincing." Baltimore next came in for its chapter of hor listment of troops in the United States for the 1 British Army, scarcely deserves correction when rocs, and although it did not prove as bloody as that of Louisville, it was sufficiently so to BUS- 1 aPP/ied to a gentlemen so well versed in the sta. tote law of the country as Mr. BUCHANAN. There tun our position that it is only by riot and blood - shed that the progress of this libel upon Amen- has in reality been no method of testing the rel (=ism obtains its most noted victories. But the ! sties proportions of 'sympathy,' eithor one way or the other, in this country, to regard to the record does not end here. New Orleans was yeti to feel the power of ' , Sam," and fortwith the tel. / belligerents. On this, as on all other subjects, *graph commenced reporting a "great Amen- opinions and feelings vary according to oircum ean victory" there—the city wasoarried by 2000 stances The Times also takes an exaggerated majority, said the report, and the prospect was view of the course of our Government in prevent good for a similar result in the Stem. In this latter I lug enlistments for the Crimea. The duty was respired of it in vindication of our good faith as calculation they reckoned without their host The I , pistol and bowie knife was not all powerful in the a neutral nation. That the British Government rural districts, and hence we have only to add to these bloody records their exploits in the city. -And here it is from a New Orleans paper: "As neon approached, an excitement, Dem- i meneed at the eigthteenth precinct, as we learn, i in a contest for precedence in approaching the polls Major Henry Balise, one of the officer 1 of a German military company, who assumed a championship on the Democratic side, struck one of the Americana, and thereupon half a dosen re volvers were drawn on Lim He started to run, and some eighteen or twenty shots were fired at him. One bullet struck his thigh, another his ! foot, a third passed across his breast Soon after ' several fights emnd, and, among others, T D ! White, a city contractor, was badly beaten and wounded. The next difficulty occurred at the twentieth precinct A man named Antoine Ful lerce native of France, who had his naturalisa tion papers in his hand, was stabbed in the cen tre of his abdomen. His friends put him in a cab, and took him to the charity hospital but he was dead before'he arrived (Are Towards eve ning, Dr. Sherrer, who kept a drug store at the corner of Great's:Jan and St Ferdinand streets, w ll3 &Kill& the tweitietn Prain t et.• - te'is -AIL .. be went to the polls with his naturalisation pa pers in one hand and a pistol in the other; that being opposed by an American, he fired at him, and wounded him in the arm The American then returned the fire, and the shot proved fatal A man named Antoine was shot in the leg.— Several shots were fired at James Boyden, while on horseback, and a German was stabbed or wounded in the face Towards eleven o'cloek, a party of men broke into the ninth precinct, and destroyed the ballot bn' and contents There is m id to h ave b een ' Democratic majority of si,kty or seventy in th O precinct At midnight, a crowd forced its ~,,,, into the engine house where the i ns p ector , ~ the - seventh precinct were engaged in ou ,,tig voles, and at once forced the inspec tors e d clerks to retire, when they seized the b i iiit box, and utterly demolished both it and see ballots " (Eric . M (ED Its bscrtnr, ERIE, Pat, S kT7R")II' MORNING, NOV .:4, 1,155 Low Nothing Victories. This explaitts the 2000 Know Nothing major ity in New Oileans. It was obtained by the destruction of ballot boxes and murder. Who ever beard before "Sam" became a power in the land, of ouch scenes upon election days'? No one: RIGHT —The Washington correspondent of the PLiladelpbia Ledger writes, under dates of the 9th instant, that, a short time since, a de putation of southern Know Nothings, tendered a proposition to vote for speaker and other officers from the Democratic side of the House. They protested against any alliance with the republi• cans or free coders of the North, belonging to the order or out of it These gentlemen did not profess to be authorised especially by any con stituency at home do make such a proposition, but it was made, and the party to whom it was made rejected it, alleging that their political faith would not countenance any compromise— This is right—no affiliation with such a party, is our motto: Sou:emits ow 1812 —We have received from the Hon J. B Sutherland, President of the Convention held in 1855, a call for the defenders of the country in the if DJ of 1512, who met last January in the city of Washington, to assemble there again on the approaching anniversary of the Battle of New Orleans, pursuant to the resolu tions adopted at their last session, to which time and place the Convention adjourned. As many of the delegates have gme to their last account gime their adjournment, it is recommended that additions' delegates be chosen. Many important p ro p os itions will be presented to the considera tion of the Conventien. Meetings should be held forthwith in the several States to make the necessary arrangements. A full attendance of Delegates is very desirable. It is the inten tion, we believe, to keep up the annual assem blages. lir The New York Erpress of Saturday has a letter from Washington, which states, on the very highest authority, that Mr. Cm:tiptop will be diattoseed by the President; but his passports will be sent to him in the least possible offensive .saver, with expressions of regret that sash a step was neoessary, coupled with a hope that the diplomatic relations of the two Governments may remain undisturbed. war Lewis Broadwell, of Cincinnati, has be queathed three-fourths of his property, mount jag, it is said, to one hundred thousand dollars, le the lira Universalist Church of that eity— ems half to be appropriated for the establishment i d a school, to be ander the centre! of the Uni vemslist 4iSfeliilistiou is to its theological SOS 4111111110t. has, as is asserted by the Times, promptly made explanations and restrained its officers from fur ther violations of our laws, affords proof that it has discovered no undue feeling on the part of this Government in regard to that subject. In pursuance of the same law, the present as well as fi,rmer Administrations hare promptly isiterpos rd to prevent aggressions upon neighboring noun- tries, and the arrest of one of the enterprises against Nicaragua was only frustrated by the perverieness of a foreign Consul, who refused to , testify t matters within his knowledge." Pact vs. Prophesy Time was when the ourthen of the complaints of the opposition against the policy of the Dem ocratic party, was that it was "ruining" the country. Every editor of an eight by ten news paper. tnat could concoct a leader, and lard it well with "10-co-fo-co," bad the country ruined on pAper at. least once a month. Every bar-room oratqr, or smart young lawyer, who looked at a endeavor, and the height, and breadth, and depth of political fame, was very positive that the tariff of 1846, and the Independent Treasury system' —the two then leading measures of "10-00-faeo ism,"—wonld very soon" rain" the country beyond redemption $o firmly was this idea fixed in the miuds of our opponents that our present wise Executive, then a member of Congress, boldly avowed his determination to abjure his party, and join ua, if his predictions of "ruin and die aster" were not fulfilled to the letter—a promise, by the by, that we are very thankful he has broken But it was not to this broken promise and Ulm!, prophesy of Pollock that we designed Calling attention, but t.) the evident oontrast be tween the acttutl state of the country now, under the operation of the Democratic system of finance and tariff, and the predictions of our opponents generally in regard to the effect of those measures. True, we might show with • good deal of force in this connection, tLat while the two things that were to "awn the country," in the opinion of our opponents then, were the revenue system of the act '46, and the financial measure called the Sub-Treunry, the two things now pitched upon by them to do it, is the influence of that misera ble old Italian fogy, Pope Pius 9th, and that bug-bear of nervous people, the "encroachment. of the slave power"—two humbugs that possess neither the merit of the plausibility, nor even the honesty of the former. But we pass over this evident deterioration of the "ruin" material of the opponents of the Democratic party, to Gall oar readers attention to the following exhibit of the actual state of our country under the opera tion of the measures so unmercifully oondemed. The article is headed— Tax RSSOURCES OF TUB RiPtrirac.—A writer in the Journal of Uommerce, who seems to have paid considerable attention to the sub ject, contends that there is no reasonable ground for any thing like a money panic, and aakir— what is the true state of the cane? In the Bret plaoe, he says our country wu never so rich in resources as at the present time. What are her resonroes. Cotton $150,000,900 Cereals 500,000,000 Sundries other than above 150,000,000 Gold products per 111311111:0 45,000,000 Total From this be shall probably realise by our shipments *brood full 00,000,000 more than our crops have, io the most prosperous years, ever before produced us. Our importations for this year will be some thirty or forty millions less than io the year 18A, and oar kreip_indebt einem fat advanced is liquakLation, the Wanes at the credit of foreign houses with our bankers here being about half what it was scene three or four months ago. This isa cheerio/ view, and it is entitled to due consideration. The country is, indeed, in a high condition of prosperity, and instead of croaking and inserting absurd stories, we should be graceful to Providence kr abundant crops and the noisy national blessings wa eajoy. Sir Two Russian chips, which have been ly. ing at the port of New York ter upward' of fif teen months peat, have been sold is puck* in that city within the week pot, on private toms. Tam Cacaa.—The U S. Sfexersuiet says the tree cause of the mosey striagewey a New York seems to be the weskit of the West, sad the high Floes which the Atlantic cities are required to pay for eteeritiag they parolees. theme, weseiag snowy to go ~ward wish roan tepidity them it goes 'brat in. It is said by the Albany Atlas that the official returns of New York will +hnw that a large portion of the Deuwcratic voters refrained from taking a part in the election in consequonce of the fraternal strife which has been su long carried on. lie A Washington correspondent of the Ne•w York Times says that Government has taken the necessary steps to bring the caner of Walker in Nicaraugna to an end, and thinks it w,ll be dune in two or three weeks alb. A statement has been published that the property of the Rothsehtlds Is valued et a thou sand millions of dollars. The Nuiloau/ late& genes pats it •t forty millions /Mir The Journal of Commerce, in speaking of the Kansas contested election case, says Reeder cannot have a seat as delegate, in virtue of hi 4 election, and that White&ld ought not to have one, because his election was the result of the Missouri voting. Our sentiments exactly Mir Henry A. Wise has been nominated by a paper in Virginia as a candidate for the Presi dency One swalloir does not make a summer is,. Last year the Democrats had but one member in the Nl.tssachu.setts [Luse of Repre• sentatives; this year they have chosen thirty An increase in the same ratio for the year to come, would eradicate the combined force of "Sam" and "Sambo" from Massachusetts DIVIRACT.ITL DIdTCHBANCE AT BATH, (MIE —We hoped, when we chronicled the destruction of Old South Church in this city, that we should never again be pained by the recital of a similar outrage upon the rights of any elves of our fel low-citizens; but the late events proved that we in Y (.1 .11S h " th ' e n' ai. r h o C n S " l n t aip d.. L " a t he l d reli gious worship appropriate to lajing the i•oruer stone of a new church, a large concurse assem bled to witness the exercists; which wi.re pre vented by rowdyism of the lowest s it at 1 vi., tenet.. During the forenoon a wood- n cro-s a bleb had been erected was forcibly pulled down.— Early in the afternoon an American flag was raised amid the cheering of a considerable number of persons, who showed themselves battle to the exercises and the occasion. Mr. Russel, acting Mayor, pulled the flag down amid shows of "Hustle him out:" and hisses; but in his leer• lag it was again put up. A rush was made for the corner-stone, which had been prevtout•ly and several attempts made to reuiu%• it from its setting, which was prevented, as we learn, by the exertions of Marshal Walker :end Mr Con stable Leach, who kept the crowd at bay There was much ba4 talk, shouting, fighting, eke. The Catholics, finding that they would be opposed in their exercises, quietly withdrew, and s left the lawless mob in possession of the field. No at tempt, that we hear of, was made to arrest any of the disturbers of the peace up to four o'clock. At about five o'clock the crowd, having accom plished their objects and prevented the religious exercises, gradually dispersed. Seedig the tem• per of the people, the Bishop seut word to hi s parish that the exercises would not h.. held Some injury was done to private properly, and nuisances committed of which it is uut dectut to speak —Bath Tribune. A Ls.i , stla NATUR.L.—Mary LeClerit, who re sides at present on Seventh street, iu this city IS a child of French parentage. She is at present about eight years old. For something wore than a year, her oceipat was entirely d,•stttute if h ad .. In the sec.md year, - however, hair begm to come out upon her head, arms, and the left bode of her face, and at prestut she has a head of ticruttfal jet black, while the side of her Ne s , is cover e d with a rich capillary growth of dark browu—ex tending from the eye•brow in ao angular direc tion across the forehead, and down the cheek bone on the left. Nor is this her only peculiarity. Her arms which are very small and delicately Lamed, are covered with a dark, heavy growth of hair, much more plentiful than is general with muscular men. This growth extends in a narrow chain, along the back of her hand to the middle finger, where it suddenly terminates. It is of silken softness, resembling closely the fur upon a Mal ten CU. The child is not distinguished for soy gre garious propensities—bnt is rather retiring in disposition. Her intellect is somewhat impair ed; and she is accustomed to strange freaks of fancy. Altogether, this is ooe of the most remarkable initanees of native deformity we have ever wit nessed.— Troy Wisig. $845,000,000 Tut amine SOUND DUES —The Washing ton Claims says:—"We have noticed some traces of apprehension that the pending controversy be• tween the United States and Denmark may act prejudicially upon our relations with Great Bri• fain. This we know to be a mistake There is no diferetioe of opinion between the two tivern meats on the imbject." ANOTII/1 INDIAN BATTLE—The Platte Argun, of the Bti ink, notices • rumor derived from a gentlemen, just in from the Grasshopper, that another engagement bad occurred between the formes is command of General Hersey and the &Nur lodises. Tie informant professed to have meshed the intelligence from an express en route for Forth Lenvenworth with the news sod die psalms. He learned nothing beyond the mere report that a battle bud taken plane. A Pitorusr.—The New York Day Book sage: "A little more than a year ago the New York Trunute said that no man in the North would dare to stand up who did sot advocate the re es tablishment et the lliseouri hue. Now itepposes its reohashilabsesseleutlfi So semi ice`Ortel•ra knoiwiedp of pub& sestiament." --4.-- - -- 11W YORK o..rrlmpuirlitiOted of A* fe,• Ober*" Nor You, Noveiiiber O. 1111 6 . The pvo one kindred year_ bike wiulsesed the triutuph if Mina oYer 'setter, the eattjuga n..ll lii elements to matt', will, and the al whit magical bridging over of the skips* of time and gime Have we humans ever thought, com placently acid triumphantly, our sucoessiesia—that the b 'Ave often rises upon the master, and that the victor:ultimately b- , couses the vanquished. Booth to say, there is danger of it. Steam and lightning have done our hurried . bidding—but as we will not allow them sleep nor rest, so they refuse the burin to us There is danger that oar physical euduraoce will not hold out against the demands Upon it. We will eveaturlly suocumb to the iron muss , s and the fiery energy of the giant power., we have enslaved Two hundred years ago, this little city of the !daub awes, carried on its duties of trade, and commerce, and produetiou, of life and death, in a good old genial, wholesome and comfortable way Men lived their whole allotted three score and ten in boal.h and good looks, and left a de cent luberitance and a good name to their cLil dren The thtug cannot be done now Steam and the telegraph are harrying as too fast. Life is shortened—health and beauty destroyed, and c•itupetitt , m and exeitetueut are perilliog pro perty and reputation Just think of a great city without an excitement tor the space of a month There Lutist he something got up, or the papers would be e xtinguished and the community would become "blue moulded" as the- Irishman that "piled" fur want of a "bating " Both sides of the Atlantic are doing their part to prevent such a Jatawri , .phe We have got up a panic here -1 about the supposed monetary difficulties in Eng land, and England has gut a fever about our sup posed intcutiou of universal conquest. The paragraph market and the supply of gossip are Largely glutted and humanity has the supply of the dangerous stimulant to which it basso fatally accustomed its system This affair lan anticipated rupture with ling- ; land is of more imprirtance than is generally sup. pissed. That piwer has valuable possessions in niduras, liar a few huoilred miles north of the Mit4tiutto tier assumed protectorate of that unhealthy uu I desolate coast is not main- tamed, beeange of any value placed upon the dominions of his copper colored majesty, but be cause of its h...ug a sort of outwork which she must hold in or.lor to retain possession of lion. dorms The LiArb Jr of Cir.) town, would also be a point, which, if in the hands of Americans, might ale serve for a reu lesvous for fillabustera s p i ns, Cuba an 1 u.nuist..ly Against all the West India colonies of Victoris But above all these England looks forward to the cAmpletion of the Inter-oceanic eanal, whieh must ins few years be a re.tlizAtion. vrhieh must find its western terminus at Grey Luau. it is important that she milould hate a coutrAiing, influence upon the con struction and couduct vswork which must become a great highway of nations. The grant for this work resid,•s iu the aceetisary Transit company derived from Lae State of Sicarangus. The late expedition of &Juni and Walker, having some app treut support fr tzt the Transit Company, and els.) an alliau.e iv; th tto• Nicarauguans, as well as suspec.o.l fileudlines. from the United States Al•niuistration, so excited the jealousy of the t.44eeu's zoverucuout, and this is probably the c .4 the presence. of the West India fleet in - tc rit bn said without es.aggera- Liou, , h.tt tuere never las been • day, for several year , , when the flag of England, floating from a wan ,f war, has been Olen& from the little harbor tiv‘town Tli, fears of John WI of an invasion of Ire land are remote, if the exist at all. It is true, that Young Ireland Las had s romatio idea of the kind to this and utter cities, but as yet it has hardly taken form or oubstsnce. It is probably looked upm with s)me I..eur by Archbishop Hughes and his Corby, as weli as by the Know Nothings The eturen is desirous to strengthen and perpetuate its iweentlancy in that island which is somewhat endangered by the drain of the faith ful to this country She also finds that the obe dience of her children is somewhat shaken by their intercour.e with the heretic Americans, and would be glad to sue Ireland uuce more indepen dunt awl Catholic. In this cJanecti.n, we notice an etentof some importance Mr. fliotuas Francis Meagher has just been married at the Eptaeopal residence by Archbishop Hugles to an Ainerscan lady and an heiress of the such aristocraey of the Fifth Aye- Mr Meagher is the representative par e.rcelleitre of Y.aag - Irclaud in this country He has alway o bees supposed to ba opposed to the influence of the Catholic Church and Clergy, to gether with his compatriot exiles. That impres. sion is How dissipated and Ireland is safe for the , Pope uuder a republic or a monarchy. Wheth er Mr Meagher aspires to elevated political posi:ion to this c,untry or to power in indepen dtut Erin, time will show. In either cafe agi. tation and the "riot" will aid his viewf. CM The Crystal Palace after a demonstration of its e-Jpaeity for drawing crowds at the Fair of the American Institue, is now destined to become a permanent institution of New York. It is to remain open during the winter, with whatever attractions may turn up. ERIE. SUNBURY AND Eau RAILROAD. — We learn from the Sunbury American that the last span of the bridge over the Susquehanna, on the Northumberland side was put up last week. The bridge on the Sunbury side is nearly up. Both will be sufficiently completed for the passage of locomotives before the first of January. The small link of read making through Sunbury, to con nect the Philadelphia and Sunbury Railroad with the Sunbury and Erie, is also rapidly progres sing. The rails are now beiig laid on a portion of it, and the whole will be ready, we presume, by the tune the bridges are completed. We may, therefore, expect that the cars of the Sunbury and Erie road will commence running from this plice by the first of January next—when coal will b carried direct from the mines at Shamokin to Elmira and all intermediate places nn the Sun bury and Erie road, Williatmport and Elmira, and different points un the New York and Erie Railroads. ANOTHER SCOUNDREL CAGED.-A "fancy" negro barber, known in this community by the soubriquet of "Professor Hines," was arrested on Saturday by officer Young, charged with ate tempting to mimic an indecent outrage upon the penes of a white woos° named Elmira Mo- Laughlin. It appears that the ebony-colored ras cal detained her in a private room, ender pre tence of "telling her fortune," when he desired her to fa vor his with a "model artiste" exhi bition. The woman indignantly declined, when the amorous . "Professor" attempted to scoots piish by violence what he had failed to obtain by persuasion. After a bearing before Justice Sny der, he was committed for trial. The develop ments of this infamous outrage caused intense in dtgnstion in our community, curl it was fortunate fir the "Pr.)lth.,-or" that he faded to obtain bail and was sent to prison, where, for the present, he is secure from the violence of ft excised psalms. —Harrisburg; Herald. istiyal at . Niw Yoe x, Nov. 21. - ~,n,i sissie s The Steetherr North Bier arrived been this The Washington Vision of ?mod iy is ()exit , 'Z'' , '. s n ort i ng Bee left Cowin Roads at, daybreak, ing the statement made by the Erie, __A A'hom of av," 7P ~“:,,4,„5,eni. ^' :'`,., morning, of die fultrih and brings the second edi- New York, to the effect that wba. Ar. Cratuptoo lace IN as t. e, , tion of the Landon Times and 117 Passengers. I had dune in relation to recruiting 1.. r the British t: i !'"h* 9.n1 ; '. k. 2 No additional political news o(importance from army in this country had the sanction of Mr th e 1.7: •1• '' " ''' ' Europe. I Murray, says:— 4 . Tho eosins f.r .aut,, s t .. tyt k Tue Loudon Times contains f ille letters from "We say, and are authorised in the fulliest 1 1- N'""" - ` .. i '"'• Chiva received by the overland mail. A large i terms to say, that the i mputation thus m a de ~n ! PALLF r,' , 14 ,i 7 ... 1 .1., , and heavily armed piratical fleet h a d been d ea . Mr, Marcy, is a, falsehood, by whomeoever it was I Dever tic . t,..6c, e e ..,, . ' treyed to the :northward of Shanghai, by the penned or prompted a in whatever sense to be . ! ,j u . 7 6 v P‘'' in l 4 "" 7, British war brig Bittern. Nineteen vessel., were taken It is utterly, and to .le relations , toviYir h a,, t . a,..i ~, ' destroyed. Cauton quiet imports improving, .false that in what Mr Crane ist,4l has don- iia had s,,i ~ ~,,,,, ~, , ~, awl holders of goods ars looking for higher pro the previous sanction of Mr. Marcy, official or . .;;;V;`, , .,'li' l jr A '7 v . . r e , • _ cos. Three crops of DIM ,ottongons bad arrived, noofficial. Nay, we aver the; the precise con- i , -at . 1ie ,„,,,: x74 : - '''''' for which exorbitant prices were aisle el the. trary is the face" , waiel. ci.,:4r , 0 at , ^iwitsirly m , ',, crop of Canton silk very short, and all taken for It then administers the following just rebuke gwou.y). I .) ILLEI'i P +IS t- '‘. I SAMS. II •I Mt, . r. I, at, I mauve manufacture, at high prices. At Shanghai to the impudent article of the Loudou ridner. i prevented. SI .re...,...r. L C... tow, .! the import market had also improved and shirt- "A.s for the ',Aion Times, wtiieh takes as the i bias,,, at bane t1,1,/ , 114.r 4 .. 1. .'./ lugs were taken at advanced prioes. 1 theme of ita recent assault on this repehlie the I re . c0 .,,,,.,e,„.0 , .. 10-,..11 1 ree l ,. .1 . 1 P . " , Cb oo dates are to the 27th August A absolutely (else sod gre,uwiless declaration that ;„„ / I' u • ' - I' f'L proclamatiou announces that after September 13, I "in her ports are fitting oat, at thus moment, ' N ' ''' l "' r" , f , 0 • duty of tux Mace per Bieln will be levied on piratical fillibuettriug espeditions, destined t o 1 , " -: .1 " ",''' , ' „i ''' '' ~ " '' IC vise ,. teae grown in the Frovidcee. or brought to Foo carry war and bloodshed into the dominions of pe er EX reN.7l , Jil ; ChOi for sale. Foo Cboo prices show a decline ian unoffeuding neighbor," we sincerly trust that N Pea. 1.5 t r ,... o' .... .„. , . Duraug the month four vessel.. had sailed for it way utterly fail to exercise any effect what- '‘'.`,'/''/" k .." I. .. it,t "' • 1 Ir i ''''t . 4 ' Agleam= ever, good or had, upon the existing political re- ',E t . ~,y,„,y,„ ;', ~,,, . .;,,,,”" Amoy Advice. are to the 3d Sept C Awn and lotions of Great Britain bud the coiled States. A. cotton yarn improving in prices, with a fa i r d e . Whatever may be said or thought in Great Bre ' ` t i'” maud i taiu of the lawlessness of individuals or the tei• Hoeg Kong dates to 15th dept. Freighte hid 1 ereuce of government in the I:lined States. we, declined, and the passenger traffic to Australia on the other baud, in this country, lia,it with an d C a l i f ornia was a l most ann ihil a t e d, in c oo s e. I amusement on the fact that „the Loudon Times, queues of the restrictive measures lately adopted which lives but to lie, who-e ectry breath is a there legates:Chinese emigration. libel, whieli fiber/blies soil grows let of habitue! The United Buttes ship Powhattan and sloop crime, and which, by nit , tolerance 1r eni ..)!, at Vandalic were at Hong K o ng, an d th e m em o ° • j the timid or vicious Laud% o f the taw, goes un• man at Shanghee whipt by that justice which d ea u t spare le-. totettievous malefactors—we are amazed at the feet, which we sec but do not comprehend, that the Times has been permitted by the peove of Great Britain to arrogate and wise to itsvif the dictatorship , f i hat country—au eutoeracy ,f mere falsehood, malignity, and wiekedriele—by wheel it ie &hie to drive low obscurity her beet and purest statesmen like Abeideeu Jed Newca..Ait and Gladstone, to nound on to di-gra,...., ,r 1_4.1 her chosen military or naval captains, its,. Rag lan, Simpson, Dunbar, Boxer and Christte; to break down administrations and armies, and per petually to embroil Great Uritaiu with all the governments of Europe and America; to .iiienate and repel Ler friends and to render se r e Lui•ulieb implacable. There may be wealtuess of admin istration in the Unoed States, there tosibe Lie' Less meu among our people, but thatik*eave.n: this example of bid edameace in depravity, and in crime, and of diatultions influence upon ivuolie affairs and upon society, ha- the Beat of its malev olent and ia...tious iiiflueuee u it In lillerle.l, and if it a.;14,1 exert, at tti- pr.... , o f I.ule, any ll:taut:l2c+ , On al.! pialeal relation et the two i ountr,cs it nil, Li i so Duly by means Ot . its toierated usurpa tion 0. pub:it authority in (treat Britain. 11 - ,•ak and laws'-s,- as we may be it; the ...,Liminon "1 the London Times, we continue to Ise govern , d b . t lawful authority under the constitution of the United States.- Arrival of the Steamship Canada. The Royal Mail Steamship Canada arrived at this port about one o'clock this afternoon. Eler ad.vices from Liverpool are to the' 10th ta•it, ouc week later than that brought by th:. Pacific, at New York. The eansda will bc duo at Ihstou at a late hour on Friday night, so that her mails will probably reach New York on Saturday of ternooo. The excitement in Great Britain in regard t) the threatening aspect of the relations between that government and the United States, had to tally cooled off, and nothing of a belligerent na ture had transpired during the week From the seat of war there is no news of irn portauce, beyond some unreliable rumors of bat tles near Perekop and Simpheropol, which were generally discredited. At the latest moment a report was in circulation that Nieolaie-ff had been bombarded by the allies. - Peace rumors were quite abundant, but they wj r apparently withou foundation Stirumons efforts viere being made to bring Sweddn into the western alliance Unfriendly relations were arising between Great Britain and Spain, respecting certain disputed claitn9 The Liverpool cotton market had exhibited considerable animation, and owing to a limit, d supply of the current qualitie, au advance had been fully established on some it riptiuus. Tbr quotations are higher than those advised by the Pacific The week's busine.3 aggregoged aver 77,000 bales, nealy one third of whink4wer, ta kvu by speculators and exporters. - litreadstuffs.—A general advance had taken place, and all descriptiont, closed with au dctiv,. demand. Brown, Shipley & Co. quote wheat 3d higher, flour h and corn 28 6d higher. Provisions had undergone no change of mo ment A further considerable advanc • ui ruj3ra t..tl Laken place. It IS runrared that Ituisia aec.•pt , ttic ofii.:r of mediator between Denaisrk mud the oitol Stater The allies sly that the Russians are making preparations for a retreat The excitement respecting 01.2 K.tr with the United Stater had quite subsided. The leading journals are ashamed -f the pan-' ic, ana in their attempt to excuse, let themselves gently down by attriduting the pretended hoatile attitude of America to an lecton ruse un the part of the President and Cabinet. Intelligent EngliAmen of all rank, express themselves pained and humiliated by the whole affair. SPAIN. Unfriendly relations were aribiug be tween England and Spain, in the case of Mr. Buylan, a British subject expelled frlm Cubt, notwitbstrncling his agreement to submit his grievances to arbitration The Bnti•h Combul, attNew Orleans demand for Ilblian's losses A MOB IN LONDON APPSASICD BY Ma. Bu- CRANAN.—A Washington letter says— " Last night the President received a telegra hie dispatch from some per-on in New York relat ing to a rumor or stateui ut brought oy passengers in the Pacific, to the effect that a-crowd or mob, very much excited by the representation that the Ministry designed to go to war with the United btates, assembled around Lord Palmerston's holm,, in a threatening and resentful manner, and that Mr. Buchanan appeared before them and gave them satisfactory assurances that there was no danger of the occurrence of a war between the two countries, and that so far from having demanded his passports, in consequence of any difficulty, the oorreepondenee between him and the liovernment had been of s very amicable na ture. How much truth there may be in this di-- patch I cannot undertake to judge; but it appears that toe Times' article, if it could raise a mob. could not much affect United States securities on the stock exchange. as.. The Berlin Advertiser says: "In regard to the statements which have appeared in the London papers, it happens to be in our power to state that letters have been received in t•ur city, under date of October 31, in nhieh it is stated from a source entitles to full confidence, that Lord Clarendon has assured Mr. Buchanan that the articles in the Times and Post were not in ac cordance with the views and feelings of the govern ment. PorrzY SOBERID Doirtt.—l' 03 thinking of the time, Kate, when sitting by thy 'ode, and shelling beans I gazed on thee, and felt a Wondmns pride. Iu silence leaned we o'er the pan, and neither spoke a word, but the rattling of the beans Kate, was all the sound we heard. Thy auburn curls hung down, Kate, and kissed thy lily cheeks; thy azure eyes, half filled with tears, bespoke a spirit meek. To be so charmed as I was then had ne'er before occurred. when the rattling' of the beans, Kate, was all the sound I beard. I thought it was not wrong, Kate, so leaning o'er the dish, as you snatched up a lot of beans, I snatched a nectared kiss And a sudden shower made my eyes blind; I neither saw nor stirred, but the rattling of the beans Kate, was all the sound I beard. SINGULAR CIRCUMSTANCE.--Not long since, Mrs. Kendrick, wife of Jamei Q Kendrick, ofji Tasewel county, liirginikafter au i (neas ~ f sonafr weeks, presented every czr,•rual mptom if death and preparation. were made for her interment. About ten hours after her apparent ricoPo.,e, the , friends who were employed in making a shroud i were amazed to hear her ask, in a fAiot v.)ice, for food. It seems that she had a cataleptic fit, which fortunately passed off in season to preveut the horrors of premature buri44. She was, how ever, very low at last accounts. Mir Oliver Jones, a black man, convicted of j rape under very aggravating circumstances upon a Bohemian woman at Chicago, Lab been Beaten ceci to the Penitentiary fur twenty one yekna. I Rscovintnici:—We base received a call from Mr. Johathweit, the eelebrated sub marine diver, ' whose physical system was prostrated and Dearly ' paralysed kin August, while he was attempting , to recover the treasure lost by the American Ex• press Compasy in the Steamer Atlantic on Lake Erie. Mr. Green has been subjected to a tedious ' and painful 'limas, but is now rapidly recovering, and iotwaa so mow hit Alois is the oomiag ,apriag.—Bostost orth Stu. HALIFAX, Nov 2? The Washington Vidal on *a Tit !or Tat. Commendable Energy In th- New York. Ti 171.3 N , vemb. r I.3th, tueuti to i, made 0f.% g• ntlenrin, ! ,1' Lilt ,14 til,2 Nat V. Wu , the nututier fie". lately decapitated by t.. • actein of the Bord Washington, and woo has r cetitly %et -.•ed the, command of a merchant vessel Wo !newt di this c-tince—havi ng heard several like it sp, , k..n ot—as wirthy of commendation, ati.l as in dicating a pr./is-worthy Qpirit tf t riterprp-e If all the g' ntlemen similarly situated were to and do .i,:ewice; we believe that not only :hey themselves would find that in the end they hid lost tiull ng by slit h a eliaugr, but that th • coun try wonei beSgainer. (Oulu , years tie , charicter of our merehant marine has greatly iluproved. and no gentleman need be apprehonsive of a I is. of posit, .11 los, acting a command to it At th present &ay tic' United Stitt s bout a h••,t rer tonnage than any nation in the world. England not accepted. and such an imp.irtant iiiement in our neti , dial prosperity surely ti t ,..1. 3 t., c l aim and receive that high consideration to the per ons to its officers to which it is entit . .id A charge from a salary of fifteen blander. per annum arid dependence on the whims of cuts , rtors to that of four thousand and c onparat lee independence--as in the case cited by the Tones --whould also be worthy consideration. No gentle man following so honorable a calling need appre- hend that there can be any loss of respectab; in the opinion of those whose opinion is worthy of respect, and we accordingly hope that t , precedent will have many followers. HEAVY ROBBLELLES —Ott Ttik•.vlay a mao who had been for :.4oterul years in C4iif,irrtt, arriv , - in thi- ei'y and pu• up at the Irving Houso U. Ltd %4114 hint ifel,ooo to gold witit.h Le fc an hi , trunk instead (d . dep.tetting in toe sae tio tel His r..,nm was ent , red uwan , f a tAise lug the 811113 C evening, and every dollar earriA off by some unknown anal The p•ilice vr.2re im mediately notitied„'and are now endeavortng t., find Ow offender, but their suceeNs is t.l,ub,ful. On th, same evening an aged gentleman was passing tort ugh West street, in the vicinity Washiugt.d.) \larket, when hi breast pocket wa out nut and 82,100 in bank bills, and a enuh..l cueek for $4: 4 (.)0 carried of Jo •leiterousiy was the , perii:lLma performed, that h. was unaware of it l u l u, I;il,,rru e d by to:other pert qi Tit. • stolen was ly ail lie possessed. en 1 h. was s • a 4 3 , ....teri by tho I iss that 14, f/iu:, I atilt rematued seAsclew until a phy , :, dais wits onl led and resb.reahim Hi' , reN:deLleti 14 in the interior of the State..—N F. Corr. MR. FILLN.ORE —The Berlin oirresp. Eiden! qj the Tritune under dAte of Oct. 27th b.,35: Mr Filiwore has been here a few days II hag dined one aftcro. , m with the King, arid i , said ch.': up.m Lis departure the Kiug e him one of hta aids de camp as u eompau.yu point uut to him "the fatnes4 of the land New York Markets. Rip° rtetif ,r the Oturerver by Bemmett 41 ffouwinytow. Comions Iferearrya., 4 Front Sinhet, New York. The market for Flour ban ruled steady dung .he week, with slight advance under the itilluenle of • c.ear• r finan cial nky The i.ws by the tfic creates nv material change, (slthough inuoh in said ahlut war, but Pirengtb ens the market r•m-what by imparting oonlideace in pit.- eat price.. BRZADITCTIFS.— loot* common dtkteti.749.t. 81: ex tra, do S.,7ialr 121 extra Geoessee, 10:pa1 U.OO, eotninott to god Alicaagan, 8.75a8,87i, extra do., 1 0,0100.2): Mtn - !LOU l R .) I Onio, hililltd& sod Wise ,, n4in. l o.l.'4Ali.l2l extra v,3lj.i? 13,e Flimr, 8,5tia7,:r0. Coro 114mir 4 Buzawheat Flour has beau very IJriag tlto week, with sale• t4l per Iwo ; be. firt•:\ he..t. The supply of flue • , h,ppiri4 /Cola, either white 1 - ri:o.r litaiteJ, rad it g demand ‘..sp • r of white state and e...,t,rn, .111.1tv.s •orl Wier 2.004:: 05. red do 1,7511.96, grime C.iriadolu, 2,108.2.2,25 rod d , 1 753175, white cuntala 2.1 , 1)42," 25; nye is 6,m e 1 2 . 21/.21 Of.ts. I a.ler l . f•n• 51e f wr.t,rrn. Corn 971398 e bu. fur wrcerri PRovw ..z - P ,rk firm with a good d"rn.,• a22.62i t.r :2,50e,22, 75 ••,.1 Prime m•••ir 21.25, country mire , . Beef II 06417 00r1..1. prime 0.00a111.00. rep.ecke•l Ct..eag . conntri. 16 511, e tra mess. 16,50, prime mr,•, 20,00 4 2.4.00, Beef Elam , , 14 501:,110. Lire 11 c.l. 7}37 , 1 , . Preseecl Here. 9191 e. • Hermit—Batter is ia brisk *wand and scree. Piitor state dairy collo readily at 23a24e lb.• frreh fall made 24a 25e; eamatoa and store parked 20&22; Ohio and pen n . iylrania Fall madeuoiforia Color 181119. con mon and %M. otter made 15a17; Illlauw, Indiazii, and Wisconsin 10e21, great* batter 11a124c Lard 12a1211e lb. clintsa.—Cnes— 1.1 firm a? 104s110 lb. o , r p-im• dairy state. and HalOi for (Attested Ponasylvanta. PRovtacWool.—Dried A pplee are In !mak demand. e , ditZo lb fi , r etappbag. Oroon apples 1,2 J oil 10 por barrel. Dried Pesobee 13a14c.; do. Pions 14e15e lb Wu l f,. I'.a ,s are Very /:, , IrCe acto roktoe.t, our sale* to day were at 240 bush. Canada Pees l,yl Aa vh Tto - tno rioted g. 1.2; &tab. Cluny seed lOtel lb. Plait need J.OO liopsliSoa lb. for old and 10a134 lb lot good ee.t.- ern and print* western. Aosita.---Pete,are Ora ss 0.4746 Pearls 6441. hialerabee 6,00 wow..—Y SON lliarric, tat 12441, 11. Tiim NEW YORE. N-vilmlber 21 1455 Wm. A. Li ,r 1 as.. =CB IZEIMIZI lIIIZI ea .4 11.10 ,C1.V.1 I • / ?.1 ,/ II • 11 ,, wo" w •1 If. y •L. S.ur ai. II .11.1 whet. •r a • , r • I I) - E. th , r 4rn . Tuot.D. i.r It E • . : -eren , •er • t Kg:F.4,4 fire i• • "1 r, Pc, =EI I= ELIE t 1 n)r •t•tu y Jr4 •ftll.l t .r t I rr•rr IMZE 13=1E1 ••,••• ." 1 L T L -a {• e t ,' a t . 1 ~.tr, 1,, MIS MIELBSEE tip ~J tit r r .1 •by ewes • 1 ee male 11114 1.1 t. •Art, 4,•2, - ME Fa tYy, ..t MEIIIIOII *1 Pt nr.l 1 t:Ft a.. 1 must kd .1ro•1..0 X A R. I: I In rnt.tu. )a • I ),t) tt A '.IE• II Ai.. '' ut .••••• : • P. v L. F Mr. `I`:‘:11 • t .1 t Wll.l • •, MI i' '+ ° i_r•+ t `• Ml. ~ - F L It-Atti.tEr • 1, i . it I pin •t. *O3 1);;r More N,:w l'a 1. MEI 3 t,t - t . tot .1) t - Terms C tsa: Smi.i. "•• • ; • =ET= =NJ Groceries and fraris:,,i, tVare kq t. ^ tS , 0311,e• tent r tn , :3 „at 4118-1 EIMEMiI lil• 'll4 ^.l i ead .togue. wit II F, z • J r. • • iodd lied rAllo Scv !M. w t Ti.'t MEI Flour' Fur 507' '. IN ffMIIM Nu. Teac. TL , A Iv yt. rig H yft.a. ' ,1:4 .os AO ••1 1 ' • Nov :4 NOT:. LRIG l .1 DTrTnEND TI- Ca• .teelaro 1 a 4-tn. or ~ 2 , 1 cur la.t •ix tuuntl . payttt.,, azn THE Tlnter on We'ln.vhs • 21 z.S rd. LBI i - Pr lIE Iobx-nb••r I - • elms of r.. o i !. 11110 ler ua ler =MI ro I, g - , rr nt .f er ortharl nr .“ I in (Aber wipe tu a.. .t._ r Vn. 17 IC' lali~.. T ir t.ltt a •er y.lves n MI I= p cut nenc nc (1.! t.T. , Er, cceit at j ,„7i, P. 31 . tel 1141 a ' ,r! K. , T. , Auditor'. T HE tiolor..eno Urt t Er, County to I .01111,4 J 1 1 ! k . • the exec at .r• here',r . , meet at hia • , (8 . F.r e next atom p will be toads; Er e. r 7% SUMI-;THIN rVEltYlV,lll",v,...try . 11:4 is. 3EOI y •-• • ev Oita heari ,talts • a- % t rtty Ptlie • Jr ti agr , Pl. •an E = —aft qr.' tKICIZ 411 t cur. • .ruL iu ' s' It • COB= a rain. v nly ' . f , Jr) t. , orvfn,r, ha% r =MESE p RYA 4 •1 hr e uiore va Ur and a u • . bat ,o tLio••• .! ! :en n • , p /1111 . 1 . th .1 I. • , I=E 4 • I .1 , 1•• 714 J f.•w k, 1 , 4 111. t7lll/ . , nr. 4t. rig U• 0 iuu4-1 4 t tt•td 1.4411:1 N W 44 ,t I'l 4 ! , b'e El:r.let • 37/ , 1 ) . J• n• U t:t the wool. ".Y•hIJ t tAc ./s. rtllrrr•l in it, , - tn t icr , .t , n.t • r t nt• , t ('Yin intrnr nr "trp ti 1.1" MAI ) •. 4.(1.“ 11,1 tbv-4 wt,:, 1 / 4 , =EI I= CuIIVIOL., .1 t• . 1 .1. tt, .. , 1 r• • :.1 t'a 1.1. Oirto , • 1t.•tk.r;...• - I et th .0 , • ~cc !net, 101 l fAf. A ••Itue of 111111:1111 ILe•t• Lanunkest lasta andgna L. uti.. and our 410 "1" , . . rll P ' Ir'n•••• 11.3.rn, vr-sa e•qi aro Chile t and and rittff Ne•,, t 10.1 wnat.t.t,. t t, . : 4 • .1 ) WlVell Wide' ' IV le edicts of sold ur ruction , . 0 , Lases and cut a. and say you flood to kAorp on na.A. It or Iv. bottles for a d)l:ar. Pro Zr.,i Nor. 14, 1544.-211 13 =I IMI