..TrE - DE 6 .OGRArt. G. upritras, Montrose, . FOE PENIIIIDINT, JAMES BOCHANANi B,ubject to deoisifin of the Natkititi FOB CANAL 0111111115Ionit, "- ISRAEL T Ea t Of Westrporeitr.nd County. Air The heavy dry/ upon tiUr idvertisiog Opens this week lqii. #e mpelled us to curtail 4e.r usual ~quantity of;4adingtter. in' one 'sense. much , againt iostr it& io mother. othemise.' • • • 701(1 . Mel* tie wigwam. 'The PriiiitiikiihhiliiiCthrown a new bone into CorigressfoitintV4 and Slavery 611- . ilessitranaritiott qua* over., -On Saturday he sent speuage to blit Houses, inrrelation totiheAmititiithin-of Yitchtan, accompanied' by scierii — Colikteheicationsphiu Senor .Trista Siir -4,tuniuisAtle,lnticllrem the %Verner of itif*4 el that State suacanying on s war of extermination against thit white population, wh, ith they were unable titiesist, and nppealineto the:Govertunesit of *;trillitAl4 States for aldi prOposing in cue it ehcald •be granted to trinsfer to the latter her sovereignty. Similar applications, it is stated, hive - been made to England and France : and thel*ident lays - t at while he is not prepar -4-0 recommend pirticulan, measures, be isoutain we should not permit Yucatan to fall into the hands of any European power. He then directs attention to the declaration of Mr. illtuhroe, in relation to the interference of En vpiteus powers with thS affairs of this Conti **, and considers it s mete occasion to reit erate ond •re-affirm thou sentiments as the set tled- policy of this Leouniry:Zitrguing 'that the establishment of a Etqopemx colony on the North American Continhnt would be dangerous to our own national secitrity, and subversive of the obvious destiny of the various divisions and subdivisions, tribes and'astes of which it composed. He deems our relation to the 'sup pliant •State a peculiar ohe. We hive,-to some ettentphe thinks, recoglised her indepenlietice. But even admittingberito be a part of; Hui as is, averred, be adjhdges it proper for us, dieing the continuance Of the war, to occupy the,tervitory, and airontto her inhabitants the protection which' hey ebi much need. • Still be thinks it would be impoisible to withdraw our Present lone from otheriparts of Mexico, ex eept our naval force on tbe Gulf, which he fears would be inadequate. He recommended the subject to tlie. immediate attention of congress *lt they might adopt stich means andmethods eber as in their judgment would be right . sad proper. Ita.bOth Houses the l e ssa g e and documents Tttlonl4 and entered to be printed. No sooner than this „Ceremony was through with, upjump ed the great South CaroEnian, Mr. Calhoun, Kith his usual sensitiveness and impetuosity about the " peculiar insiitutiOn," and tendered the project his unqualii,id opposition,ldeclaim ing against it -with his eCcuitomed vehemence, and stigmatising it as a " measure to plunge the country into anothei war, the expense and termination of which na one could foretell."— ' The fact that the Yucaianese had abolished slavery, which he regar4s as the main prop and pillar of the Republic, is unquestionably" the main-spring of his very patriotic course on this restion. His opposition to it, therefore, suiprisks no one, but was anticipated. The man. who opposed resobitionscongraplatory to France because the neW4overnment hadabo . l imbed ,his faiorite institt4ion, could hardly be expected to favor any 1 6).her nation that 'had done the same thing. t . Tint Mr. , Calhoun, wiinotice, is not without narml backers and atiesi the Whip. His remarks led to quite debate, in which Hers. klasnegan & liege, (both Democrats) ma Mears. Beekwell Root (Whigs) per the two latter coinciding with Mr. in his denuncialioint ofthe President, "a de . cdaringlit,toer4 ammo . designed. to wiriest. in the - aeqW4lon at territory—the two former suataking the message. From this complexion of things, lite sefont, we ire led to infer that the Whigs in Congress 'occupy the same ground as upo4 the Texasquestion— cid all other questiolstermined opposition to the. Executive. .11U4 , common buthear of ' , territorial acquisition itlagain raised and made pretext or amipe-goat . ifor ,their political sins. 'We are curious to see wbat-tbe oraelnof Penn- Whigert the'- trorth itstertatt, will say to tbikmorentent. few - days ago, Tot loWing its ii;uM4nDed. twit of going off".44f Cocked," putefaith_w ricry , able appeal to the President and Congress o •iiterfemi with the 444c4i 6 in. Yucatan.' Now that the recom;N, '',Oeiidition,ko - teen followed, We are I I anxious. voi„ltiiiwebether the tooirsent, will beans eoteern, sad it. winos. :A4ooot,lolil. do as ft, did in ..ralation to , - ate; ooioeottyllig.:ol6 Pres -4,Atript,olt,,Juo,*o Rama him with Wholesale ITitop*tionAr faripilibi t •frefiselY .coarse iitsuggest Okay to be l ls forth' 0, 0 4 4 4 41'2m1:69174f ' gogeloges Pommtg ilegs ii -014 - 11110tible. A ili .61 1 061 4 ,0 1 4 1 0 1461 1414 6 1fetan0e 4 4i416144•0 1 Jy at liawket., Na York at $" , fro pie/lion inkiltit!s year. ilar" Tits OLATA. .11.11WICTIfT CASIi . in Wil # l o oll but truth isee' : ' - . lttirtortiAnto both bnoichaii - pf ; _coirtsii - wholiciprOdlied the greiltestleiciteiUmt, And 0414 ti*th so*e very big* Ficote abd pattiegm, made cos hdete thinkers of themeeires iti their ire rigain Mr Hale, nit of leiolati mall tinkrue . n the District liable for 01 gamma incurred b y Mobs, &e. Thetfonsee in iiiartieulii . ; derdedl the right of northern people to discuss the slave question at all,raud even menaced Mr. Hale with death by authority of . Judge Lynch, should -he ever be '34414 irl Mississippi. Stich intemperate remarite"alledludge Douglass, of Illinois, to his. ;feet; 'Vrko adminiitered to ids southern friends l< righteous rebuke, congratulating Mr. Hale u*mitbe acquisition of 15,000 votes for the Presidency, as the consequences of their indiscretion - tend hot.headedness. We may find room for some portions of the discussion hereafter.' • . == 'The eiticona of New York city presented a magnificent Cap of Liberty to the city of Paris, through the French Vice-Consuls Louis Borg, at the Park Theatre, on Tuesday evening week. the ceremony. was a very brilliant af fair, and liras witnessed by about a thousand persona.. The cap was presented by Theo. se rick Ex-President Van Buren was spe cially solicited to perform that part of the cere mony, but could not make it compatible with his other duties to do so. After the presenta tion, the; company engaged in s dance, and kept it up until an early hour in the morning. The Theatre windows were brilliantly illumina 094.during the day, the American and tri colored flags waved from all the 1 public build ings. The cap will be despatched to Paris by the next Steamer. The Whigs of Maryland may be set down as tmanimone for Taylor. A State Convention was held in Baltimore on Wednesday week, at which resolutions in favor of Gen. Taylor, and nobody 'else,_ were adopted, and an electoral ticket fontted. The Baltinlore Clipper is posi tive that the friends of Gen. T. 'in that State are fully resolved to run him,• on independent grounds; in total disregard of all dictation from National Conventions, and that the consequence will be that there will be three candidates in the fieltl,..teitides the Abolition candidate. In such an event it predicts that the election may go to the Mouse of - Representatives, a result which it ;contemplates with extreme repug nance; mar. tremendous Mass Meeting of the Ihnuotraey of Northern • Thinois I was held- at Olticago . a' few days ago, in which among other Democratic measures, the Wilmot Proviso, alias, the;Ordinance of 1787, was ably vindi cated, and unanimously endorsed in their reso lutions as a part of the Democratic creed. The call for the meeting:,wqjgagth i pst XI& Improvements of the Rivers andßarbors were also adolited. Viaotna cleetion for mem bers of the Legislature of Virginia took place on the 26th of April. • ISO far as the returns hive beeli Deceived, they indicate a full Dem'- °wade triumph. The Democrats have gained three members in the twenty districts heard from, au& the Whigs lost the same nnmber.— This reverses the Whig majority of last year. AIIOIIT Thu.—The Senate has ordered the disclargeiOf Mr. Nugent, the Correspondent of the N. Y.' Herald, who was arrested by its ed ict because he refused to tell wboifurnished him with a copy .of the treaty with 'Mexico. We think'it about time, especially as the opinion is very general that it transcended its powers in ordering t his incarceration at first. We elet the following from the Albany KnickerVcker, a paper nentrel in politics, for the upeeial benefit of " ern4ing Federal: ism From the way ,some ' of oar ,po li tical men creak over the destinies' of this !country, one as; flew that its ruin was Xs easily effected air, womaa'S. The war debt that .we 'have contracted to bring Mexico to justice and common Jose, , fills- them as full of lamenta tions as the tat* of Jeremiah. In their opinion we are " 4 bursted community" unless the country makes an ass of itself, throws up , its conquests, sneaks home with its army, cuts up its cohnis into vendue tags, and immediately auctioni off our honor, glory, saltpetre, and Major Generals. An hundred Millions of debt (mid tbitwe imagine will be the extent of the present wir charge,) they view as an incubus that Will P:rq upon the vitals of our posterity for a centmy to come. - ! AU hundred millions of debt crush the Uni ted &Mei I You might as well undertake ,to exush4Mo4t Blanc with a lemon Squeezer.— ww i the owed this before it "'time of sgc;"' ol ige" she yet sported jacket and 'bell buttons: t At,' the end of the to war With Greei'llritnin, ou rdebt ' was $1 A00,000:4— I In 181 t, nn act, was pissedSpprepriating $14,000,000 annually,' for the . paytneat of. :that' Under that act , the, est, principal and 'garnet - Oran paid off in eighteen yearts. r I Oliki4o4ll4olll4entli those eighteen _yew s 1 goys,u4ing 11,000,g00, • 14,500,000. .o•:eighte4,yeusfiva, 184:0)4 numbers w i ll pogs Irma 22,000;000 to ' ; ;000,000. The aimegi of 4e first mind: ' 11 ? 250,000; te le for thinsoid it irsll - - I millions.- -6. 4 14 1 ~ , 000 , 00 0;wa '-; Awe , h° Paid with illiaia aliquit'of for - . Aiditid stal."lll we aid frowllBll to I: : But out migiA: gie inersUed foie than; . . . ' suisiberk ao ital.* talk tat sail: or:: mot . base quadrupled si eve'' 181 sinirdi,. a dtht arHaijaa,Ladeildi amid' aloe no edfailai - a:kami pilaw's . . i 84 8.: 'awn ene - orili-**‘: saCIN.I.T: , - ti' ;n ' d 1 4 : in ieitK'' ''..'i''''! '! l'_.- !,.* ''' -- : ',-- ~,,.,.. "; -Tail fram taii reastaty .- , in Annoy i .°l6 4l94l o oo l F4iwitrePatehwwt ' YlNdiditigt 110$ S itetilniserty, worth is A 300,000. A Liberty Cap -tar France. Wlslayer, In Maryland. Th Democratic member; of the Nei York Legiskiture met in icatictuduit previous to the ailjoirnment,, according to the usual ens toutin tbakiState, and atriong other acts, put forth a verx z elabomte,aq excellent address to the ieople-0 the Staten!) yhich the Wilmot PrOiso is iidmimbly suataineCand 'enforced. Welitever read a more triumphant 'vindication of that meaanre. ATOIL MILEY Dultn.—The southern pa petslof Mo4i itt ay bring intelligence of the death of Chester Ashley, U. S. Senator from Arkan- Ile eigpired at the Capital on Saturdiy, after, a shoti illness of two days. Mixreo.4— Advices from Mexico to the 14th ult., by lastt night's Mail, speaks of the pros pects of pet cc as rather dubious. No quorum had yet bee,4 obtained in the Mexican Congress, and many siriously suspect that tho Mexicans have ;again *bused the good faith of the Amer ican eroveriinent. Wo really hope not: Castilla M. Clay. Liiten t4the candid avowal of this talented and thorouo-going Whig—who has gallantly borne his pixt in the.war—relative to Mr. Polk and our Mciican difficulties. 'At a festival in Richmond,) he s aid " Though a whig, I do not stand here as a partizan, I iihall speak with the freedom of his tory. / hake no sympathy with the late outcry against PrAsident Polk as bringing , on this war.; I shrill do the President the Justice to say, Mat Mexico, I never heard the first man • ; alleg4 the march of Gen. Tayltir to the Rio Grandf, as that cause of offence, or of the War, The Flight of Queen Victoria. Net the Bast among the many significant oc curretices lat have marked the recent convul- I sions in Eu',,,ope, is the departure of England's • Queen to the Isle of Wight. It appeis that this step was the subject of considerable debate among her :advisers, and was only determined neon i afterli the most, mature • deliberation,—; Since: the time of James 11., no monarch has left the roylil palace under the apprehension of personal dOger,—then the monarch fled from the nobility 4 J and now the Queen leaves for fear , of thq people. Whatever may have been the result of tl4 great Chartist assemblage, an im portant adulission, on the part of the Crown, of its insecuriti and danger, is made to the world. It shams that, even in England,. the same sen timent preiiils that has stricken down crowns . and demolished thrones in other sections of , Europe; mid that the rulers there arc terror stricken at ,!,tlie majesty and strength evinced., by those wlitim they have so long trampled upon • with seeming impunity.. i WO hav4 in the conduct of the British Gov- ernment—i(i its attempt to prevent the peace able atsemidage of the people, a scathing com mentary upn the wickedness and insecurity of i monarchical rule. It is a forced, but positive admisSion of the weakness of the government— a conCessioti, that the rulers fear the ruled. It is-only a fe* days since; that an English jour nal, in notiiiing the revolution in France, con soled itself,iand congratulated its government, that in Erikland the causes that led to the change of Ocivernment of France did not exist. It boasted that the poorest peasant in England could unmolestedly , and as a right not to hr . , _ Tr . . ... nd t h eb Crown. It relied upon the personal liberty of the subject., for security for the Mon arch, and *rendered that the government of Loris' Philippe should-have exhibited so little I wisdom as . tn deny the people that right. And 1 now, bow lilt with England ? ' The course of conduet byl which the English editor justified' the revolution in France, is pursued in his own i country. The people have been denied a right, a.imitted 61 be inviolable, and foribus doing, are thinatened with "Buckshot and Ball," if Ithey dare 4semblo in great masses to present i their terono. Ho* thitattempt to rob the subjects of the, English CrOwn of the only right by which-they . can seek redress of grievance, will end, no one • can tell. We hope for, the best for the people, but fehr tins worst. If they are only determin ed, and purkue with moderation and firmness , the course they bare resolved upon, no one ran' doubt the r - t Csult. It may cost blood, and re quire time, )ibut if' they are faithful to the holy cause nf bu,6n freedom, their triumph is as certain as that there is a God of justice, who out of; one :flesh made all men, and who does not Will thhthe few should enslave the many. If the',Englph Chartists and the Irish Repeal era join hand s and hearts, the days of monarchy England arij, ended ; and from the coal mines of England+from the mad cottage of Ireland —anAfrorti, the mountain fastnesses of Scot? Ihind, kunitlid shout shall burst forth, proclaim ingthn freedom—the pure and radical republi canism of tlie British nation.—Pennsylranian. ,Coi r oNE4 WELLS n.—This gentleman, the Panincratiqandidate for Governor, in Ohio, is routing the ;tiaemies of the Mexican war where ever he gee). He recently addressed a meet ing. of his fellow-citizens, at which a stiff 'old Vederidist Ivas present, and after hearing the speech, rcsevind requested Col. Weller to put thin qUestioa : " You who are in favor of sus taining tI4 country in , the present war with Next:6-64 Aye." A shout like that which went up on the heights of Monterey, was the re sp.onst!. T$ Colonel then put the quesiioti in this livise : IA r OU who Are opposed to sustaining this win', will say Nay." Not a sound escaped the lip of al:Single one present. ' The old Fed , esslistl l wouldn't rote, declaring 'that, "when it t . ome: to tteujiaked quo - lion, I deln*t like to vpte I onthal sidtr The old' man was in the same 1 prediciunentns a large number of his political' frienda.will #nd themselves in at the next elec tion. I.Whea it comes to,the naked quaition— lor,thtlir cOlintry, or against it--they will; be fotind i ltith.e4 not voting at ,all, or casting their' stiffraee for the Democratic _candidate asp the SOnotix.-4nissyleanian. , , • litile'Th4linhest and ,beet, olcel,..cf the ts44L son arc , thelette.rs. of 'Henry Chi and Santa Anna.; Thatiane consenting-to be sacrificed a ,O4rthitirnefor the good. of 114 Country—the other biddint farewell to the country for whlch aininst dii)d,fuld anneaacing his intention, to be an exilefor ,What wonderful' aped, ulen c a i sael4 ' sing devotionl Puredisin - tikpa gam is not altogether extinct. t -1- P*Fisjivan , - The kergeky Leaidatt* on the laat night tilts seeeio4i diyoroed, it one Alike, tiiiity 46(pi es; -A4owipg six similes Is the .nyentge of nouriehi_p4his at old' liteep'perished Abe freite of 15 Jceere of the !severest labor. The Tables Turned. A most eztratr i rdinary develotwtHment has sig nalized some of the more reeent ettaminations before the Creurt of Inquiry.in Ilfexieo, - toucbing the everlasting subject of,thelLeenidisi letter —the original end the -interllnestione. The' authorship of the former, it will be recollected, has been untied by Maj. Bums in his testi mony before the Court ef Inquiry. The-re sponsibility of the interlineatiens, in regard to which the Court was So long occupied, has been Wholly assumed by the editor Of the New Or leans Delta, to whom' the original-Leonidas letter was addressed—and the testimony before the Court is consistent with this state of facts. But the developement to which we refer, has reference to and implicates another officer, in at least an implied sanction of the very offence charged upon Gen. Pillow—and that officer is no less a personage than the • commander-in chief himself ! The fact comes out upon the trial of Gen. P., that after the famous general order about letter-writing frdm the camp to the states, out of which all this difficulty' has arisen, Gen. Scott was himself cognizant of the writing of a letter by Col. Hitchcock; one of his aids, de signed. for publieation,in substance or in whole, and actually published in a newspaper in the United States—that this letter was-any thing but complimentary to Gen. Pillow, then under arrest on charges baring reference: to the very matters discassed in it-- 7 -tbat this letter was read to Gen. Sec*, in part at least--its intend ed transmission to the United States, for pOldic, use, made known to him, and yet that the coM= mander-in-chief interpoi no objection to the letter, or its intended Iransurission.--4vl/bany Argus. 'N, . , i Petersburg. - There have been 'sonic distorbances at Po. , . I ~ I lone, bnt they have 'been suppreaSed. SANTA ;ANNA'S DEPARTUTE I'IIWI MEXICO. In Poland there is nothing decisive. The —The Union thus speculates upon lice with- 1 drawal of Santa Anna from Mexico :`k 40W ! report of a rising at Warsaw is noVeonfirm d. A new Milistry has- been fr.riiied at Na les far the departure of Santa Anna will affecithel of h much more liberal cliara&er.:' ~' , ratification of the trt.aty, and contribute to the, restoration of peace ; is a probletn tibial) admits The Independent Pallabent are in • 1 , . . , of some .doubt. We had supposed that it , Sess ion.,... The Sultan of Turkey has decided to reepg- Would be the forerunner and guaranty peace; but some few doubts are expressed by of ex peri-, nize the French Republic in spite of the of ~: 1 , enced officers who have just arrvied from Mex- sition of tissia. Paris en inued in a state of 'tranquility., ice. having no distinguished lender to-rouse up the military energies of her countrymen— There 'had tern some disturbances in• ithe Santa Anna gone—Valencia dead—Paredes Provinces. The\C overnment Ceinmissioiters putjdown by the power of the existing govern- have in some plac6, been obliged to give lir • their offices. The state,of the sabering elafises meta—it was supposed that M ex i co would be' around Paris 'is very aiitressiine ' Thons4nth happy to embrace peace. - Nothing, in , fact, of tradesmen, are thrown ~ t' of nmploymp.nt could create a doubt about it, except the sou- of Rollin is organizing ' Gijard forith, duct, of the opposition . in our own country:— - frontiers. They are responsible for the prolongation of the , Lareb numers of , g war. If Congress bad provided, at an, early: the Sardinian b frontietroops are Corte tratin o day; the necessary reinforcements with some- There have beenses at serions disturhances, , .n. thing like unanimity—if. Messrs. Gallatin and , the laboring clas'llavre. '.The Nati , i, a Clay, and Webster, and other (waters, and wri ; Guards were all on duty, and lituFmarie seir tens, and presses, had withheld ; their clamors, ' , I we have not a doubt that peace would noir belarrests. The District of the Landes', bear ardent i: certainly made—indeed, made before this time. : 1 l in a state of iusurrection. • . ?I, - • But testimony continues to Tour, in upon us to The Austrian and Sardibian treops arelap. from our officers—and from whig ones too- 1 Preaching each other-in Lombardyl.' Radetsl:3 that the wbigs have prolonged the ,war, and now jeopard the, fate of the treaty by the re and Montau. The Lombardo-Piedmontes9 - an leritless opposition they have waged against 1 has concentrated his forces bet*ben Vernt , my, commandedliy King Charles `.. - klbert, iS or their own country: If peace comes, we shall the road from Cremona to Montuni -,, rejoice in it with all our heart. If it fails, then In the Venitian territory, eves defile oqtht we hold the whigs guilty of the failure. It is_ , Frili is guarded, to prevent Austrian reinforce the "aid and comfort" they have given the ene- 11 merits from entering Italy. my, and - upon their heads be all the blame." 1 The general character of the Centinebt4ad. vices says the Liverpool Mail, ii , ;;much More satkfactory, than for some tinia.! Exeept -a. , i respects Denmark, its revolted provinces,ianc. i Prussia, political affairs also begin to wear-: 1..ei.0r noNet, not only in Belginm ! hot in Fraihce still, however, they remainelepreased: , Beloung shows symptoms of iutrovement,'a returd o confidence being perceptible.' The Bank o' An tcrwerp has declared a fourth dividend qte ' per cent. to its creditors. . - , ( At Berlin several banking-honics have tittle among which are Messrs. Veit, Brothers &Po, A. Busse & Co. sand L. B. Cohn. ,At Breslau I Messrs. Schreiber & Sons and. Klecks & Co ' are mentioned, and at Cadiz Mr P. A. COUte banker. •I The letters from Marseilles announce fal J be ' serious failures, - the parties being Lantehne ' Sento. & Co. bankers ;_Michel Batltti; a •Gieel merchant, and L. lleeet & Co 'large enginOciit !and ship-owners. 'The failure of Messrs. Tltur• i nevssen & Co. one cf the mostlreapectable anc I - esteemed banking-houses in Paris; is mentOn. , ed, 1 The Special Committee upon 'Public Pnti. i duns, appointed in November last, to when was referred the Chartists' Petitiob for uniler• sal suffrage, signed by about .two millicm o ' persons, made a report on the 14th agamst said petitions being granted, and:lo,l i , - That in the matter of signatu'r thertqlai been, in their opinion, a very;gt , abase o•• that privilege. , 1 • • That the honorable memberfor ttingliair stated on presenting the irtititnilin questioo tc the House that 5,706,000 eignatiires werelat• r . tached to it. ' i ' 1 That upon a most careful cntaniutation,hi a ' committee of 13 law -stationers ''Clerks, VI( number of signatures has been sicertained tc I be 1,975,496. . ~ . .. . i .... 4 • ' That on numerous consecutiv e sheets itbt signatures are in one and the Bartle hand writip, g . That the names of distinguished individnal: are attached to said petition, who cannot i supposed to favor its prayer, .among which i: khe name of Her Majesty in one4lace, as lt,ic , , toria Re.; April the First, thtLOnhei of Wel. ' lington, K. G. ,Sir Robert Peel,:-,&c., beside: , such fictitious names as "No dheese,7"Pitg nose," &c.—signatures which ObVionaly bebop ito no human being, and which are derogatery • to the Rouse and those who preiMnt them. Breadatuifs have experienced . an upsvit i i:1, tendency, and more activity and buoyancy pre ,' rails than per last. advises. - At the Liverliooll market, April 14th, 11 S. Flour sad at.2 . 0,,t0 , 1263 6d per bbl.,_and Sour 23s to 24s 6d. , in- 1 I dian corn in the same market WAS*4s ; to ~- .40S . fidbL per qr., and'lndian.Meal.loo. to Its 6d ter b 1 i • The Iron Trade continues in aUlunsatisfitc- , tory state. The quarterly meeting of, the Iron masters was held at Birminghatnoa the 13th instant, -which it was detertniactl'ti maint4iri, - -i- ~,, .. •: - at: least for some time, the / resell_ rates. , : he . accounts _from. Glasgow ,are, i (1, 1 fi liiimilriAlit, • city - the Pig i Iren.trade was extremely 11id.:: . .1 1 0 :Tho several reports received ftoM.tlii.Nillpu and W oolen manufacturingdistkpC4)SSE6glafid are-much the same 118 lastlepOrFek.: - • -,.; .t, .: The English Funds . _ have . 't;esis Salijaceta much.litiotuatieo, owing 044,*4,1**04 44 .panic of the , last. few*y.Caud.'l4 news . m several parts of the, soiithleiii, -- :kgio er _f 1.,• ing prevailed on Ignadi4,.-IfiatiataVirid tiesday,' when one Miala4 ". s , *:bUth. r the.AcCeunt and 1110.10 V 'l)lolieiciVii•aloit -• t 'dant au4,very easy..:- - ..ui.., , -1-.:: : -- , Everything connea**Mtiiigh • *Oial ' ' pfFranokia looked ifteS#Aiiiiioiloidi(;:','.',.*. sz , A Opipiri 3 Ost. A , ..o.o444l**Liii* .-W: '. advanced ori bbiids"athitiffiltaiMM.i:•Wll 1 HI ' '' 14 PARSIMONY OF JORN JACOB ASTOR.—The Cleveland Ilerald relates the 'following anec dotes of Mr. AeTort, which certainly exhibit him in a light not very favorable, for the weal lia.ll/5 in thy 11 urta . The interest of the great Erie Railroad de manded a large subscription, in money. Gen tlemen wait upon the millionaire and solicit his aid. " Nu." They represent to him the great advantage it will be to the State. " No." To the city. •• No." As a last resort they at tempt to touch a cord which they are sure will vibrate. "It will enhance the value of real estate in New lurk." " Iknow it," says the man of gold, "and for that 'eery reason I will i i i l , not subscrib . I ant a buyer not a seller of that commo itu, I desire to buy as cheap as possible." They could not reach him. The Irish wer starving. The ladies 6ka neighbor ing city, n common with others, Were making specialeffort to send bread to the famine strick en. Sonic one who had. access to Mr. A., pro posed to solicit from bim a donation. The call was made, and the richest..man in America gave 7 —what ? Two dollars and fifty cents 1 THE SLAVE AFIDUCTIO:s; CASE.--TllO Na tional 'lntelligencer of Saturday morning last, has the following paragraph in relation to the exciting case mentioned in our last,;— Daniel • Drayton; Chester English, and Ed ward Sayres, were yesterday finally committed by.Jastices Goddard and Williams to answer at the June term of the criminal Court on the charge of having "stolen, taken and carried away," seventy-six slaves, residents in this county, on the 15th of April, 1848. The bail •demanded by the magistrates is one thousand dollars for each slave. -As yet no bail has been offered for either of the men. , RUNAWAY SL"AVEN.—The slaves in ,Cecil comity, Md., are running away in droves. The Wilmington Chicken says :—" A week or two since eight made' their , escape from Mr. George Kidd, in that county, and a week or so before five ran away from Messrs Gales and Cham berlin. It was Mr. Kidd's intention we are in formed, to free three of his slaves in a few days." EADMIQUAKE'AND AVROILS BOREALIS.—The Montezuma, clefen days from St. Thomas, re ports that on the 6th of April. a severe shbek of, au earthquake was experienced at St. Thom as. No damage done, It was the evening of the same day that shocks of an earthquake were felt a.t. Zanemille and Norwalk, Ohio, and the same evening the Northern and Boreal Lights were seen at both New York and Albany of a deep red color. A TRIBUTE TO SILAS WRIGUT.—TIIO idea has been started of erecting a novel Monument to the memory of the late Silas Wright.by founding, in Middlobviry College, Vt., (wherein he was instructed, and near which is the home of his kindred,) a " Silas Wright Professorship of Moral and Political Philosophy' and 'Histo ry," to-be' filled from time to time ih a manner aceeptsble to the contributors to the founda tion. Santa Amut has ,publinhed, a long` farewell address to his iountrynien, reviewing his public life, complaining i xof the injustie that his been done him, execrating the peace 'which the Mex icans have consented to make, and declaring his intention to exile limielt from his cointry., Thetemocrate of Wisconsin have nominated lielsonfikwey, of Grant county, for' °vapor, and John E. llohnee, for Lt. Governor. how our Extia cern 7.1 szvounors 474 pi. • I LI 1 , t mutivgi. or. *ea4.oastioAt: - ) 1 'r The Chartist Convention Pt i istd Qulstli. •`,l -" , ,;• A •- , Througb the kindness of i friend we reeeii,ed lag evening a copy otan Extra N I UW, YorliVri - , •z•-• i 4. bun° of Saturday evening enutaitiing . the 11' iflowing highly important intelligence from n rope, which we are enabled to.. lay before /Ur readers in advance of our regnlar , issue : I. • The new Cunard Steamer America, Captfiin Judkins, reached this City about .half-past 511 this morning, having made the paiisage &pm 1 Liverpool in a little less than' 14 !days. Itt is rumored that Louis Philipim is. among 4er passebgers. •' .. f The America brings sevenilays,lr advrees fri m Europe, an outline of Which we giv e be_ kw : 1 ' The Prussian troops arc advancing into ol stein. Some skirmishes took Iplaed on the yth between the Danish troops and the Holsteiners. The King of Denmark rhml IA Copenha 'to join his army. -. • . • Hungary has declared herself indepet nt and chosen the Arch Duke Stephen King. I 'At Botzen, in the , Tryol,' thc 'citadel ins yielded to the Provisional Government. 's' All is quiet in Prussia and preparations" for War are active. 1 1 , ' - , 1 Serious disturbances have broken out at,iSt. • Tbe iimrpop/ Mt!, a ighly temper e d ov4miniertif: brit% publiihed ,the fo ll owing s - ,i t t,,,i4i r stide,:?a t iai n st the' Movements of - the holistic owitlie 15th. • Chid leits and Topics of the Week. - .Polloiiiing:tlie eiample of the nations on the Continent, we Jen this side this Straits of Dover have had Oniidenionstrations. The English Chartists andlish Repealere have demonstra ted diet thasytlhave more liberty than is mi.. sessekby inyAther people in the world Governmenetias shown their power to cope with and punish distnrbers of the public peace ; 'and it has else been demonstrated that the hysl inhabitantii=of England- are , in ntimbiir lam to one of the dissatisfied. - We hope the firebrands who hive so long kept us in bOtivater will now Permit ns to hare a little rest,priparatori to the application of our energies a more Profitable direction. They must by this time be perfectly convinced that_ the middle classes are not with them in ' their riotous , idelinationa, and that they are to tally unfit to tie the leaders Of a reform move. 1 • - men t. A • Any agitation fOr reform in the goverinness or representative system of this country Boss be based the general cOnvietion, not only that the proposed sheratioal are requisite;lns that they are, e'ertiin tiPpioVo'beneficial to the . : common weal.,c The middle classes of England must be persuaded by appeals to .their geese to ally, tbeinselves to prowerd party, They will opt be driven to join it by threats - and maledictiOn. „Let the Chartists and Re. peelers, therefpreJetire to the rear ; they are unfit to reniain:iathe.prominent position" which ( they have impudently assumed. What faith can their own !dupes continue to bestow rips them, when they reflect hovr ridiculously they have been deepived ; to whet a dangerous es. tent they have been led ; ..and how their lead. era abandoned them at the eriticai moment for .which they priifeesed they had' long and aux. ! iously sighed 4 The-dreateit'blu.sterer ofjall became a very craven when tackled.. declared in the Thinse‘of Commons, that be would cross Westthinster Bridge at the bead.of the multi tude, in spite Of • any opposition,that could be offered by. the; Government. `On finding that an armed oppesition had been resolved upon, he applied to the Conventiowfor leave of at, SCIICe. ASeertainirkg that the piocession would not be insisted oni., he returned tte the cony ra tion, and was as brave and makOlogneat ever. As to the Cptivention, its members were very appro g riately'i:designated as " . cowardly , bum . They have frequently met since Monday, but talk with the humbleness pf detected felons. that they were rnment ; but they thrust themselves hear no more of land or Ireland for f,rhe great peti- Au neat six mil u. apipeiged i had been untner crully exambied, - and Mr. O'Connor's constitu ents dwindled] down to less than two millions. - It was shown that, eveir-tto 'make ;out this number, from4en-to twenty'. names - had evi dently been Writtenin various places by one hand; and thai among the signatures were many forgeries, and, an equal number which were al together fictitious. Fergus reirtarked that he could obtain a pe -tition upon the Same subject signed by fifteen or r doOlde, or treble that number, which is :not ii,iiprobable; if thOy were to be all of the same Auhlity ; but in the event of its being necessary ithat they should. be the bona fide signatureo of living souls, be would have to make a journo ps India or China in search of them ;for, according to the; . late -census, the entire population Of the British Empire, inclu ding women 9d Children, does not exceed twen ty millions. < Mr. Smith-O'Brien has been talking a little treason in -Patliament, but the- reception, which his speech had there would scarcely ; encourage him b a beriiiition of such an harangue. The bill Tor ,planii4.lrelaild on ;an. equality with England as . rtgardi'treasonible meetings and speeches, is rapidly passing throtigh the stages necessary to its being promulgated as,the law of the Unitod4Ernpire, and has met with very few aissentionis. • - The Case (linden, Mitchell and Meagher. Dorms, April 12. -Easter term commences on Saturday next. The bills ofifidietment against; Messrs. Smith O'Brien, - Mitcibell and - Meagher are. prepared. It is stated that thatrial will not take place until the'sittings atter term, which commence on the 12th of May. • On Saturday next the bills of hidictitent will be sent before the grand jury. I .1. DECREASE bI.TIIII Exottxxxsr.—There is .a most hianifist and decidedi decrease in the exeitemeht and apprehension WWI by the result-of the chartist demonstration in Lon don. The thjsc'ernment Securities continue to ndrance. Tlds day there was a further rise of one per tent. in Consols and Three and a Quer , ter per Cents) The satne:tilifyiog change is-noticeable in the accounts rom the . prormaea. The tone of the popular .)neetings is rather subdued, and altogether there .4. mupla less ground for alarm. Tux Mit4lDunaaeravion. - -I.—The motion for new trialand in' arrest of 'judgment, in the case of Randall Hiitchinann, convicted on the 16th $23,288 ; f11 from the 17.'S:"Mini in itis,Aty, m. 44 argued on Saar- Abe .U 4 court, by D. P. 'brown in faini. of We Motion,• and Mr. Nikki Attorney Pettit against it, and concluded on Monday by. Mr. Sergeant, ?An in favor of the nielinn• - The Judge'oen',#,ateikliis opinion that the " L e °Ouil*nst.eabearlement do not read) Abe„,iiii:Of Oledefeiidinit ; that, the in: aretoout tiot c bi, supported by thesi s and now bn,,grinted. This would jilaAatbn,defeaditiCAMkbbi• ithd. again, but we .feiefet*P.NAltt it; is the :intention of the e irlP4 e t re4k -A l l ePtii; ll4 4 l: '?tti e*Pna*s 'no/. of ., thig u there a1 1 e.A 4 0,47 1 j iipSn ishiab , con.votio4 can , n 4lO- 01. • is 'tbeisteis Ole*/ froii4ll;filitharnrweatii". What a Weekly Pap floiminfiliii:'steambeatii Wert ptioienfroatiliCit York •to Al y fee , , I . The otrio* Lyme,M'At.en‘nt. M r$ gliaiktfl.;)giyegi alSajOlYithitemk-11: O l e whiie 8144 in:fine of inenibi of the humbug Of Ilium ii COm-