Arrival of the Steam Ship GREAT WESTERN ELEVEN DAYS LATER FROM V.URi,PE. The steam ship Great Western Arrived at New York on the morning of the 15th inst. We t a ke the subjoined summary of her news from thy. U. S. Gazette: The Cotton Market was Siren, holders Allowing but little luelinat , ou to sell at lower rates. The ts,..ews broug,ht Over by the Cambria, wPA euniidered as favouting holders of 'l•he Corn Law Bill hail passed sscoNn reading by a majority of forty,seven. ('he war of this country with Mexico would, it was supposed, operate adversely to the final passage of the bill. 'I he neon of the Mexican war had been received by the Cambria, and had awaken. ml strong interests—the sympathy, gener ally, being in favour of the NI The Queen has had an addition to her family. The royal family now counts an other daughter. Toy OREGON NOTICE. —MC question whether or not the Pre,ident of the Uni ted States had given the notice respecting the occupation of the Oregon Territory by the 13, iiish Government having formed tile' subject of conteover:l in the Emllish and A nwrican press, we have the s;itisfaction nF slating, upon the highest authority, that such notice has been given. The Great NVeston conies nut on her present trip the answer of the British Government, which is of a consiliatory character. The King and Queen of France arc ex pected to visit England eat ly in July. The London Sun says nothing whatever can prevent the triumphant settlement of the Corn Bill, the tale of the Irish Coer cion bill is Lord George Bentick has declared that the great body of the agricultural members are opposed to its Girdle' progreso. The Cambria arrived on the.'Uth, taking out the news of the battle on the Rio Grande. The English papers publish all the facts without comment. MONEY MARKET—London, 29th, I o'clock.—The English securities have been effected in a considerable degree by the news from America. Declaration of war by that country against Mexico may, it is feared, involve us in fresh difficulties with the United States, and the (begun dispute will now become a question of secondary interest compared with others that will, in all probability, arise from the hostilities of our transatlantic neigh'mrs. ESCAPE OF LOUIS 111LONAPARTE FROM HAM. On Monday last the Prince succedcd in effecting his escape from the Fortress of Ham, after a close imprisonment for some years, having assumed the disguise of a workman.—He contrived to elude the vi gilance of the sentries to regain his free dom, without any molestation from the battalion of infantry that formed the gay ,s,e wale, and to arlive safety to London, where we believe he is at present. The Morning Herald says, as the Prince escaped at seven o'clock of the morning of the 25th, and as the event was not discov ered for ten hours afterwards, he could easily have reached the Belgian frontiers, only 0 leagues distant, long before the telegraph itself could have been set to work. The papers say lie embarked at St. Valery. PARLIAMENTARY SUMMARY. In the Commons Mr. O'Connell moved that the order of the 27th April, for the committal of Mr. W. S. O'Brien, be dis charged on the ground that the Committee of Selection, which had directed his at. tendance on a private bill committee was not itself properly constituted. In the Lords on Monday, the Duke of Welling ton moved an adaress to her Majesty, con• gratulatmg her upon the addition to her domestic happines, in the birth of anoth• er Princess—unanimously agreed to. The discussion on the Corn Bill then commen ced. M ARKETS —Liverpool Corn Exchange, Friday.—At the commeneetnent of our market to-day, a few sales of free wheat were effected to necessitinus business at a decline of 111. to 5.1 d. per 70 lbs. from the reduced rates of last mat ket, but the Lon don morning papers arriving by express about noun, stating a majority of 47 in fa vour of the Corn Bill in the House Of Loids, appeared wholly to engross the at tention of the trade; autl subsequently very little business was done, although rather lower prices would have been gen• erally conceded. It is difficult , however. to form any precisely accurate (potations for the moment ; we therefore wait the re sult of our next market, when the effect produced by this impoi (ant measure will probably be more clearly ascertained. Notwithstanding the large stock of wheat and flour lying here in b‘md, will shortly be r eleased at the near duty, we hear of no sales to-day in anticipation of the event, though We,.tern States flour is still offered at 28s per barrel. Baussr.Ls, 26.—The Minister of the in terior has brought torn ant a Law, author ising the importation of Corn and Provi sions until December, free of duty. All is quiet in Spain. INDIA AND CHINA. By au extraordinary express which reached London on the 20th inst. in anti cipation of the mail, we have received ad. vices from India and China ; the dates are Calcutta. April 7th' Madras 13th, Boni- bay l'Oth, China, March 2qth. The Bom bay Times of April I sth has the following brief summary of the news : the last lOrt night haS proved perfectly barren of intel ligence. Ihe Commander in Chief like the liovernor Ciencral, has quitted the Putijaub—the British garrison remains in• active at ',idiom, where the people are comlucting them elves with propriety, but there seems a considerable amount of -tur bulence up and down throughout the coon. try. The new cantonments were being arranged in the Julio oder•doub and their garrisons assigned to .hem. The Bombay troops begun to arrive at Rom about the first week of April, and were to be distri buted in the manner formerly described. People in the %% eaten, India were begin ning to suffer from scarcity, mainly bru'ght about by the deficiencies of lust season's rains• Cholera was spreading amongst the na tives. India generally is quiet—some failures of European houses connected with Bom bay have occurred. The weather is unusually cool for the middle ut April. Sir George Arthur, Gov. of Bombay, is greatly improved In health, and able to transact buisness and take his customary evening drive. COMMERCIAL I NTFLLIOENCE,—PEOVi - slims. There is nothing to report in the market for American Produce of such a kind as to require un extended notice. there is no important change in the val. ue of any article except U. S. Flour which has been sold on lower terms, say 225. to 245. for New Orleans. Western Canai Provisions without charge. Caledonia Arrived. FIVE D VirS LATER FROM EUROPE. BOSTON, June 18 The Steam ship Caledonia, Capt. E. O. Lott, was telegraphed this forenoon, at IC o'clock, and arrived at her v hail at half past 12._ . . . The Cotton Market has been reduced ag tin to a state or comparative quiet. Prince Louis Napoleon has arrived in England incognito, and is about to leave for Florence, there to join his invalid fath er. It would appear from what O'Connell stated on Monday, that Sir Robert Peel is determined to press forward the liish Co ercion Bill, when Parliament reassembles alter the Witsuniide holidays. The Oregon question has now ceased to give any uneasiness. . . England has offered her mediation bo• tween the United Slates :mil Mexico.— Mr. Packenham has received instructions to that effect from the Eritish Got erlin.et,t, by the Caledonia. Notwithstanding the unusual scarcity of tonnage, the Paris paper, La Presse, of Monday,reached our office last night,which announces that orders have been sent by the Minister of Marine to Brest, and the other military harbors, to dispatch a num ber of ships of war to the Gull of Mexico, to reinforce the squadron stationed there, in comequence of the war belt% een the U. ititatt.lend Mexico. On the subject, the same paper stales that much uneasiness exists now in Pat is. The opposition prints are all on the side of America, and predict an early conquest of Mexico by the United Ft.ites. The apprehension caus,tl by the war of the United States with Mexico, weighed on the Paris Money Market on Monday. The closing scene in the French Cham ber of Deputies show that M. Thiers has lost none of his pugnaciousin at. Ile had had a smart tilt with his great rival, M. Ouizot, in which the calm philosophy of the first Minister was more than a match for the fiery little historian t.l the Consul. ate. The Overland Mail of May the Ist, reached London yesterday. It posse%ses no political and little inteist. The seeds of another Sikh controversy were sown at the termination of the late war. Portugal has been the scene al another attempt at revolution, consequent upon a change of the Mioktry. It appears, for the Portuguese, to have been a more than an ordinarily energetic affair. ST. PETERSBURG, MBy 22. I regret to say that the cholera is ma king rapid strides towards this city, from a hence, no doubt, it will in time make its way to Western Europe. DANCING.—The Presbytery of Harris. burg, (New Schnol,) at their recent meet• lag. unanimously adopted the fullowirg re. solution on the subject of dancing : _ . Resolved, That it is [lie delibeJate con • viction of this Presbytery that dancing by professod Christians is in its tendency sin ful ; that L'hurch sessions should regard it as a fit subject for admonition, and if per sisted in, of disc;:ilit;e; ar,d that we com mend every appropri,:te effort which is put lorth to suppress thin evil. INJURY Ennui STORMS. , --We regret to laarn that the long continued rains and fre quent heavy thunder storms of the las! twit weeks, have in some instanc , a caused great danger. The barn of Mr. Fredrick seul t. near Spring Forge,was struck with lightieg and consumed on the evening of the 27411 ult. Mr. Sent( lust not only the building but all the contents, %%jilt a large number of farming utensils, six head of cattle, sev en sheep, and a quantity of grain in bags A friend also inlorms us that there was a very heavy hailstoi in in Fait view town• ship near Lisbon, on the 2541 ult. The bail stones which were vi ry numerous, were round and smooth as large as a hick try nut, and exceeded :n size and number any that have fallen in that vicinity fur 25 Years. The rye and fruit suffered serious injury. Fences were carried away by the heavy rain which accompanied the hail, some of which still remained the next morning.— lush' L'fpublictur. THE JOURNAL. There is a class of newspapers which denounce as traitors and tories all whodo not glorify President Polk for getting up the war with Mexico ; and the same papers are worm in their commendations of the President's policy in relation to the Tariff—a policy so extremely favorable to British interests, that Secretary Walker's report, illustrating it, was printed in immense numbers, by order of the Brit ish Parliament, for circulation among the aristocracy of England. A just rebuke is administered to that kind of patriotism, by the Germantown Telegraph, a neutral paper, in the following paragraph: We see papers and individuals denounced as lacking Ratriolism who disapprove a the war with Mexico, and others as traitors who would not go and fight for their country. This may be right enough; but we would ask what epithet is to be applied to those who are opposed to the industry of their country, by which the masses obtain their support, and in favor of the industry of other coun tries coming in competition with ours, and in a measure destroying it? What epithet should be applied to them I Do not they lack patriotism, and are they not traitors? it would seem to he a work of supererrogation, almost, to fight in defence of your country, when your country. after you have, at the hazard of your lifeprotected it, turns round and refuses to protect you i n the enjoyment of the fruits of your labour, against the very people whom you had just before been called upon to fight and kill, for reasons a thousand times less important to " The Falsehoods of the Fair." you personally.—Germatilown Telegraph. The above is the caption of an article in the p sax eases of the Government. Washington Union, Mr. Polk's official organ, re- Week before lust, Mr. Webster, in debate, stated forcing to the late exhibition of specimens of Amer- to the Senate that the expenses of the government icon Industry in Worthington city, which astonished were about $500,000 per day and on Monday of and delighted the heart of every true American and last week he referred to the subject again, and said friend of his country, who had an opportunity of he did not wish to be understood as speaking from examining them. It is a subject of regret and nor- any knowledge of his own, but from calculations row that Mr Polk should select as his Organ, made by persons familiar with tire subject, the pres- Printer and Dictator, such a deadly enemy to Amet ent expenses of the government, including the ex icon Manufactures and American Mechanics and pauses of the army, transportation of troops, &c., Laborers, as Felber Ritchie. This venal editor, in could not amount to much less than half a million the four years of Mr. Polka administration, will of dollars per day, though it was not probable they realize not less than ONE HUNDRED and FIFTY would long continue at that amount. We should THOUSAND DOLLARS by tbe public printing hope not alone, besides the trimmings and dealings. And what consideration will he give to the country for such a reward I He will sacrifice our Domestic Manufactures and Domestic Industry, to foreign cupidity and avarice, so far as he has the power to do so. Rend the following from the columns of the Union, and say whether the man Who can thus sneer at the ingenuity and skill of his coutrymen is not a Tory and friend of Great Britain at heart: From The Washington Union. The eyes of honest men cannot be so dazzled by the exhibition of splendid articles of manufac ture, although of American workmanship, as to lead their judgments astray ; and when the atten tion of the fanner is called to magnificent bed steads, wardrobes, pier glasses and roaches, costing each their thousands, what will they say 1 They will say, who con afford to luxuriate in the enjoy ment of such extravagant ;widen, fit only for ener vated royalty, or princely dissipation; none save the Lords of the Loom and /he Spindle, who have 'leeched our pockets to enable themselves to sleep on beds of down and revel in luxury, to enable them to pour out their gold for such purposes as the making of all this show, in the hope that en Amer ican Congress is weak enough to be led may from the true interests of three-fourths of the people of thin country, to leave them in poverty 41.1. utipti them down with indirect taxation, while they lavish on the other fourth the means of living in the mag nificence of lordly luxury ? This is what the far mer will say, or think, if he does not say it. And Ihe will add : Put they reckon without their host, for no such weakness exists; the eyes of many a member must be opened to the extravagance 6f the age by this very exhibition. and many a lukewarm anti-tariff mail will now come forward and with warmth and energy demand that protection he taken away from these lords of the loots and spin dle!!" HUNTINGDON Wednesday, June 24, 18t6, Whig Candidate for Canal Commissioner, JAMES M. POWER, OF MERCER COUNTY, 0:j. Hon. John Blanchard, Hon. A. Stewart and Hon. J. M. Clayton, have our thanks for pub. does. APPOINTMENTS IIY Tun ATTORNEY GENERAL. —JOHN SCOTT, Jo., Esq., to be Prosecuting Attorney for Huntingdon county, JOHN CH ESS WELL, Esq., to be Prosecuting Attorney for Blair county. Ye Tariff Democrats, who voted for James K. Polk instead of Henry Clay, what say you to this phraseology ? " Lords of the Loom and the Spindle !" Is the man who converts his capital to set looms and spindles in motion, and thereby gives employment to hundreds of poor Laborers, and en ables them to procure an honest livelihood. better Weir condition and gain an independence, to be called lords and stigmatized as aristocrats / Father Ritchie well knows that the object of making these magnificent bedsteads was to show to what perfec tion mechanical skill had arrived at in this country under our protective system ; yet he gives it this demagogical turn, for the purpose of bringing into scorn and derision the mechanical skill and manu facturing industry of our countrymen. No hritish agent--no tool of Sir Robert Peel, has published anything so malignant and base against our me chanic., as this publication in the Union. And yet this old man is still permitted to conduct the government press. Whatever he dictates, the President and A majority of Congress submit to and dare not resist. He says, "Now is the time to repeal the Tariff of 1842," although our expenses for the war with Mexico are four times as much as the Tariff of 1842 will yield in duties. If the du ties were doubled, they would nut meet the expenses of this Mexican war. At the end of Polk's administration, we know of no man that will he as able to luxuriate on a bed of down upon one of those splendid bedsteads of American manufacture, as Father Ritchie himself. He can retire with a princely fortune, as Blair did before him ; and his successor in office may then describe his country seat and elegant furniture, as he did Blair's, to the astonishment and delight of the hard-fisted Democracy. Yet thisold man claims to be the friend of the poor and laboring classes of the country !! Of all the States in the Union, Pennsylvania will suffer most front this weak and corrupt admin istration, to the support of which she was brought by falsehood and deception. The Pa. Telegraph and Union Star, of the same date, suggest. Gen. Taylor for Vice Piesident with Scott for the Presidency. A strong team. (yrj At a meeting of the citizens of Trenton, N. J., on lest week, " Old Rough and Reedy" was nominated for President. A meeting was called for the same purpose in New York, but upon assem bling. they abandoned their original intentions and merely adopted a series of resolutions compliment ing Goa. Taylor, and those under his commend, for their gallant achievements upon the banks of the Rio Grande. What is Patriotism? Now JUDO The debt discharged.—President Polk has nominated John K. Kane, Esq. of Phil adelphia, as Judge of the Eastern District of Penn sylvania, in the place of Judge Randall, deceased, It is understood that this appointment is in consider ation of the important correspondence between Mr. Kano Jr. l ible Polk, in the campaign of 1844 the one ether" having secured Mr. Polk's elec tion. Does our neighbor of the Globe claim to be the organ of the entiro Locofoco party of Hunt ingdon county, the , Gwin faction' included? If so, his interrogatory to us of last week is answered. Plan of the Campaign against Wes- The New Orleans Picayune of the sth inst.,con tains a plan of the Mexican campaign under Gen. ' Taylor, in which hie course of operations will be, first, the capture of the town of Camargo, situated on the Rio Grande, 250 miles by water above Mat amoros, so soon as transports can be procured for the troops, for which purpose Gen. Taylor has des patched Cvt. Saunders of the army to New Or kiln, Beare reaching Camargo, the army will have to take the town of Reynosa, which is between Matamoras and Camargo. This latter town will be the basis of operations upon Monterey as the depot of supplies From Camargo to Monterey is about 120 miles. and the country more fertile than that between Matamoros and Monterey. Gen. Tay lor designs to be at Monterey in all July, where it is supposed the Maxims will make a stubborn stand, if at all, during the war. It is added, that if the troops under Gen. Tay lor occupy Monterey, the whole of Mexico this side the Sierra Madte will be in the possession of the United States, including the milling districts of New Leon, Now Mexico, Santa Fe, Chihuahua, &c., &c. This calculation is based somewhat upon the idea that the United States will order an expe dition from the Missouri river upon the northern provinces. If this be dune the whole of north Mex ico will he in our possession. Such a disposition of the forces of the United States Would end the war at once. But if it did not, our army would hold the key to the whole of South Mexico, and the gates of the capital would, speaking in a military sense, be in the possession of Gen. Taylor. President's Message. On Tuesday the President transmitted a message to the Senate in reply to the resolutions oll'ered by Mr. Lewis, a few days since, calling for estimates of the present and probable expenses of the Gov ernment, together with a statement on the subject from the Secretary of the Treasury. The President and the Secretary BOTH RE COMMEND A MODIFICATION OF THE TARIFF to furnish means to carry on the govern ment. Mr. WALKER suggests an alteration in his miff bill so as to produce four millions and thirty four thousand dollars more revenue than he esti mated would be raised by his original project of the tariff: From his estimate of expenditures, there would be, ho says, a deficiency of fourteen millions of dollars! A warehousing system, ho thinks, would bring this deficit down to thirteen millions, and to meet this expense he asks power to issue Treasury notes in preference to loans or direct to. s Mr. Walker estimates the expenses of the ensu ing quarter, of next fiscal year, at twenty-six mil lion of dollars, (more than a quarter of a million a day !) The message and the report were then ordered to he printed and referred to the Committee on Fi nance. ej. Does our neighbor of the Globe approve of the effort now making by his party in Congress to repeal the Tariff act of 1842 , This is a question in which the people have a deep littered, and we therefore confidently expect an unequivocal answer to it. a} The Philadelphia Sun shrewdly remarks in substance, that, should Scott become popular among all lovers of good soup," his chances for the Pre sidency would be no littlo enhanced. Look out Means. Locofocos. You may run against a snag. 'l•bat • hasty plate of soup' may he the death of you! From the Pennsylvania Inquirer. Important TROal yr.,/ s in.7l TOA WANIIINOTON, June 17th, 1846. It has been agreed that the Tariff Bill shall be de bated in the House until two weeks from Monday next. It is thought that the session will then terminate • early in August. Mr. Polk is confident that the war will terminate in sixty days. He looks to the mediation of England. The Senate today, during the afternoon session, elected Mr. MeDuffie chairman of Committee on Frireign Relations, then went into executive session on the treaty, and soon afterwards adjourned. The votes until the fourth balloting, were chiefly divided between Mr. Sevier and Mr. Webster. Mr. Archer having withdrawn, Mr. Webster withdrew after the 34 balloting, and Mr. Sevier after the sth. Mr. MeDuffie had 31 of 53 votes on the 7th balloting. The Supplemental War Bill has finally passed both Houses. Mr. Secretary Walker, I am informed, has issued orders to collectors to grant clearances to American vessels for Matamoras, thus throwing open that port and the Northern Provinces of Mexico for the introduction of American products,and manufac tures. WASHINGTON, June 18—P. M. The Oregon Treaty, without qualification, was ratified this afternoon—yeas 41, nays 14. The following is a brief abstract of it: Article 1. Fixev the territorial boundary between the United States and Great Britain, west of the Becky mountains, on the tine of forty-nine degrees, till it reaches Queen Charlotte's Sound, and then through the Straits of Fuca to the ocean, which gives to Greet Britain Van Couver's Island. Art. 2. Declares the navigation of the Columbia river, up to where it strikes the line of forty-nino degrees, to be free to the Hudson's Bay Company, during the continuance of its charter. Art. 3. The rivers, parts and harbors north of the forty-ninth degree, to be free to the commerce of both nations. Art. 4. Indemnity for the forts and trading sta tions of the Hudson's Bay Company south of for ty-nine degrees, and of the Americana north of the same, if any there he. Art. 5. Indemnity for private property of citizens or subjects who may be south or north of forty nine degrees, if they wish to retire within their own territory. Gen. Gaines, with his aid, Capt. Calhoun, arri ved in Washington this evening. having received his orders from the War Department on the 10th, and started on the 11th. G3.DBOUSTED !—After the vote in the Sen ate for the settlement of the Oregon dispute, Mr. ALLEN became disgusted! ! and asked to be ex cused from serving any longer as Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations. The Senate ex cused him unanimously; and Mr, McDuffy has since been elected. The Wan A letter from Major General Taylor to Governor Johnson, written at Matamoros on the 27th ultimo, is published in the New Orleans papers. He says that "until more fully instructed as to the policy and intentions of the General Government, he can not speak with any certainty of the amount of force that may he required. He says that "if the Gov ernment is contented with a simple occupation of the Rio Grande," his present force is quite suji rient. "If, on the other hand," he continues, "an invasion is contemplated, an additi , nal force will be required, consisting in part at least, of mounted troops. I have just learned that war had been for mally declared by the United States against Mexico, and take for granted that Congress will at once adopt suitable measures for raising an additional military force. In this view of the case, I would respectfully recommend that no more volunteers be despatched at present front Louisiana." General Taylor concludes as follows I "In case I shall require an additional force of this description, which cannot be the case until pro per depots of supplies and means of transportation are provided, i will not hesitate to make a call, feel ing assured that it will be as promptly answered as before. In the mean time the organizations which have been already made will prove useful as the basis of future regiments or corps, should they be I wanted." Later From Mexico. By the echr. Merchant, Capt. Kean, arrived at Charleston on Sunday last, the Courier has received files of Havana and Matanzas papers to the 10th inst. From the Diario del Madonna, of the 9th inst., the following letter is translated: VER♦ Cnvz, June'l, 1846. • The consuls of the neutral nations have protected against the blockade of this port, declared on the 20th of last month, by the commander of the U. S. fleet, which allows only 15 days for foreign vessels to leave the port. The principal portion of rho American fleet is now at Join Verd, and the American men of war St. Mary's and Plymouth, and a small brig, are cruising before Tampico. Many families are leaving the city for the interior. We are now here, as in 1898, with the only differ ence that the Castle is in a better condition. After much delay, the Congress of the nation has the first meeting on the 27th, Senor Bustamente, ex-(resident, being appointed President of the same, and it is generally believed that Paredes will be elected legal President of the Republic. It is said that Paredes will march over to Mate mores at the head of a strong army—the largest portion composed of the body of troops called re serve. The departure of the army is fixed already, but nobody knows it. Gen. Bravo will occupy the Presidency ad interior. The suspension of pay ments continued, and Waimea remains In the worst condition. Government had called a meeting for the purpose of procuring resources, which I believe can hardly be obtained, because the clergy ore not able to pay the amount of $90,000 monthly, asked by the Government; and on the other hand, the actual condition of the several states is not such as to expect from them any resources." cO•• The Whigs of Schuylkill, at their late County Meeting, passed a reeotution in favor of Gen. Irvin for Governor. Appalling Calamity in Quebec. NEARLY ONE HUNDRED LIVES LOST. From the Quebec Mercury of June 13. It has again pleased the Almighty to afflict our already chastened city. Lain night al 10 o'clock, a fire broke out in the Theatre Royal, St. Lewis street, (formerly the Rid ing school) at the close of Mr. Harrison's exhibition of his Chemical Dioramas. From the informeiion we hove been able to glean, a Camphrene Lamp was overset, from some cause or other, and the stnge at once became enveloped in flames. The house had been closely crowded, but some had fortunately left before the accident. A ruah was at once made to the staircase leading I from the boxes, by those who, in the excitement of the moment, forgot the other passages of egress. In on incredib'e short space of time the whole of the interior of the building was.enveloped in one sheet of flame—the newly erected platform covering. the pit, and communicating at each end with the stage and boxes, favored the progress of the flames. The writer of this article was oneof the earliest on the spot, and present at the closing moments of the hapless beings who perished ft om their over ex ertions to escape. The statrcase communicating with the boxes was a steep one, and we ere of tho opinion that it had fallen from the weight . of thoso who crowded upon it. At least such was our opin ion at the moment. The flames at the tame were above and around us :—but human aid was of no avail—in five min utes from the time of which we make mention. the mass of human beings who had but a short inter val previous been in the enjoyment of a full and active life, were exposed to our view a mails of calcined bones. Up to this hour 46 bodies have been recovered from the ruins. Most of them have been recogni zed; a greater loss of life than in the two dread con flagrations of last summer. Sad wailing pervades the city. Scarcely a street can be traversed in which the closed shutter or the hanging crape do not he. token a sudden bereavement. Fathers, sisters, children of both sexes, indulge in the deepest lam entation. Woe has fallen upon many, for those who were thus suddenly and awfully summoned into the presence of their Creator. lIIOITLY IMPORTANT From the Cape of Good Hope. WAR WITH THE KAFIR TRIBES—THE COLONY OF THE CAPE as GOOD HOPE UNDER MARTIAL LAW. The ship Natchez, Capt. Waterman, arrived at New York on Sunday evening, from Conlin!, whence she soiled orrthe 3d of March, and from the Cape of Good Hope, or. the 29th of April. We copy the followingirom the Graham Town (Cape of Good Hope) Journal, of the 26th April. It is important : Up to the 22d instant, no action had taken place between the troops and the Katirs subsequent to the 18th, but considerable bodies of the enemy had en= tered the colony; particularly toward Lower Albany, or in front of Graham a Town, in parties of from one to two hundred, and had in some instances been checked, but to others successful in carrying off cattle. The frontier is evidently in most im minent danger, and the Governor has proclaimed martial law to be in force over the whole colony. His Excellency, Sir Peregrine Maitland, has is sued the following Proclamation Whereas, For the purpose of protecting the Col ony against the Kafire tribes, now in open hostility against the Government and inhabitants thereof, and for inflicting such deserved chastisement on those tribes as may tend to deliver the Colony from unprovoked aggressions and outrages, it is expedient that the force at the disposal of the Government be assisted and increased by the services and enrolment of the inhabitants of the Colony capable of biaring arms, for military operations both offensive and de fensive. I do hereby proclaim and direct that Gem and after the promulgation of these presents, Martial Law shall be in force throughout the whole Colony, for till cases, and in all matters connected with the assembling. embodying, conducting, and supplying her Majesty's forces, and the inhabitants who shall be enrolled and embodied for the parpoae above re cited. Given under my hand and seal, at Fort Beaufort, this 22i1 April, in the year of our Lord, 1946. (Signed,) P. MAITLAND. A battle had taken place, and the Kafirs are get- ting short of gunpowder, and one main object of their rush into the Colony, is said to be to obtain a supply. A heavy attack, it is conjectured, will be made upon the magazines at Graham's town. The mail to Fort Beaufort was seized by the Kaffirs, the bearer of it severely wounded, the mail bags cut to pieces and their contents scattered to the winds. A Capetown mounted Rifleman, as Express, was also shot by the enemy. The Legislative Council of Capetown has been summoned to pass a law to make it punishable to refuse to come out when summoned by a Civil Com missioner. • PEACE WITU THE Cxxxecuss.—The Nein , Or leans Tropic, noticing the arrival in that Oily of the American Commissioner and 41 Indian Chiefs of the Camanche and other Indian tribes, eays:-- ~T hia is a very important arrival, as peace with thirteen Indian tribes bordering on Texas, ie now guarantied. The treaties with all these have been made by Col. Lewis, in connexion with Judge Hut. ler, of 8. C., and the delegations are taken to Wash ington, both with the purpose of having the treaties ratified, and to acquaint these " men of the wilds," with the extent of our country, and the number of its inhabitants; on which subjects they have very obscure ideas. They represent at least 50,000 souls, all of whom will be peaceful, at least during the absence of their Chiefs, and we hope "for all time." The Rev. Dr. Jonsos, of the Birmah Mission, was married on the 2d inst., to Miss Emu, Coca• aucx the charming "Fanny Forrester" of the literary world. They will sail for Birmah next month. A correspondent of Morris's National Press says their first acquaintance commenced soon . after the Dr's. late arrival from Birmah, when he engaged Mies Chubbuck to write the memoirs of his deceased wife. The writer adds, "It is well understood to be a love match, and it is certainly a striking instance of tho power of the little winged deity. She is Dr. Judson's third wife.' SWINDLED.—tiII rhUrndity last, a coun tryman Irom Bedford County, Pa., was swindled out of $lOO in Philadelphia, by two cunning rogues. On his arrival Irom Baltimore, he was spoken to by one of them, and alter some conversation was shown a ball, which divided and contained a small piece of paper. The conlederate 4 then offered to bet the countryman that the paper was not there. The money was. bet, and on openis, the paper was not.to seen. The two swindlers then decamped.