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MOVEMENTS OF K088UTK SECOND DAY IN NEWARK. Bpwfh ?? Um People, In Wuklngtoa Hall, Nrwiax, April 22, 1852. Contrary to tbs cipreM understanding last night. and the announcement made to the reporters. it wai w. raagtd at a late hour. and a despatch went off by the 11 o'clock train, by Kossuth's secretary, to hare it announrtd in tlio Tribunr ? his present organ that he would deliver the speech this morning. at 10 o'clock Kossuth himself. when spcakiug from the balcony of the City Hot i-l did not announce it. and even the local papers were taken by surprise for they had not a word of it. Some members of the committee are greatly enraged with Koeewth's changing ibeir arrangements. He changea the arrangements everywhere He did it at Tn nton-he ha* done it in the cafe of the Boston c> ramilteo, and he has done it here. The Newark committee had intended to give hiui $3,000 but they are so di ?gi ist.nl that they say they will give him very little now. One of them said last night. that he ? might go to the d? 1 hid own way;" as fur himself be would take no lurtlur interest in him. This morning at 10 o'clock Governor Kossuth was conducted into Washington Hall by the Mayor and Chancellor Hoisted. wheu the m n Uug was called to order by Col. Pennington, who requested the audience to rise on the cut ranee ol Kei?.utli which lley did accordingly He was then addressed by Key l>r. Kddy who .said tho principles of Kossuth were the principles of the everla-t "W gospel of the blessed (I.kI our Saviour The divine Author of Christianity was king <?f nations as well as kinir of saint* and where the spirit ol the Lord was. there w is liberty Kossuth then addres-ed the assemblage, as follows KOSgt'Tll's HFK.KUH. Gentlemen? I ain about soon to leave the United Mat**. My thoughts turned homeward to my down trodden fatherland. hit bent to the id.* not ef what may 1 do in your country. but t?> what I have done. The wo#?l.?av.t1 dried or ? m my lip*? my mind U imprewed With the Mlencg of uni'ty . lam like the man who had 1 leaded a cause, fro the issue of which depends, not ? nly his own life ai -ppiness. but the life and happi ness of all dear to L h art lie has pleaded the cause thejury ho* retired to give its vrdict. If there be a man in this assembly whoever has been in that case be might tell you what be initht have f. lt. if he would bav? been called upon in nidi a moment of awful expectation to make a speech. That is any case now: having the impression that for all my future lifj I nave quite other things to do than to speak. I believe, mdeed. never in my life I will more succeed to. make a tolerable speech. And still I would fain ' leave a good impression upon your hearts, tlmt the ! fruits of your generous affections may ripen to the bene fit ol my brave unfortunate people, worthy of your ! affections arid your sympathy, as ever a people was How can 1 accomplish such a "task ivith such pre-oecu- I patiom weighing upou my heurt ' It was a minister of the (>of]?el wh? ad drew* d me in your name. li(?t m? speak to yuu as a Christian whocon-iders it iiis heart felt duty to be. to act. not only in hi- private but also in bU public capacity in conformity with the privileges of Christianity as 1 understand it. by the right of private judgment in reference to the book of lift-, which he often 1 explained with religious inspiration to his audience*. I have seen the people of the I niti d States almost in every climate of your immense territory? aud I have laid my hand upon this poople's heart. I have marked the natural influence of geography upon its character I have seen tho same piirciples. the same institutions assuming in their ap|4ication the modifying influence of local circum stances I have found the past casting over its shadows I in the present, in one place darker, in the other less I haie seen man every where to be man. partaking of all Aspirations, which are the Uiss as well as the fragility of nature in man ? but in one place tho bliss pr. vailing more and in the other the fragility I saw now and then small reality com idera Horn, of pass, ing mt i rests of the pitsting hour, lessor more encroach ing upon the sacred dominion of universal priuciplos; hut. so much is true, that wherever I found a people, I found a great and generous heart, rend}- by instinctive inspira tion to take that ground which, by your very national position is point* d out to you a- a mission, which either must be fulfilled. or the position lost : because every po sition has it* own condition? its own necessities Your position Is to he a great uution ; therefore your necessity is to act like a great nation, or if you don't do so. you will not be great. 1 hat is clear. 1 believe. To bo numerous, is not yet to be great. Tho Chinese are eight times more numerous than y..u? and still lhiimisnotgre.it It has issolated itself from the world and such a power cannot be great N. ither depends the condition of a na ti' u f rf m what she likes hursolf to cull China culls her self "Cilestial " aud takes you and Kurope for barba rians. Not what we call ourselves, but how wo act. that proves what we nrc. (.rent is (hat nation which acts as a great nation 'hould. And give me leave to sny what an American minister of the gospel ho< said to mo: Nations, by the great (Jod ol the l.'uiierse. are in dividualized. as well as mm. He has given each a mission to fulfil and lie expects every one to bear its part in solving the great problem of man 's capacity for self government, which is tl <? problem of human des tiny; and if nny nation Hub in this, he will trout it as au unprofitable servant ? a barren tig tree, whose own end is to be rooted up and burnt. J ouah sat under the shadow of his gourd rejoicing in isolated, selfish indifference? nothing cnrit.g for the millions of the Nim-vites at hia foet. What was the consequence ? Uod prepared a worm to smite the gourd, that it with. r. d. God has privilege you, the people ol the I nit. d states, to repose, not under ? gourd but beneath the shadow of a luxuriant vine and the out-spreading branches of u delicious fig tree Oive him praise and thanks ! l'.nt are you. Jonah-like. on this account t? wrap yourselves up in the mantle of insensi bility. nothing caring fur the nations smnrting under the iron heel of oppression? stretching forth no hand for their deliverance, not even Vo murh as to protest ,again<t a community of evil doers, and to give au alms to aid in their deliverance ? Are you to hide your national talent in a napkin, or lend it out at u-ury ' Head t lie Saviour's para ble. --No unto others a.' ye would t hit others do unto you '' This is the Saviour's golden rule applicable to nations as well as to individuals. Suppose, when the I'nited States were struggling for their independence, the Span ish government had interfei. d to present its achievement ? sending an armament to bombard your cities and murd. r your inhabitant ? what would your forefathers have thought ? how felt? Precisely as Hungary thought and f. It when the Kussum bear put down his over slaughing paw upon her. They would have invoked high heaven to avenge the interference ; and had there been a people on the face of the earth to protest again- I it. that people wouid have shown out. like a particular bright star in the hemisphere of nations and to this day you would cull it blessed. What you would have others do unto you. do so likewise unto them And though you met no foreign interference, yet you met far more than a protest in your favor ? you mut sub stantial aid: thirty 1^,'ht vessels of war. nineteen millions ?f money. 24 000 muskets. 4,000 soldiers and the whole political weight of France, engaged in your cause I ask not po much? by fur not so luu. h---foropprcssed Kurope from you. It is a gospel maxim. "Be not pai taker of other men's sins." Itisulike applicable to individuals aud nations. If you. of the I nitid State?, fee the great law of hu manity outraged by another nation, and see it silently, raising no warning vuim against it you virtually become * party totlie oilcnoo. as you do not reprove it. you em bolden the offender to add iniquity unto iniquity. Let no* one nation be partaker of another nation's sins. hen you see the g;eat law of humanity, til. law upon which your national existence rests, the law enacted in the declaration of your independence? uheu you see that law outraged and profaned will you sit quietly by? If so. excuse me for saying part of' t he guilt is upon you. and individuals now and then receive I heir reward in the ?'tonal world but nations are sure to receive it here There is logir in a nation de tiny. A nation should not be a mere lake, a glus^y expanse only reflecting foreign light around? but a river, carrying its rich treasures away from the lountuiu to distant legions of the earth. A nation should not lie a mere light-house, a mere station ary oracle, eriet.d upon the coast to warn voyagers of their dangi r ? but a moving life-boat carrying treasures of freedom to the doors of thousands and millions, in their lands. I confess, gentlemen, that I shared those expecta tions. which the nations of Kurope have conceived iu seeing the star spangled banner of America cast in pro tection around the rights of humanity in my humble self Your hi-tory aud your institutions have been a favorite study to my yeai !y youth and the philosophy I derived from theui not only a ource of valuable instruction to my manhood, but also a source of inspiration, and a guiding ti r in u.y public life, full of vicissitudes but also full of evidence of the coostant operation of J hin. I rovid. n. c. and a . triking proof of what the most hi'mbte man endow, d with no peculiar abilities, may u. hiev.- if he be sincerely devoted to his duties an.l actinif upon principles with entire self resignation, and with that iron <?i':l which neither the sunshine of prosperity can melt, nor the storm of adversities bond. I was acquainted with the principles upon wlrcli your great In. .i is founded? I have ad mired tl?- wise e. lol. i.idi. n of y. or having consorted the local self-government and the indep. ud.ut s. If admlni-trsti.n <f your Mat. uniting In the same time all States into on. national body fo.- tim e lialional lute rests which an <? mtiu u t" all. I have ee n by your in stitute ns realised Hi pp l.l'-m I ,f treed "111 and order, without losing the power of treeeih I l.a\e seen you free. l? can,-, oppos. i t. i , .? um.' orbing centialisa tion nod still powtrft.l tl.m ? 1, n t c< litralisH I have mark, d the progress of yot.i d^ .elopement I have se n how you ass. rted (to I-. lire not without foreign aid.) your iti(l< prndi nee. ho\ you h..w ]>rov. d your pa -ive vitality by that dofeii-ive nar. winch ... gloriously ended With the battle at N.w Oilcan-. Ii* .?v you hav. orov.-d your a ctlve vitality i.j war against Mexico. and extending y. ur br d bmtory firm tie Atlantic to the flnir ..f Mexico and h< ee to the Pacific. I Imve seen your gigantic p.,,-1<r noer t.d by a thou-and ties wi h the condttioi. of il .ittwaid world I have m-n y- u. in a word arrive iu v. ni lev. l.ipement at tlio jK.int lvheie it i not only ? mr right, but ai o your necessity to become a j oh.i .,u .?.t!t. I p.?n this posi tion 1 founded nny boj i no the matter was clear, that t utope bellig n. w or ti e ev< I a decisive strug gle als lit what principle h. 11 i :ile the ? rid you cannot r< n.ain InuiU. reot ah .ut the Is.-ite. b . au e the princiil. rt aheolutnn. < nc< ? dor; ., o?u ill Kuropn. ?' ul.lt ring not oi.Jy . I,r.l.;|.i-J ' i/tlcllll its. but even Uanger ' f your luii.e recur \ o ,,e to yourselves. I lb> i* Ion1 1 on# Mii-red H ..1m? ?t il I !e that you should in * ' r' " '* ,iblU" l" "" ?' ppy u. ot our in. | ei |, iih ii you can do it wt.b ii! the r.-lk . t , ..i, eiiUngiiog v?ur wiil? lit 1.1 sjc.iiieing anything. Without bur ?K III |I? ; , ,, ?mr wlnchever of \f iii nib-red- but imI , , ., ill. And I told the is-. | ' " r fr.,.. d.^lriog that ' , " 'if Um no w. bu?< i.ii. v. ii ? .. . .Vs4 1. fru" . 'ii arm to Maud our r. ai. ij . i < n ? i , , ( |j ,n n ( wlJI w if er. mr ! ih f ||#. | |ow ?? | ^ "" 1 ' I 'M 'ed to .10 so ??| .. . I ndib'd by eirc.n. " do so sow : and to .. inninil oui succe , w, , , -li ng i?,t to have ti.ii play * loeh ?? an rui> we ? ;i b,vs|fHi? t ,,, ,. ( Mate* aesumii.g tlie position o| a power on earth d clare but i ?t.r? nanon has ih. right lo stand by itself, an, i ,<> ? {.ulate its own institution- and the lorm of it m g, ? rnioeftt and thai no for. ign p-.w-ir lr.s the r ght to , 'irf.rv with ,t ? Uouidtio concerns of anothor nation 2? fW **h*r ?mmUh I lure More faMr raaliiai* *5*{ '? uP?n Ik* baata of tkiw principles. humbly ^ ^ K?pU o t the United States '? fair play " io suredby your national protest against the principle of 1 ?'r. frBOC* ? l^e rlghU of free commercial intercourse m^It J?Ut wfTrn for lb* tUne of our "?ne?e<l do r^*nH'on ?f our independence, JiVBurta . t.me when we succeed to re-establish it. *** i*1' expectations which I wu. by no many evldeuau of sympathy and by numerous a**nci itioni, which I niet in the United Mate*, encouraged to enter 'aiji? -beside* wane financial aid. n poor aim* lo the rau.-e i J, . rtjr.fr0ln i?"r Pirate generosity ; not any great Individual sacrifice. but just so much a* you ean opart' without either Injuring ) our interest or even abating your wonted daily comfort? financial aid. not to make revolution with because that in unavoidable, in n should nil the world forsake our cause ; not to curry on a war with, because. the war once engaged Hungary ha* sufficient resources to carry it ou without foreign aid or loan, with her own mean* ; but financial aid to complete with those preparation*, which mightily would increase the chance of* cceas. but which we now can not effectuate out of our own means? the rich resources | of ' our country being now in the gr.tsp of our enemies. | Allow me to ask wan I too sanguine in my wi-hes to j hope, that in these expectation* I will not fail ? So much. I dan- my, that I conceived these expectation* not without encouragement on your own part. With thix let me draw to a close One word otten tell* more than a volume of skilful eloquence. When crossing the Alle ghany mountain*, in anew country, scarcely vet *ettled Coring at every *tep the murk ef a new creation I hap pened to see a new house in ruin* 1 felt astonished to see o/V'k Am'Ti<?; !n' mu'*t l?W been a misfortune in Jk ? liaDl* of ?od may hare *tricken him, thoiigi.t I. and inquired from one of the neighbor*, W hat ha* become of the man?" Nothing particular'' answered he. -he went to the West? ho wa ? too comfortable here. American pioneers like to bo un comfortable ' It wax but one word, yet worth a volume. It made me more correctly understand the character of your people, and the mystery of your hidden prodigious growth, than a big volume of treatises upon the spirit of America might have done , The instincts of indomitable energv. all the boundl *s : power hidden in the word "go ahead," lav open before my '7?'? bowing with deep reverence before that energy \V? bJ a glance what immense thing* might be aceom i Pl ou 7 ,h.nl "n,,r?y to th<> honor and lasting welfare (/fall humunity. if only it* direction be not milled ? and i I pray God that he may preserve your people' from being I all absorbingly given to the direction of materialism i Kome having conquered A*ia. then the richest country in I the world, a triumph was accorded to the victorious lead er, I.uctillus. 1 believe, who. a* the custom wa*, expouud | ing hi* deeds in the capitol proudly indulged in the ex planation of what immense treasures he had captured and brought home. Old Cato rose, with all the severity ot his grave character, and solemnly said. ?? I greatly fear those ; treasures will rather capture our-elves than we them " ! Ami curious. indeed Rome wa? declining from that vrry i day that those treasure* were brought home to Kome , I.ueuUu* is gone the treasures are gone. Kome itself is gone; and what is all. which of Iatculluit (besides the memory of h in fastidious dinners.) cum? down oven to ' u* out of hi* triumph* over Asia ! The cherry tree, which I lie was the first to bring then over with him to Kurope i A lesson of deep meaning, gentlemen. The treasure* perished and Home together with them; hut the kernel ' ot the cherry b fruit, which lie brought, is blooming eve- ! r7,/P"1K' lnultil,H"a to million*, and its fruits, a fair girt of Heaven, gladden the hearts of million* of men 1 he proud results of egotism vani.-h in the following gene- i ration like the fumy of a dream ; but the smallest real I benefit bertowed upon mankind, is lasting like eternity i People of America ! thy energy 1* wonderf ul ; butforthy sake for thy future sake, for all humanity's sake, beware ? i Oh beware from becoming too material. But I am wand ering from my subject. Kxcu.sc me. It was but au illuit- ' tratmn of the fact that in one single word, there i* often I a deeper meaning than in a volume of philosophy. I have seen ro many sad and bitter hour* in my stormy life, as not to remember every word of true consola tion which happened to brighten my gliiomv way. It was nearly four months ago. and still 1 remember it a* if it had happened but yesterday, that the delega tion. which cainc in December last to New York to ten der me a cordial wtlcome from, and to Invito me to Newark, called me a brother, a brother in the just and righteous appreciation of human rights and human desti ny-? brother in ali the sacred and hallowed sentimeut* of the human heart. They are your word* I quote, and ves terday the people of Newark have proved to me that they lire your sentiments? sentiments not* like the love which is passing on like the sudden excitement of passion, which cools, but sentiments of brotherhood and friendship, last ing. faithful and true. 1 ou have greeted me by the dear name of brother. When I came, you entitled me to the right to bid you farewell in a brother * way And, bo tween brethren, a warm grasp of hand, a tender tear in the eye. and the word leniember." tells more than all the skill of oratory could do. And remember, oh remember, brethren : that the grasp of iny hand is my people * grasp the tear which glistens in my eyes, is my people * tear i my people suffering a* none other do; my people bearing ! , 7T?t,or and for tlle wor'J: niy people, ready to redeem i wiih its blood. the oppressed world: my people, the emblem j of st ruggling liberty claiming a brother's love and a bro [ thcr s aid from America ? the emblem of prosperous liber j. word brother, with all the dear tiw com prised in that word, bo (he imprcsnion I leave upon vour hearts. Let thi* word, brethren, remember, bo my fare well. Kosmth then retired, and Col Pennington announced the Hungarian bond* for salo During the forenoon, four ladles from New Brunswick presented Ko'auth with a basket containing $100 in American gold. He said he had not received much aid trorn the ladies since he left New York, except in Pitts burg. Between two nnd three o'clock in the afternoon, lie met a number of ;he clergy at the residence of l(?v l)r >.<ldy. when he was addressed l>y Dr. Scott, and bri"t1v leplied. ' THB DINNKR. . V.*18.1, " public dinner, was given to Kossuth the J ark I1oum>. at 4 o'clock. ?tran|je to miy, th<' tick limited to 100. in a cit} liuuiborinc 40 (MK) inhabitant8; and ail the tieketp wc*re n?t K?ld. for there were some vacant Beats, though tlio commit tee thought proper to offer an inMilt to the Prens bv ordering a side table to be bet for them in one corner of the rocm. Iliis inhult was resented by the reporter f?>r the lit sai d, who insisted upon paying for a ticket; and alter the committee had actually sold it to him they re quested to get it bark, as they would not have room: j upon which Mr. Bernard McCormick presented the re j porter with a ticket of his own. upon which be entered I and took his seat like anybody else. The result was. that I the committee were compelled to aliandon their odious arrangement, and the reporter took his seat at the table wherever he could find it. The dinner was announced for 4 o'clock, but it wa* | twenty minutes to 6 o'clock before Kossuth entered ae , eompanied by the Mayor. .lames M Quinhy. upon which ; according to arrangement, all rose and cheered. The I , ,1?V Kossuth sat at his right hand, and Rev. l^ilUy at his l"ft. with the members of Kossuth's suite 1 ?, !, r Col. A. C. M. Pennington acted a* Vice | 1 resident, and hi* brother. cx-Uovcrnor Pennington | occupied a conspicuous position. Among the other per I SOU" present were Baxter Sayres. Morris county (aboli tionirt); Col Ileddcn. D. J. Miller. Col. Charles King. | Uiu f Justice Ilornblower, Dr. Conger, member of Con i Kr('fh : Mr. Southard. High Con -table; Mr. Vermiiyea | ( a shier of State Hank of Newark; Sheriff Pierson; and | last, not least, the dent leal " Billy Patterson'' who was I struck? a rosy-faced, hoary haired, venerable, honest i looking Scotchman. I After dinner, and before speaking, commenced a num - ,r wt-re admitted, among whom were Mr*. I Justice Ilornblower. the Pennington family, the Eddy family, the lady of Mr. B. McCormick. Police magistrate, i and ML-s Bacon, the authoress. The rootn was orna i Inented with flag*, and Mr. Burnett, a baker, contributed a handsome confectionary ornament, under which wa* i what wa* far handsomer ? a tifty dollar bill. I Wni. K. M( Dosnh.i. gave the first toast, as follow* .e . ' niu'd 8'ates of North America? I'pon her I Christian eri-ed has been engrafted that noblest senti . in< nt of a pagan philosophy? that next to Uod. we stand I for our country " | The next toast, was: ' The President of the United | States '' 'l b en ; ? The Governor of New Jersey.'' i l x-( hief Justice Hon>ni.ow> n was called ti|ion to rc fj??nd He said he was afraid an unfortunate selection was made?an old man, and one laboring under an af fection of his throat. lie did not respond to the toast I tiecause (.overnor Fort wa* a democrat, hut because he was a true r. publican in heart. Whig* and democrats fight furiously ixfore elections, but after, they were the ?est of friends. He paid a uumber of complimentn to Kossuth, and concluded by saying that Kossuth wa* dr jurf by the voice of llie nation. Governor of llungary ?who was very differ, nt from Louis Napoleon, who took 1 the government into his own hand*. If they had never Inard of Kossuth till he came among them, they had seen enough of him to make him the guest of the nation and the jxvest of their hearts. He had followed him everywhere, and he had never been able to detect him iu a fallacy or a contradiction The time had not yet come, though he had some fen boding, when the people of the United States, | and esjM cially the people of the North should be afraid to "peak ill univi r.-al liberty and universal emancipation | He was the last m n that would support any man who would ot p. ?e the doctrines of Washington. But the doc- i tnnes < ; Kossuth were not opposed to the doctrines of "nh.iigton There was too muvh Kuropeau influence exert? d in this ountry. and the result was that we were succumbing to tie des|K>ts. Hc honored Mr. Biv. * who. until h was authorized by the government at Washing ton. would not ri cognise the u urper at Paris. 'i I., toast of the ? venit.g was tlnn given as follows: ? ' l.oui- Kossuth ? An orator, statesman and patriot, who in vieti i j <.r di lent. In office or in exile at all time* anil | in aU place- alwnjs steadfast to the freedom of his father land?a niim who can ray with tialba .? liaised as I wa* l y the events of war. and fleeted to the highest office f Mhw wb.at I had t j i x|h rt Cnvv and malice may pursu" me but tin glory of doin^ . ,..j ,iu,|| si ill he mine.'' The least wnsneelved ^ nh loud applause M Ko*h hi tie n ro e and ai-t :? It is my fortune not tofigri* with many ideas in the world. The sentiment now iiltue i I do not agrei with tor a mnn who does go(?l In in filory. df**s not goi d at all. It i,. only he who is worthy ? f tin name of d> inggoi d. who doe- it not from glory, but fiuna one of duly and does not know that the word glory is in the dictionary (Apj lau e ) P( iha|? there i vi r was a man who ha. ne. iv.il somucli pers' nnl kin.l !'?' as 1 have n reived ill the I'uiti d 8'ale> Yet I feel not delighted. ' wi h for nothing for myself and every personi I kiiidm s- I riciivi leud me to fear that it h done or ii e and not fir my latin rl..nd ft may be a failing; I nt I ale an hone, t man w ith ail my unpi rt e'ion and I hink < very lie m< lit 1<>s t that is not tor i he benefit my lathi rland I na .?? lie tine i perhaps < II n?i?e when per s lis show me kilidl e s I. i-s.u e I do not -lnw lint I !<l graliful fir it? the kind tie- b< !n^ lo my -elf. ante ami not to my eountiy I cannot make a jsnh. I have i o atti nd a met ting to-night and I am Ot like a bellows which can lie blo.i n at will, (hanghU r nd eriis of ? Hot nbh wri r.") 1 1 Is lint III a I in re pent eld ' ?I v hi n we find ii a -I elated wiih mil pr neiple* a* ! I.i gi nth man who Ii., Ju t ipnk ii h i- muur iteil H<> ha made a eoinp ri on b< twi n l.oui Nap' Icon and inv to mlb m If and tin ii he aid In nekin.wl. ilg. il tin ? io he ovetnor of llimgaiy dr j >r. \\ > II I b. level am If ? will of a p> ople who hive a- erlnl Its right to di p no ? I ii? own fale by heroic dccdn nnd oeians i.t blotal l,e a , giiln ate leuti. efg reinniiit then I am the lawful t oviinor i f Hiingary (Aptlaue.) I. then' anything j nih.it title that I am glad of? Not at all. Vou will ever in jovii I s. meet a man to wle m the work | of holding a publ i of i) i ?* hu s'i h(Us ,rn.ti l tsuou a-, to iny-ilf I con<iJ"r the gr ?u*t (toon UutoH be toileted uot m* la to ?-* ma <? n; F?W? I aqpMt hate thletoStiiw? It U*?j Mluw, I wWfcU beprivaU, \idta go into my garden and MaWMpUU tha evorUatlac beautv of nature. But duty to om thing. and laoUn?iio? to an other. Previd.noc oalled me into the P real dent 1*1 chair of Hungary and I could not kip it. (Uugh?? A Si have sworn to (iod to do all in my power tomainUin the Independence of my eountry, I will remain faithful to my oath: but as soon ax that Independence to achiered I would like to aee the power that w<*ld hold me in offlce. It to not, therefore. for the purpose of being called -ex C- ', n1Cf vnr. wh*t7lpr_1" le' but beoauio I honor the Principle that no authority can legislate except by the will of the people; and it to from them that I have re ce red it I must be candid with you, and you will excuse me when I tell you that I nerer know why American* lov.d no much titles (Grout laugh ^ i of Americans not to be offended with truth I do not take this title from the Car of liuseia ; and 1 hope to aee him embarrassed a t ou t hi* own title I wiut not born among the nobility, else I should nerer have obtained the position I did In former time* the nobility placed themselves in erery of fice, but always with the additional title of honorary" im mU re. which wean, only a title, but with no duties J waa 'n ? certain place in the I mted i tales 1 will not hay where ? I was called upon by ii person. who was a Oolonei, appointed by the autho rities. n nd who offered me erery kindness and attontien during luy stay in the place When I was leaving the city. 1 mid to him, " Colonel. I most cordially thank you for your kindness, and I wiH fend for you, the Orst cannon shot that is fired in Hungary'' (Honrs of Laugh te*r.) ' Me. sir?" he asked. "I am not bo fond of gunpowder as that." I am told that the title had no meaning at all (Renewed laughter, which w*a excited tbe more, as the allusion was under stood to be to a gentleman of Newark? Chief Justice 1 lorn blow er li*s all udod to Louis Napoleon But it so happens that IxjuU Napoleon Is recognized by the Ame rican government, while the poor Governor of Hungary is not recognized. Yet Louis Napoleon to guilty of per jury, and broke his allegiance to the sovereign people. The Governor of Hungary led the people on against despotism. and broke their enemies. It would bo very ridiculous to call me governor rfe t facto, who am a p-vor, wandering exile who doea not know whether my chil di en have bread to eut to morrow. But I am governor dejyrt; and. oh. my God' if 1 had seon the (lag of tliu lulled States flying over Huugary. when it f m^ht so bravely for it* lit* ln*toad of flying in prottH'tion i?v??i me. wht n the country was lost, Hungary would have been saved and be now free. It is only, therefwre, for sake of my country that I a sumo the title. I will very soon leave the I'nitod Slate*, where I have re reived ao many honors. They havo produced sorrow in my heart. bc< ause I believe they were given to mo per sonally, rather than to my country . I havo often said O my (iod. pluck me out of fight, that nobody may see me more; bul let the principle be borne by the hand of un invisible angel, and no longer let the glory be given to me. who am a poor candlestick, and not Ihellght. (Ap plause.) I thank you fur your kindness. I reiy not. however, upon expectations from men. but on the al mighty arm e.r God But let It not bosaid in the nine teenth century, that a republican country only recognises struggling republicanism by a momentary emotion or by personal kindness. Curse me if you jjease; but help my eountry. (Great applause ) ' Itn. CoM;?:a then moved that a committee of four be appointed to collect material aid. The appointment was accordingly made Kossuth then withdrew. Some other sentiments were drank, and the company eryi?yed them selves for some time longer. Kossuth a il drifted a German meeting in Library Ilall, alter !i living the dinner table He leaves Newark on Fri day morning, at 7 o'clock, rn route for Boston. THE A It K A NO KM EN TS FOR KOSSl'TH " DOWN KAST." We have received the following particulars, from the Boston committee, of the arrangements for Kosi'ith'-i movimcnts down Kast: ? Kossuth leaves for the Kast to-morr. morn ing, under the conduct of the Massac' -Jative Committee, accompanied by the Coi ? >,.w Haven, lie will arrive at New Have eleven o'clock, where he will be received by the ci authorities, and conducted to the Green, where be will be uddreased by the Muyor. From thence he will bo escorted to tVhlt neysville. where he will be presented by the workmen of the lactory with material aid in the shape of a quantity of American rifles. Returning to New Haven, he will partake of a collation, and leave in the three o'clock train of cars for Springlleld where he will pass the night On Saturday he will visit Northampton, where he wili paw tho Sabbath. On Monday ho will return to Spring field. and proeced to Worcester, where he will remain till Tuesday morning, when hs will leave for Boston. Ar riving at Boston about eleven o'clock, he will be received by a military escort, and conducted to the Slate House where the Governor will receive him. Ho will then be escorted through the principal streets to his quarters at the Revere House. Another Flood on the Western River*. It' ri in the Pittsburg Commercial Journal. April 19.] LIVES I-OST ? DESTRUCTION OK PROPKRTV . We have scarcely been able to sum up the damage and disasters of the late Hood, when we find ourselves sur rounded by another and still more detractive inunda dation. At the time we commence this article ? Sunday evening at 10!^ o'clock? the watir is up to 23 feef and both rivers rising at the rate of six to seven inches an hour, wiih a heavy rain fulling, which commenced Fri day evening about o'clock, and has continued, al most witnout Intermission, until this hour. In the recent flood, the great rise was in the Monon gahila. whilst the Allegheny was swollen beyond the bounds of an ordinary spring freshet. Now. both rivers are gushing over their banks, and information from the headwaters of both, leads us to look for stiU further en croachments of the Aim d. At Brownsville, buuday morning, the Monon^ahela was rising at the appalling rate of two feet an hour; aud from the headwaters of the All ghenv we learn that the valleys were charged with heavy bodies ut snow to aggra vate the unprecedented fall of rain. What may be the effect of the heavy rain of Saturday and Sunday on the streams already so enormously swollen and still rising it is impossible to predict with certainty. With the information we have of the state of the streams below us. tho Beaver, the Muskingum, the Kanawha aud Scioto, all running over their banks, and the Ohio at this point already up to within eleven feet of the great flood of 18,'I2. and still rising at an incredible rate. We must conclude it is scarcely possible for the wa ters to liegin to subside before the infliieuce of the rain now falling will be felt, to add disaster upon disaster. The Alleghany steamer, which arrived at eight o'clock on Sunday night, reports that rain ha? been failing with out rotation throughout her trip, from the hour of her departure from Cincinnati on Friday morning; that every stream was swollen, aud that she encountered a rising river through every foot of her passage. These facts authorize fears that the water is not yet wit bin many feet of its maximum height. The Allegheny river is covered with floating fragments of rafts, valuable timber, and lumber of all descriptions, which have been swept from their moorings, and now mingle in wild confusion with trees, drift wood, and fence rails. Numbers of human lieings have been seen on rafts and portions e.f rafts, as they have swept past the city, clinging to their property at the peril of their lives ; and we regret to say it is reported that lives have actually been sacriflcd in view of our Inhabitants, by this ad venturons spirit. One raft of lumber, on which a de ficiency of sweeps gave evidence that it had been carried off unexpectedly from its landiug. and having three men on it. was precipitated upon one of the perpendicular piers i f the upper, or Mechanic's street bridge, the raft shattered to fragments, and the men lost. It is difficult to realize that three men. in broad daylight, in full view i of the numbers which, despite tbe pelting rain, lined the bnnk?. surrounded too by the multiplied means ot saving themselves which the severed boards presented, could thus have lieen drowned. But the impetuosity of the stream, which at this moment Iteggars description, with the chilling temperature of the water, fresh from frozen fountains, may be sufficient to explain a sudden paralysis ofthe vital powers; the only hypothesis on which we can admit that drowning baa occurred in these circum stances. A fragment of a raft of logs was seen descending with the maddened torrent, and a man on it was vigorously struggling to control its course. He guided its headlong career safely past thu Mechanic's street bridge, the Aque duct ai.d the Hand strce-t bridge, but was not so lucky in steering by the piers ofthe St. Clair street bridge. Fortunately several of the piers of this bridge hare been strengthened within a few years, by the addition to their upper edges, of massive walls, or ice hreukers. which, in stead of standing perpendicularly to the current, present an inclined plane, with an easy angle. Our solitary na vigator finding himself doomed to inevitable contact with the pier dropped his steering oar. and squared liimaelf for a running jump, and just as his doenned craft lose to the fwell e>f the obstruct! d torrent, he sprang forward, and leuped bravily clear i f the crashing aud surging timber, made sure hi- fitting and cheered by the raptu rous and joylul shouts of an excited crowd of witneksses, he ( lambered steadily up the pier on all fours and with a friendly hand fr< m the top he was soon on the bridge. It wa?. as he pithily ri mm k. d whilst lie wiped the sweat from his brow, - a pooty tight fit." All the lower part of Allegheny City is overflowed and the inhabitants are in a moat deplorable stale of ?uffer ing and alarm. ( n our own side, tho lower situations on the Allegheny border of the city are submerged; and the water has in Vadi d the ba-i mcnlKuiul cellars of number* of dwellings. F cars are entertained that the large stores of lumber pilid in this quarter may be swept away during the ii'glit Some fi w men are busy moving off what is most oulaiigi red but the driadltil weather renders It next to iu.pos-illc to induce men to work so that owners are compelled to await the waters subsiding and slopping short, as the only chance for tbe saving of their pro perty I ears are entertained for the security of property (ton d in I he c< liars en the Mouongahelu front between Woed and Maikct streets and along Wood street to Se cond stifst 1 he water advancing up the large sewers whii h uiid< ilii Wis d street and converge there, may in voile those c< II rs fretn bel .w should the rise continues f< w futltirthir in now appears pretty certain. Parties inti rested hi.wi vor. having taken the alarm, are on the i.lcrt, and have Htwatihcs upon the advance of the fit.' tl S? me of the merchants more exposed to damage? W ii k V M(iii'dlis?. I.i wis lialzell in Co.. James A. Iluti lii i n K ( n in Bagalcy k t'o . ,1 S. 1)11 worth & Co King & M es t bead ai d limff Lindsay A Co. ? have ? titi ri o i pen i he n il. oval o| all destructible property lii m tin it n lhir>. 'll,o sti i nn r Keystone State which lamb d Saturday nlglit lias Inn lilts tie to dischaigo Iter cargo lest da iti' K' nuld ci me to the pri perty from the rapid niovc liit i t 1 1 tin llo. d As w i (bit this article it i* Impossible to convey In our 1 1 1 lit rs an iib a i f thi gli -om and alarm which pre > ail over llie trultlu de of silent jet stirring watchers who keep | | .en 1 1 the river Isiider, i.f oui city and are doom ed to | nss an i nxious iiiflit thi re I I ' t?i I 1 1 > t s o't i i t In t he hour from 10 h. inn to 1 1 1, 'Jo min . tl. water ha* risi n seven inches, till He s w i II e p|ii,rs a* rapid as ever whilst the rain tall* i no Hum 1ml in voltiiu and slimline- 'I he water i- in w i vt r VI lei l I w ?i > ? o ( i oe s ? Cur b oal reporter bring" in a con I "nut" n 1 1 the I t . t?.t make* it two litis b si I* I I In Ai|t'i iltici and one at the St t Hair street I ridic j"0 O'lier |'i I ?n- isoijml bv crawl ing up the piirs I I the lattn in the manui r In which wo havi- des Mill* <J CillC" JIaii i'A?n J wo o Cloth ? ~l)uring tho ln^-L Iwo lioim, tuu.i a 'i b '.H mill the wat't t<j preob ty tw.ive inch M, gMag HI WMMthlof OTt* 35 foot, lid tke ri? appa rently u rapid m before, with a heewy rain still failing The daatraotion of lumber and other property around and near us. will foot np a wry serious aggngait, but we hare ne time new for dotaila. Ntock Haiti. fHiuDiLMu, April <t ? (Reported by Barker. B rather* A Co .)? Km Hotwd?% I.jU) 1 ouusylvania 6'*, '53, 93%; WW do. 93; tKX de. W,'; 1,000 Pennsylv ai la ?'*. 4d, 1A!1*; 15,00# Reading Hailrood &b, 70, 7?H: ",0tW do, bA, TVl; 3,0u0 de, *0, 71/'., 6.0UU Reading Railroad Mortgage 6?, '44, by HA)*; 1&.UW di'. h4. hA.Si >000 Camden and Amboy Railroad tt'*, tff. SMt 6.1IU0 Lehigh 6'*, MS; 300 United .State. ?'i, M, 102; 700 Penn sylvania District#'*. '70, Wk OW city Water Work* ?'*. 'HO, 103; lt>7 shares Pennsylvania Railroad, cAp. 43H; ; SO North American insurance. oaab. 14; SO Union Canal, sA, 14; 10* Reading Railroad, b6, 3**?; 100 I.ong Island Railroad, b6, 10%; .'ISO do, 10%; 100 d?, *A, 10%; 11 rennajrlrania Rank, 117; 100 Girard Bank. b5. lJVfe 600 United State* Bank, 3%. He Imrti D?ari(i-W,UOO Penaajlvauia 6'*, bA wn. 03; 120 share* Long Inland Railroad, 19%: 100 do. liS, 10%; 30 Pennsylvania Railroad, t-Ap. 4,1%; 100 Reading Railroad, 38,W| 12 Pennsyl vania Rank, 1 17 ; t> llnitod State* llaak. 3%. themd Ht ird ?fcMHlO Schuylkill Navigation ti's, '68. intereat oa, 51: 1,000 j Camden and Amboy Railroad 6'*, '67, 85; 2,000 Spring Gar Jea tr., 101. i. 000 Reading Railroad IPe. 70,79%: 300 Reading ' i Mert.ace 6's, '43, Ht%l 16 M' rri* Canal preferred, 98; 100 Union Canal, bA. 14; SO Susiiuehauna Canal, 13 ; A# Long In land Kailr< ad, ?6, 10'J; 19 Northern Bank of Kentucky, 113; | 2.1 Kentucky Rank. 106; I Pennsylvania Hank. 117%-: A de, HA II7H' After llwrd? $.5,000 Schuylkill Navigation 6'*, '68, interest off 4914; 5.000 do, interest on, M)& 3.IM0 RaadingB's. j '70. 15, Ml; 2 000 do, bS, 80; UK) ?hare* Reading Railroad, at i w n, 3r\l?; tiOO do bA, 3hW; 2 Chesapeake A Delaware Canal. i 104: 2UJ Long island Railroad, liA, 10%; 5 Pennsylvania Itank, M, 117%: A do, 117%; 23 United State* Bank. 3%. ?(.'loriug Prtrea? United State* 6'*, '68, 118^ offered, 118% | asneu. do, '07, Ut"*a offered, 118VJ asked; Pennsylvania 5'h, 1 tf"l? offered, 93% asked, Reading Railroad. 38% offered, 3H% 1 a?ked: do Bonus, '70. 80 ottered. N) aaked; do Mortgage 6'*, j '(*), hft% offered, 86 aaked; Pennsylvania Railroad, 43% offer- I ed, 4.''-S aaked; Morris Canal. 19% offered, 19% aakod; 90*><iyU I kill Navigation, intereat on, 51% offered, Al% aaked; Long I aland, 10% offered, 10% aaked; vickaburg, lo% offered, 18 asked; Girard Bank, 13% offered, 13l4 asked; United State* Hank, :?% offered, 3% aaked; Union Canal, 13% offered, 14 aaked. Market steady. Married, By Henry Dana Ward, of St. Luke's Church, A. B. Vi lkntinr to Klizaueth B. Jacoui. all of thin city. On Thursday, February 22. by the Hot. Peter 8. Chaun oey. Mr. T. L. Mauaono* to Adeline Augusta, daughter of 0, J. Cbrlstman. Ksq.. all of thi? city. On Sunday. March 14 at 8t. Oeorge's Chapel, by tho Ktv. Benjamin Kvan*. Mr. Josr.ru Jakemar to Miss Uracb Coates. both of New York. At St. Peter'a Church, by the Rev. Mr. Quia. Mr. Pat hick K 0'Mali.t to MUs Mahian O'Do.iooiile, both of thi- ?ity. On Tuesday, April 20. by tho Rev. Mr. Molellan. Daniei. 0. Mi ujkvehn. Ksq.. to Miss Kuia DnouaaE, of thU city. Died, On Wednesday, April 21, of consumption, Sarah T., ? wife of Krueet Kt-yeer. Jr., aged 31 year*. 7 month* aud 10 day*. Iler languishing head is at rent; It's itching and thinking aru o'er; Her quiet. immoTuble breast Is heaved by ultliction no more. His father, anil brothers. John. Jeremiah, and Isaiah, nnii all trii-ndi and acquaintances. are itiTit <m1 to attend | lier funeral, from her late residence, 170 Third aTenuc, this afternoon, at 4 o'clock. At Newnrk, N. J., on Wednesday morning. April 21, Charlotte Louisa, wife of Thomas U l'eddie. The relatives and friends of tho family are respectfully | inrited to attend her funeral, this afu-rnoon, at 3 i o'clock, from her late residence. 14 Camtleld street, New ark. Her lemains will be taken to Mount Pleasant i Cemetery for interment. At White I'laia* on Wednesday morning, April 21, De , Borah &CHi'nKMA!? . relict of the late Nicholas Schureman, | of this city, in the t'Jith year of her ;ufe. Funeral service will tuke place this morning, at half-past 8 o'clock, at the house ot William Barker, Whit* 1'lains iter remains will be tnken to AVilliam.sburg for interment. Friends in the city will tind carriages in waiting, at the corner of llroomu street and Bowery, at half-past 11 O'clock. On Wednesday. April 21. Sofhia Loiimeter, wife of Hermann Lohnieyer, aged 30 years and 6 months. l he friend* of the family are respectfully invited to at tend her funeral, from her late residence, 81 lleade street, corner of Church street, tins afternoon, at 2 o'clock. Her remains will be taken to Greenwood Ceme tery. After a long and sovcro illness, of consumption, Thomas Jones, aged 26 years. The friends of his bi others. John, Kran. and Morgan Jones ; the memben of United States Lodge No. 388, 1. 0. of O.K.; the members of tho Plumbers' (luard, anil the plumber* in general; nlso the members of Friendship As sociation. ore respectfully inrited to attend his funeral, from his late residence. M Centre street, on Sunday af ternoon. April '25. at 1 o'clock. His remains will be taken to Greenwood Cemetery for interment. On Thursday. April ^2. Mr. Kobkrt Anderson, a natire of Fifeshire. Scotland. The relatives and friends of the family, also the mom l>ers of St. John's I,o<Jge of Free and Accepted Masons, the Knickerbocker Lodge of Odd Fellows, and the New York Lodge. No. 4. of tiood Fellows, are respectfully in vited to attend his funerid. on Sunday next, from his late rusidence. liushwick Cross Roads. Stages will bo in wait ing at the Peck slip and Division avenue ferries. WU> liami-burg. at 1 o'clock. I At Yoiikers. on Wudnesday night. April 21. Geokub ; Mai -Adam, furmrrly of Belfast, Ireland, in the 74th year of bisuge. Tho lriends of the family are informed that the funeral will take place this afternoon, at 3 o'clock, from his late retVdence. Bucnn Vista avenue, near the Uailroad Depot. Cars leave the corner of College ptftM aud Chambers street, at a quarter Ufnre 2. returning from Yonkers at bulf-pnst S o'clock. Oti Thursday. April 2*2. Marv F.ljzabetii Fossett. in the 21it year of her age. daughter of the late Mr. James Fos sett. and adopted daughter of Wm. If. King. Iler fumral will take plaec from the residence of Wm. U. King. 182 Sixth avenue, on Sunday afternoon, at 1 o'clock. The friends of her deceased father. andofWm. II. King, ure respectfully requested to attend, without further invitation. Her remains will be taken to Green wood for interment. On Thursday. April 22. after a short illneess. Thomas G. III.l'Hl'RN. Ills remains will be taken to Milford. Ct..for interment, this morning, at 10 o'clock, from his late residence, 21% hidridgc street. ( u 'l lii'.rrdny. April 22. after a short illness, Jane W. Morton, aged 03 years. 1 he friends of the fiimily are respectfully invited to nttend the funeral, this all ernoon, at 2 o'clock, from her late ret ideuee. 219 Fulton street. Her remains will be taken to Greenwood Cemetery. New Orleans papers please copy. At Howard. N. Y.. on April 4. of brain fever. Axoeline ArcrsTA, wife of Otis A. liullard, and daughter of Augus tus A. Olmsteud. aged 28 years and 3 days. On Tuesday afternoon, April 20. of dysentery. Marion, infant daughter of Dr. Fidward and Ann Macbert. MARITIME lNTELLIUENCB. ALU A.TAO? APnil. 23. lv * mm. A 111 moon rets mora 10 .14 4 b- a SETS 6 46 I HICK WATER ?v? 11 0 PORT OF NKW YORK, APRIL 22. 18M. Cleared. Steamahip Sierra Nevada, Wilson, Aspiowall, J Howard A Sen. Meainsllip Wm Tenn, Mark*, New Orleans, T P Sta-iton. Ship I'olUan State, Manaon, LLvorpool, Dunham Hi Diiaon. VI. ip Silas Oreenman, Spencer, New Orleans, Everett A lirt.Mn. Ship Me<!onah, Rich, New Orleam, Fostor It Nickeraon. Sliiji Powhatan, Meyers, City Poiut, Taylor Si Merrill. Hark Rojal Sovereign (Br), Durell, Hamburg, l unch & i Meincke. Hark Sarah Chaie, Osgood, Cnba, Porklns A D lano. | liark l'anama, (loodlng, Matanras, I'erkin* A Delano. Hark Mary, Oilley, Cuba, J W F.lwell & Co. Hark ( lilrora, Sears, Baltimore, Gorham, Hassctt A Co. | llrig Elxira, Hunt, Cardenas, A W .lone*. HrU Arve, Berry, Curacoa, B Graves A Co. i Brig Reindeer, Arey, Mittanzas, master. | lirii.' Lauretta, Branihall, Belize, Hon, .1 .Tex. llrig Standard, Crosby, St John, NB, J II Ursine, Brig Sanil French, Brown, llathnrst, J B Sardy. I Selir Courier. Roger*, Richmond, C H I'ierson A C?. sdir Ceo M Smith, Hawkins. Baltimore, J W McKee. i St lir Seguine, Swain, Baltimore, Johnson A Louden. I Scl.r 1> 1' W illett. Smith, Philadelphia, master. Schr Cicero, Castro, Philadelphia, Jna Hand. S< hr Compliance, Sears. Boston, J Atkins. Sol.r l'nw tucket, t imer. Salem, W S Brown. Silir Oregon, Cook, New barynort, R P Duck A Co. Arrived, Steamship Faleon, Rogers, New Orleans, 8 days, in ballast, 1 to M O Roberts, The F came to this port for repair*. Steanihhlp Roanoke, Parrli>h, Richmond, Ao, 34 boars, with md*e, to Ludluin A Pleasants. Steamship South Carolina, Turner, from Charleston for Lit ? ri ool, put iiito this port for repairs having dl-aiiled her propeller. rupp<*(d in cro :inp Charleston Itar, and beoom- > mi: imniUURgcatle when in lat 35 'M, Ion 73, in a aea, bore up lor New Y< rk. Ship Saratoga, Traxk, Liverpool, 2.1 days, with mdlt and pasfcnKera, to Slate l.ardiner A Howell. Sl lpTiconderi gn, Boyle. Lherpool, 2t> days, with mdie and 1 passer |?n, to Bar beck A Co, Lat 4.1, ion 49, saw several large iiel ergs. The T arrived off Sandy Hook on Monday, , Slid was compelled to haul off on account of the gale. >hip Reelianih.au (of Thomaston ), Hallowed, Liverpool, It est s, with nuli-c and ,'l!'7 pnsaengors, all well, to Samuel ThiitDpaoB A Nephew. April II, in a heavy s< a. the ship lnh< rin, much, -prong aleak. 13th, lat ,'Wt, Ion f>s .16, during a In aty blow, with a tremendous sea, lost fore topsail yard, ii a in )srd, ti pmait, t 'Pgallant ina&t, and sprung tbe head of mail ii net. Ship I dv ina. II roup h ton. Antw erp March 1.1. and Flushing 1! th, villi md c u nd LtO paasengers. to K I) llorlbut A Co. M?d< lire and ou ttunday altirnoon and waa obliged t? i Innd i II ii ring tl o lute fnle. March '23, lat 46 30, Ion 23, I I e ? hip State iif .Maine, !>? in Havre. -I ip I el I ntts. CI. ace. Havre, 39 days, with mdse and 389 pnseetigers. t? J C Waid. Slip Silas Utilities, Coffin, New Orleans via St Thomai, At ril S, with mdse, to W Nelson. A pril 17. 1st 83 4M, Ion 74 i'7 r?n bark N II Wolfe; IMh. lat.'Ui 7. Ion 74, spoke Susan I. I ii /gerald, fr< m It lo Janeiro for Baltimore. M ip Si I'thp< rt, .M't'iriiitik, Charleston, with mdse, to Si ? r,e., I Ii urman A Co. Spoke 17th, lat 3fi, Ion 74 40, sohr J' .tj h Kfr h. Hay hence for JaeksonvlllA SI i j> In* isi ti Bennett, New Orleans and the H*r. April B, ?ii I. i i t ton . <to. to I r st A Ili k?. hid in on from the Bar villi 1 ip I'hmouth, oi and f. r Bosti n. The 1 has been 8 (Mits N el llatteias w it Ii N K tales snd fog. Ilsrl Ilentilei (llnm) Ti e let, Bremen. 40 days, In bal lii. i in ii !7 pasienren to A P Loesi her & Co ) nrk Pi> ne i Pros), Rcc-Jocr, Bordeaux, (16 days, with 1 1 in dy t .1 lterlj n. Hara 1 II e ( 11 o iii I ), lie; din an n. Ilsmbnrir. with radse and V isiii;?i ti I Iti ek ft Kunhardt. I srl l.olatd (Noiw), Nalsoa, Lauroag, N >rwsy, 71 days, \. ith lion |. order. laik .ill i (oil. y (reported below yesterday as the John i oliy) II lit i Ii I i me, PR, March i3?t h , with sugar, o II Sol thti i. yd III Sois. April 4th. lat JA 18, I mi i Ml pel i Ann hnria frnn IV -ton fi r St D ir.lngo; Bth, i i 12, ?< n 71 4(1, | a- ed I rig Maruellns, from I'orto Rloo i r N i v 11 a 1 1 n I'.srl Repolli' llr. wer, San Joan, Nle, 2D days, w t log VI. &e to II A J Cothi al llurl - W Niifb (?t Harrington, Me) Ws-a. fluayama, 1 I 2t*da>a, With so^iir hi d in' laaSM, to G II De Forrest A ( .. Pari lalellta llvne Diwlug, It in de .lanelrn 17 dara, V it I I'll t.' A || I St Parnms. Henry Williams and tints f i i 1 1 > el I i It'o.i re si d I has Tabor, of N Jer.ev, die. I f IV urn till pa March 23. lat 16 0B K, ion .'14 ?>. i l? i ark Ulei Merrlion fr m Hlo Jatieiro fo? Baltlmor*. .. I |. I ? '.'4tl la* l.'l 17 S. Ion 33 40 l.iig Juliet Gosh* I, , i Bt 'l'ii.ltln.or' for Cunts video, 4M days i>nt . - I ll l.i Ri r - It r- n, hall Hetiiimla, l.'l days, with radse, i To. kirfc Lh'htbotiriie. ... ..an lis, I l< ela Soi i 1 r Matansss fn.u. l.'l ail / | ril 1' off Matsi?*ae. spoke ship *?Bw*"r? ? l.i, t. i Hawaii* A?ri| ?. with m? 1 , 1 1 N ' rn j. Mlsn, l.na> si llla. 1 R April l?. lat ?? to P HJ'Wllt. ves? i I to M will' l.owsprit 7 Ion 7S W. saw .hip s?.+ em ^klsSi uilf r? Upmaat gons, steoriag w. i ??? e IM, by bark Nathaniel Blake, at BmUi, m re Mruij. Brig Fora*t Prtaee (of Cherryfleld). Dtuekley. Trinidad da Cuba. ?t> dnye, wtth molaeee*. to Meyer ft Stuoken. Brig M*fj (Br). Wallace, St Ana* Bay, Ja, 20 day*, with pimento, fc<i, to A 8 SoluiDuAf. Brig Times, Hkchlay (ol Boston), I'mm. PR. April X with auger and molaeera, to master April 4, lat 2ft R lua 61' 00, apoke Urtr Al l) I! aria, Smith, from !(???<. n fur Port an Prince; tith, lat 29 12. Ion 71 46, paaaed brig Maroelltu, Thompson, from Pi rto Rico for Nm Havea. Brig Al>ri>m (of ftcltaale) Stevens, Lavella de Corra, If days, nith hides and akius. i<> Vow ft Perkins. Brig Tribune (ofOrlaad), Killmaa.tiuajama, PK, Udiji, villi tuirtr, to nttUr. Hrv kolaito (rf Star* ?aft). Nichols, Cardeaaa, 11 days, With sugar, to NeemiMi a Sons. Brig Grand Turk (of Vmvidence), Porter, Cardenas, 1] darn, with molasses. to Pi aliallaa. Ilrig Clarence ( Br), Smith, Turk! Island* via Bermuda, 21 days. witli nil. til-, to Tueker ft 1-lgbt bourne. The C bu experienced hen*)' weather for the last 14 day*. Brig Duncan (of Warren), Kohinson, Galveston, 27 day*, with cotton, to J 11 Hr"vi'rk Co. Brig Macon, Watkina, Savannah, 6 day*, with cotton, to K ? Dvaiill. S< I r Ilerniine (Oldcu. ), Cornell!'*, Bremen, 43 day*, in I allai t and (0 passi ngers to Pimoo ft Buffer. Sol r Catherine, Collin*, Barcelona, 16 day*, with hide*, to S W Lewis. 2I*t, 15 miles S of Barnegat . run into the *ohr San Luis (of Harford). Williams, frim Middleton, Conn, for Philadelphia, with a load of atoua: the captain and orew a) aiiduiicd ti e vessel and came to N York in the O; ahe wa* 4 years old and of 110 ton* burthen. Thecapt doo* not thiak she sank, but would probably drift ashore on the beach. Scl.r J arc C liidpeway (of Baltimore), Snow, Mayaxue*. I'll, 111 days, with sugar and inolasee*. to Holler, Sand* ft Itiera. tit li inat, lat 41 51, Ion 7* 12. apoke bark Swan, of and for Baltimore, from Rio de Jnrciro (the S arr to-day). Schr G II Townscnd, 11 titcliinson, Nouvitas, April 12, with molasses, U>i>ateo, ftc, to M M Freeman ft Co, Schr U tl Freeman, Gluvcr, May agues, PR, Aprils, with molasses, to J P Jewctt. li*th, lat 37 ?W, Ion 74 30, aaw a lame al ip, having | aiutcd porta, with loa* of for* maat, bow eprit, and main topgallant mast, ateerini: S. Solir Ttiton ( Br). Willet, J actual, 24 day*, with wood and coffer, to G Douglait Solir Bonita (of Eastport), Pattingell. Franklin, 17 day ?, with soger and molaaevs, to Sturges t Co. Schr K U Naeli, White, Jacksonville, KF, 13 day*, with yel Imaplne. Schr Pampero, Kendrick, Apalacl.icola, April 2. with Oot ton. to 11 Hedoll. First day out, lat 39 34, Ion 7 , apoke *chr Ci nn-cticut. hence for St Domingo. Schr Julia ft Nancy, Littleton, Newborn, NO, 5 day*, with naval tterii, to tt L Mitchill. Scbr Ira Brewster, llorton, Wilmington. NC, 6 day*, with nnral atoro*, to N l< MoCready & Co. 19th Inst, ? AM, ffm Berry, of Sandy llill, Md, a a* loat overboard from the fly ing jil> boom; lowered the yawl to *ave him, but he *ank bo fore it teaclx-d him. Schr < harlea Mill*. Francia, Charleaton, 5 day*, with cot ton and rite, to N 1. McCready ft Co. Solir Franrca Satwrly, liaria, Charleaton, 5 day*, with cotton and rice, to N I, McCready ft Co. Schr J Stratton, lifctea. Philadelphia, via Montauk Point. Below, Ship St Ceorgo, Havre, :'U day*, w)th loll of fore and main topgallant n.a?t?. Sl.ip llotcliveal, from Hamburg, 07 day*, loot main had mi/en topgallant maat*. Ship Columbia, Charleaton, 4*-j day*, with ootton, to T Wa rifle. Ship Sarah J Hyde, with loa* of f.re topgallant malt. Duteli ahip Unrtembnrgh. Ilnrk Norma, Bremen, 4.r< day#. A Uo, 2 abipa, 2 barka, an d 3 brig*. Balled, Steamahipa Wm Pcnn. Mark*. NOrleana; Sierra Nevada, Wilaon. Navy Bay: ahipa Fntncca, F.llia, Havana; llemi* | h(Te, Pray, Mobile: Kmpire State, Ruiwil, l.lrerpool; Blan cliard, Lawrence. NOrleana; barka Favorite I llrem ) . Meyor dirch. Hn-mon: Alfred (Brem), I<e Punt, Bremen: South erner; F.uiily (Br); briga laahella, Cha* Thoma: , and R H Moulton. Wind at sunset, N W. RKTtmwru? Bark PaVmetto, Green, hence for Gatveaton' cnine back to tho Quarantine, to land a diaablod seaman and proceeded to aea agaia. The bark Jnmc* Hall, Tamp, for St Jago, il at anchor be low Quarantine. Telegraphic Marine Report*. Boston, April 22. Arrived? Ships Propontis, Penan*; Parliament, Liverpool; C llumbertaon, ? . Cleared? Ships Hope, and Cairo, NOrleam; bark* Julia, Cronatadt; N C Buchan. NOrleana; Sola, Philadelphia; brig Alabama, Savannah; aohr* Cha* M Smith, and L Audenreid, NYort. CitasLuroti, April 21. In the offing? Ship J Roger*. NYork. Herald BXarlue C o rr capon de nee. Rdoaktown, Anvil 16. Arrived? Schr* Martha, SpolTord, NYork for Portland; Warrior, Ham, do for Rockland; ?ben Herbert, Johntun, Philadelphia for Milton. Sailed? Solir* E H Adams, Nantuoket; Areola, George town: Kiclimond, Bath. 17th? Arr aclir Melville, Baker, Philadelphia for Salem. lHth? The wind haa blown heavily during the day from iNE. Arr achr* Carbillo, King, IJighton Tor Plymouth; Rainbow, Freeman, Tangier for Portland; (loop* Northern Light, Crocker, Nl.ondon; Telegraph, Damon, do. Several *< lira have anchored in the outer roada, unknown, supposed bound ?. 19th? Wind blowa a gale from E. In port ? Schr* Martha, Warrior, Kben Herbert, Elita Jane, Spring Bird, Helena, Pern, George Washington, Julien, and othera, in all about aail. 9 P M? ' Tho wind haa blown a gale throughout the day, aith alumdanee of rain. No mail to or from the Yineyard, by reaaon of the ^ale. Schr Bay Statu, Gardner, went down to the *chr Wm P Deliver on the 17th, and took from her aome rigging, and one other maat*. No proipect of her getting off. rnuosLnu, April 22?4 P. M. Arrived ? Brig Juan de Carthageua, Hooper, Maoliiaa; sebra Wm Lopcr, Lake, Providence; M A Thompson, llab cock. Nlork; Mary Ellen, Cottingham, Deep Creek; Benja ain F Beeves, Heoven, Dighton; Cape May, ltoaa, Fall River; Icabella, Williama, Williamaburg; Superb, Itoath, Norwich; U B Buauomb, Hand, NYork; Mary Craamer, Smith, do. Below ? Ship Damaaous, Roger*. Calcutta; bark Chance, Kllingwarth, Shirlda, E; brig* Adole, Lewi*. Guayama, PR; Patrick Henry, Lofland, Ponoe. PR; Alimode, Holmes, Mnyagun, l'R; Lily (Br). Saunders, Cienfuegoa. t ieaied ? Ship Vci.iua. Brevoor, San Franolaeo; bark Ja ponica, Galleghar, Havana; brlz* Machi^enne, Chamberlain, Falmouth, Ja; Triton, llolmea, Kingston, Ja; aclirs Virginia, Wri^btington, Fall River; William Loper; Lake, Provi dence; M A Thompaon, Babcock, Brooklyn; Boaton. Kelly, Fait Cambridge, Mary Cranmcr. Smith, Jersey City; Capj May, Rou. Providence; Isabella, William*, Fall River; B F Roues, Reeves. Roxboro; Daniel Webster, Folkerta, Provi dence; Lydia Ann, Brooks. New York; Superb, Booth Nor wice. Miscellaneous. Accident and Loss or Lirs ? Thi* afternoon, a* the bark Southerner wa* pa*aing out Sandy Hook, the yawl of the pilot boat Mary Ann, which was on station, wa* launohed, with two men, for the purpose of taking off tho pilot of th* bark, Mr. Thomaa Norris. On ooming alongside a line was thrown to them from the forward part of th* vessel, which tley missed, but succeeded in getting one from aft, which ia seme way became jammed, and there being a heavy tea on, and the bark not being hove too, the yaw 1 took a rank shear, and catching under the oounter filled and capaiaed, drown ing the two men. No blame can po**!bly be attached to any person. Siiif Inez? A letter from Mr K S Smith, agent of under writers, dated l'rovincetown, April 19, aays he had just learned from aseraon who left ahip Inea, that at 12 o'clock, alter high water, her head had worked somewhat off shore, and it was feared that she would work round and heel off shore at next high water. It then blew a heavy gale and the tide waa very full, consequently very rough where the ahip lies. Notwithstanding the severity of the storm, workinea had been engaged nearly all night and the following day in discharging her cargo. He also reporta that about 400 bx* sugar had been saved fn m Br bark Qnecn. in good order, also 300 damaged; all that will be worth saving. A contract has been made to save all they can from her for SO per cent. Br Bank Jos?pha, wrecked on Truro beaeh, night of 20th iust., satis from Gloucester, England, and was com manded by Cant. Cawbey. She left Bristol, Eng., for Bos ton on 11/tli nit. Juat before dark bcr bow broke off just al alt the fore rigging, was tenn on the outer bars, about a mile N. of lliglnland Light with tiftoen person* upon it. The rest of the ve ml and oargo were waibing alongshore. 'Die persons upon the wrnuk could be heard calling f<>r as sirtanco; but the treu, .ml >u* sea upon the shore, ccrahined ?ith the darkness, and a tlonse fog which set in about that time prevented help being crvn thein. Fires were built on the bench, and people lined the shore. A dory was procured, si.d two men, nam< d Jonithan Collins and Daniel Cassady, of Tru ro, mad* an attempt to get off. They succeeded in getting near enough to Converse with those upon the wreuk, when their frail boat waa capsir.ed, and both wero drowned. During the night two of the shipwrecked crew /.ere washed ashore on plecoa of the wrcok, and were rescued nearly ex h in 1. ted. None cf the cargo had came ashore except s< me camomile flower*, chloride of lime i.nd tandles. Several fragments of a log hook came on shore, one of whii h w as the entry of Sunday, Aug 17, Ii5l, headod "offi cial log of the bark Solway" from toward* Gloucester; a nicmorandnui of cargo taken on board aome vessel bo tween Fi b 2!' and March 12, such as 117 easka fuller's earth, marked W in red paint, til or more casks soda marked M ia a diamond, 25 tasks Spanish brown, aame mark, aome boxes of ? lead, and other writing nearly obliterated b? having been i?et; also a ccrtiltoate of chkracter of a seaman nam' d M m Myers, on a voyage from Newcastle to Lo^horn and bai k to Newcastle, in the Winscalra of Newcastle, Robert llrndtl aw, master, terminating at Newcastle, July !8, 1851. These articles may all have been from tho samo vessel, and have been among the effects of the officers or crew. N ?;W Bah k Gay Head, on Duabnry Beach, will be sold at auction as she now lies. Bark Mai.vina, from Hamburg for this pert, is ashore off Bellport, LI, full of water. She haa 120 passengors, pnrt of whom have landed in the government life boat. The M is 2 hi tona burthen, and consigned to Schmidtft Balohen. Baku Odd Frti.ow, Elliot, of and from Portland at Ha vana, bad two gales from SK to SW, the former near Nan tnc et Slioala; lost boat s, 35,000 feet of lumber off dock, and split rails. A ivi.i. Rir.OKD Br Brio la ashore on the We?t Bank. Ibe steam tng Hercules ia in attendance on her. FAi.ap Rsport? The report that brig* Gatelle. Rratir ? and f'ram es Ellen, llrlcy, from llai ana, of and for Portland* went ashore on Cape Eli7abcth, 19th inst, was false. llnio Spartan, from Nickerie of and for Boston. lo<t on I'll in Island, was insured for $1,000 at the New England of hoe in Boston, where also tho cargo waa insured fornoarly $6,1 00. It r Schr Active, frr.m We*tport, NS for Newhuryport, aehore on Salisbury Beach, IS 2 miles N K of the point. Tho ve>?el is high and dr> at low water. She was hut 36 hour* out wl en sho went ashore. Tnr Scun at areh' r iff the South Brcakori, Plum It'and. did not drap at 7 I'M of Tuesday. Mr Thompson would * ateh the I each that night, to render assistance if she oaioe Isln re. Schr Wave. Oliver, from NYork or Albany, for Philadal pl.ia, is reported ashore at llroad Kiln Bench, about five nines above Lewis. No particulars. Ne other damage to vcffcIs at that place. Sciin St san, llnston, at l'hilnilclphia from Maya^uat, I ad a rinrli | arsage, and experienced a suceeailun of nalea from N N IV to NNE; was six days N of llattcras, and four uays in the Bay. pcnn Fi ANKI.IN. of Rockland, from New York for An giitis, l.eli re reported on Hampton lieach, went to pleeet on Mi 11 day night. Part of tier cargo of flour and c >rn raved. Bu Sciih Mahv Ann. from Argyle, before reported ashore on Point Altlcrton, went to pieoes jesterday. Hit S< 1111 C1tAl.c1.1tON v (not Caleilimia 1, is tlie nan o of t l.o veeeel wrecked on Tuesday, 011 Mnr.ibhold Hce< h. Whalrmi ti? Arr at Taipanlln Cove 17th, (hip Conatitution, Bnnkof.nf and 11 r Nentiii ket (lait reported .Inn ft, off Cape Hern, ft u ' ' Al 'I ali'ahrano 11th March, Valparaiso, Clevele1"1' N "? "" ' M n "lIlMrva. Pnty tb a, N Bedfor.l from l-aelfl^befope ra > ; ; I '.'" l raVkl/n' 'Br' wo"'"^' rly, fulT'eargo 0 ep oil (about *' Sri'iVn- libl.'i ff BetJ of Mada^aacar, Paulina, Tatch, Mi mitp. (g0||rr lo Mnrlnera. (,.|i W 11 H IIsob, of the *i br J B Perry, of Raltimore, ra. I?rta llat l? l?i IV Ion 72 I!'. ?lrnc* a lesael, ?al.if I, iLftl. Veinlsloond f < r 1 1 o Wist Indies should keuv * I rifl.t lot k out. Ipinttii till I'.' iln la, from C*li t.tla lor Len Inn, Jan 2<1, off Cape t, ainilla*. : I It. A I M lo Nichols ist 3 ifl) ? Ion K> hip Ki lit llo> per. Pike, ft m Calcutta fot L >n I jo, Feb 3, Ht S, Ion 2* K. deck;) Li; box; Luiii IM? W#rM* **" *?"* tor **??*? *. Ship North Atlantic, Cock. frem Utmm?| ,,j a? iewn for Boiton. March 8, M 50. lea if Skip Saklue.frrm Liverpool f#r Boston, March SI l-. mm Ion 9 * ?*? A fall rigged brig, (bowing ? red liititl wkh a whiu k*n a. the culm, steering SK, ?u passed April 16, lat 3d, U. rs Schr Mary Ellen. Karl. fro* NOrleans far VeraCraa. w?a Men April 7, Ut 26X. Ion 91. Foreign Ports. Bbbmuba, April 8 ? Hark N W Briigs. for Caba i d>?. . "arch 23? Arr ac*r CatkariM, CoUini, pu. ladelpbla. C a i. lao, March 22? Arr ebip Sititan. ffiutr, CUitkt Islands to oienr t'ir Hampton Road*. Cld 21st, ship Her oul tn, Holkina, Mork with guano, 1)1 Bo*#r?' Otarer, fro* Sale* (Feb IS) arr <th, fordo, lac. Cahuba as, April 10? Hark Evelyn, Hiohbora. wt ? frC brigi Nenopbon, Wording, for NYork, Ida, Lareh. from Boa ton. di?g; Wm McGiWery, Hichboro, do: \ym u Spear, BlA?k# for NYork, Idg, ani Rebecca Fog#, ifeloh er, for So r ? oik, do. Arr March 31, echm James Bliss, Hat oh, Bnckiport; lltli. barksMJago Means, Portland; Victory, KUefsua, Phila delphia; brig I.amartine, Senter, NYork. .-V'fr""!"- April 4- Bark J Mr Dyer, Oyer, for Phila delphia 6th; brig Capt Tom, Smalley, from do, dug; solir Sally Ann, Clark, do do. ' Cuavanilla (abt April 4)? No Am vA?el* ia port. y %!*.?' AP"I 10? Arr soh Cornelia, Coeatnensoa NOr ' ? *?? eteamer laabel, Charleston aud Key West; bark ll?h.. ?*? Ho?g?riaa, Mumford, Portland* vj'"/ ^taby, Huston; lddo Kimball, Ingraham, Previ n H,th f?l i*?'H?Bd)i Apollo, Ingham, NYork* " Philadelphia, brigs Four Sons, Cjrbett, ? '*ur"aud; Louisa Snow, Mao*. PlSSdSf hh& ??', '1th' ,Sark "arsaret, Downtun (or We?d). Ann Kit m.m '*!? V *m"'. Freneh. Seareport; Luoy Ann, Br> ant. Bath_ Allston, Pieroe, Boa ton; Harriet, Percy. NC nth hriL"ili 1??\ Annawin, Wilmin^ lentil, brig II r Marshall, Weat, Sierra Monmi: liik! at?aai*hip Philadelphia McGowan, NOrleani for Chacrea* hark harunnc, Biglev, Wiliuiauton, NC Cld 14th ahi?Jn' ?opl.ine, Born holm, Apalachieola; bark Moatmj N Orleans; brim North Amerioa, Foster, Charleitoa; Ylu oennes, Merrill, Portland. ">????, vm l.'.th? ln port, ships I'etcrh.ff, Kndicott, for Cowei, char tered at i./5; Colnmbian, Burk; C C Dow, Bianchard^ Kate Swanton Morao, frt or oharter; Sea Duck. I'orter. iaat out of quaraiitiuc; Charlotte Reed, H'eeka, '"-ir Tiriniln Dearh tv, do; Marlon, Flitner, do, Clara Ann. Reed, do: Cheahife, Rioh, do; Kifiuth, Fisher; Oeaipec, Merrill; Anjorer, Dela no: 1'unguatuk, Wo hater; Vermont, Dinrnnore; Laiy Arbeila. J; ray, and Si do EmLil, Orr, uno; barka F.dwia Johnava lann; Ilelleon Adamn; Temnloton, Euatia; Sootiaad, l'ersy: Florence, Wyman; J A Uaxard, liardner; Lady Kaifkt. Choate; Bertha. Smart, and Medora, Koby. dUo*. Rainbow Loral ard; Ulobe, Whitmore; Rorer, C-!e. Tenarn Iiarafow; l,ei\ox, liowea; and Maria, Fiater. Tor freight or oharter: Princeton, Pace; Home, Ilopner; Hirtfw: A<1?"?. NoweU; O J Chaffee, Ni^ela; Ulltladea, Kohinaon; Saxonville, llutohioaen; Jasa Dotey. tockbridRo, aiid Ind Queen, Druinmond, wt^; Lrra, Bar ton. for New York 21M; Henrietta, Truat, do, aoon, (rota U fer hlrti auaar, ^ per box and 2 73perbhd moUaaet, on I'irziv Lond, Murphy, for Boaton ld4 augar at 1*4 per , . ,, Kilham. white, for Trieste Idg at Hi 7? lid brig Random, Burdick, and Lima. Viade, diag; aoha Ante lope. Doyle for Mobile, soon; Jno Albert, Elwell, wtg. and others a* above. ' ~ XYorVTd April !V-shlP Gertrude, Bailey, from Loaden. for Matahzas, March 13th? Barks Panohita, Lane, fro* N Iri^ Gr*',ofrum do wt?i Clark, for do Idg; Holnn A Warren. Sargent, for Portland, do; Arohi wu t" ,r?m Fal1 K'?*r; John atrond, Blwell, and White (lou'l, Mitchell, from NYork; Bxpreei, Boss, from 4.?j ( *"*'?? Vycr' UP- Kmpress, Lest, fra Bristol, EI. disr; Burlington. Winehell; Albers, Purington; Sierra Nei ? *? Marmion, Jaekaon; Wrahash, Hubbard. F.m pire. Oray; and Helen and Frances. Blanchard, wtg: B Col v^l' iiark:. *?bt ''?"??ll. Smith; and Oorernor Harris, w r,V ?,.rgJ P"t08i^ kniHh*- f<" Portland,. Id" ^ It W alton, Tltui, for New \ ork, do; Tyrone. Leland, for Bal timore, do: Broome. Trocartin. from Now Orleans, for do: Frontier. Boyt. from do; Calcutta. Clerk, from Sears port: Henrietta, Stnrtivant, from Portland; Alrarado, Lanca'ter from do; ( aroline K Kelley, Grant, from do, arr 12th; Sea Belle, Harriman, from Boston; Zephyr, Whipple, from 7 ? ?* Telos. Man ion; Frances, Franklin; and Salto bury, Ilale, wtg; Borneo, Hodgdon; Canima, Quptill; and Louiaa, Stubbs. disg; solirs Got Anderson. Sawyer, frea Key West, arr 9th; J uana, Gilpatriok, wtg; Vlatorla, Wright, from New Orleans, arr 7, diag. ' ""a"1" Sailed? 1st inst, hark Brunette, MoGrath, Portlaad; brixg Albatross, Coehran, Portland. * Mataouix. PR, April 2? Arr brig "Arcade." NYork; eohr Malvina, Learitt, do. Sid lit, Magellan Cloud, Sargeat, Ponce, to load for NYork. v In port 8th, bark Kxoelsior, Whittlesey, for Ponoe; brin Sarah Nash, Gilohrist, tor Philadelphia lOdays; L li.W Arm ?trcng, Thompson, for NHaven; schrs Janet, Webber, for Charleston; ft ran d Island, Small, for NYork, Idg; Jtha Clark, of Baltiaere, uno. In port 4th, barks Plato, Jnst arr from Arecibo; Samuel Tr*.,n> for NYork, 4 days, Idg; brigs Tbos Trow bridge. Rhodes, for N Haven. 4 days, Idg; Rainbow, Vhomp aon wtg cargo; Versailles, Coaant, for NYork 0, Idg; Iaa. bella, Nlckersoa, for Philadelphia 3; Alamode, Holmes, fo* do 3; schrs Julia ? Ridgway, Snow, for Baltimore 4 (before reported for NYork ); " Guy Mannering," from NYork, just arr; Juniata, from Grand island, do. Nut vitas, April 11? Sid bark Tlialee, Plnkham, NYork. In port 12tb, bark Elliot, Lemond, for NYork, brin Harriet Kelly, for do, do; Elizabeth Watts, Watts, de. diMCg. ' PRi,^?ril 3_.Sld bri?l *???"an. Baltimore; abt 7th, Gipttey, liridgaport. In i port, barka E l hurohill, Hiokman, from and far Nit T(Tkv.di"K; J Francis, from Miaren, do; bfisa Pat rick llenrj, Lopland, for Philadelphia, Demarara, Meri mnd w do# diig; Naritiake, JNolaon, from and for NYork 8 daya; schr Osoeola, for do, l?/g. r ?iR,? ?*"?*<>. March 12 ? Shi pa Tiber, Thompson, fram IJma; Rebecca, Wolff, for NOrleane; Greyhound. Fiekett. for NYork; Prince da Joinville, Conway, from NYork for Si rancisco; John Jay, Benjamin, do; Henry UelL. for NOr leans, arr 7th, from Mout\idoo, in ballast; Kensiactea. I arker, from California for NYork; Cirius, Gray, for N&t leans; Delawarean, llaynos, from Baltimore, arr 4; Miante ? omi, Collins, from NYork, arr 9th; Imaum, Batchelder. from Panama, art 9th, ia ballast; brics Camargo, Gordon, for Cape of Gojd Hope; Lion, Cunningham, from Callfvrniai Glamorgan, U alter, from Baltimore. Arr 12th, schr W A Spofford,. Valparaiso, aadaVd 14th for NVorkwith her Inward cargo. Sid 6th, bark J. Remerlna (Br), Baltimore, with guano; brig Metropolis, Taylor. Charleston (before reported Idg for NVork): t>U. ship St Lawrence, Browi, NOrlaans; barks Geo E Webster, Girdler. S*J*?c,iK0J(rnm B' Jth. S L Fit/gorald. Baltimore; 9th, briics > ictorine, Brown, aud Falmouth, Oliver, do; llth. ship Sunan E Howell, Norman. NOrleans; bivrks Victor tlark, and Lococ.| Atkins, do; 12th, brig Alfbild ISa). WaU man. N ? crk; 13th, barks Indus, Thompson, Baltiaor*; Jmau;a. Hatcliolder, Salvm. Sacva April 3 ? Arr brigs Isabel Benrmann (new), Mor ton, ? iseaseet; Taratine. Hill, NYork; 6th, H Mathews Devereux, hence. Sid 6th, brig J P Brown, Brown, Car denas. St. Thomas, April SO? Arr brig Wm Prioe, Qnig, Phila delphia. I hiividad. April 5? Arr brig Gulnare, Phillips, Charles ton; 7th, bark Franklin, Gibbs, Boston. Sid 5th, brin KunUunde, (Brem) I.oren?on, NYork; Gth, Marsall DntcT Mci.Uvery, Boston; 7th. Harriet McGilvery, Crocket. New York; four Brothers, Soule, Philadelphia; sohr Mayflewer. l^niiMng. IS i ork. In pert 5th. brig James Wallace, for NYcrk in 7 days. V?:? A Cau*. April 3 ? Bark Montp?lier, Colley, for New Orleans, in a few days; brig Avon. Webb, for New York, da Home Porta. Ai'If * a'iiiu?." Fairfield, for Providonoe. N^tUn Durfec ^nIRilviJr ?ch"GUb*' A Boston IIaLTI MORE, April 20? Below, in Ann&aolis Roads, brig Scotia, Cooke, talmouth, Ja. 13 days. The S came ia the capes on the l,th inat. and has been in the Roads siaee Sua ua^ ; also in the Roada, bark California an.l 2 brigs. Captala #nVn5'i,p ln "teHn,u' Champion- Cld brigs Charlotta ' O^.' TbtwV' ywpools Quadruple (Br), Swan. WIndies. I, J . rT, b,/k s?an. Cole, Rio Janeiro Mareh 16. aud Iv.j yf -t0 Minerva, McCircrn, Kail River. Kelley Tro NY All,'or,on> Golfin. linemen; schr Pearl, BOSTON, April 21? Arr ships M naUan (of Bath), Cat tin*r, ( alcntta, Deo 11, Sand Head*. 15th. looniuin (of Plv niouth). Turner, NOrleans, diamaated, na reported yesterday! bri(! Monte triato (of Kingston). Sherman, Messina, Feb /l: schre Jeremiah Learning. Corson, Philadelphia; Aerial, (?"all. Albany. Below, at anchor in Ouarantine-bark Ja hiloe from Innidad for Portland; put tn for a harbor. Cld ship Ariio, Corllas, Valparairo; I .ark Acadia. Crosby, NOr leans. Nothiag sld, wind E to SE aud ESS with rain, but mor? than for some daya. x,1,VC\lITVN-..A.Pril ? ? ^ rr ?chrt Oao Ilotchkitffl, Kelaej. Norfolk; Jo* I' Hon*. PJiiladelphia. GALV EbTON, March 31 ? (Jld achr Ben Novii. Miner Boston. ' A pril 7? Arr brigs Billow, Flitner, Mobile; 10th, Wahsega. Smith, lioaton. S|d 11th, hark Trinity, Colburu. do; prev U llth. brigs Judge Whitman, Norris. and Clsrissn, Davis, do. In pott llth. ship J W Fannin, Moss, for Boston, ldic brir W al scga, Smith, to load for do. GKORl.FlOWN. SC, April 15-Cld schrs Dirlgo, Ober Newhurjpi rt: President. Fosset, Beaton. CLOU E^KR. April IH? Arr M L Hall, Bahson, Norfolk f<r I Vrtsmontb; Martio, Fllis, Saco for NYork; Palos, Rockland, foa do. 19th, Mary Niles, Pool, Philadelphia l1"!' y,''r ^ ); Areola. L.?w, NYerk for <leor<etowa HOLMES S HOLE. April 20? Arr sohrs Watohic, Philadel phia lor Salrm; Kalos, do, for Bot>toa. LEW ES, Del, April iJO, 10 AM ? Pkt ship Shenandoah, fur Liverpool, a brifl and three schrs, went to sea to-day. 21st, 1 1 A M? Ship Wm Spsague. brigs Foster and PaciAo, went to st a fr?m tho liarher this morning, with a Boeton schr. Sohrs Geo Harris, Wm A Duboaq, it F Stockton, and Senator with Revenue Cuttsr Turwurd, and two small echra 'n harbor. Nothing seen ti pass in. (i PM? One full rigged and two herin brigs passed to sea this afternoon. Nothing came in aince morning, sad vessels stjlisrhor ssme as reported, except *i?.h the addition of f>ur coal lader schrs. Wind NW and moderating. JjOMFOLK, April 18 ? Arr schrs Frank Mc Me ih, NYork; S K Parker, Davis, do. 10th, schrs Arinida. W?ss, B?*t>a for Georgetown, SC (in d^troas, as heforo reported); Tyro Bangor. NORWICH, April 17? Arr schr Mary Felkcr, Smith, Balti more. NEW III RYPORT. April 19? Arr schrs Louisa Smith, and A re tic. Moult, n, Philadelphia. NANTl'CKET, Aiiril lij ? Arr schrs Jaco'. Raymond, Phi. ?"L0.: All any. 17th, E II A.lanui. Baltimore. M,W HAVEN, April 21 ? Arr scl.rs Calcutta, Smith, Alba ny; lien Erglirb. Lyon, Philadelphia, f id selir.. Gatsttv, . N 1 ork; Ilarvoat, Jones, do; Alexander, Bald wiu Philadelphia. I'll I LA DELPHI A, An il 21 - Arr brig Toledo, IlemmiBg wi7/ rlH schr Jas Buckalse, Miller. N Haven, vl. ^ A I April 19? Arr schr Jno Sn"W. Hftchau ipr N V ork. Ifllth, brig Lexington, Robins.. a, do for do. POHSMOHTII (Lower llur'orl, Ap.il I9-Arr schrs Ana Fli>a Ramsdcll Pembroke for Boetox ll'th Goor,o Rawail Hil.ler, do do, with losa of iih and uonk. y rail. There ar? ?i me coB?twiae vessels in the harHjr, hut it I lows a . hard that the* cannot b. boarded. Or. Sunday ni;l s it com menced ktowinir a fiale Tri m EN'E, which has continued t.p Ui the present time. I'ROVIDENt E, A pril 2:1? Sld |. vpller t'eli-aa. Wil Jiaiua, N^ork: sloop Proof tlla-s W.eeer. Kondont achr- M iry. for Baltimore, and Moses Bri n, f,.r I'hCai'xIphia, are at anchor ? H I'awiuxet SI MA KKS. A | ril II ? Arr se'us l.aura Jaaa, Delft?o. and J Vail, Delano. NVork. Cld ?3th. brig C A Coo, llubhard, di ; Filial nth. lawyer do. SI'LLI VAN, April 10? Arr brig Resene, Straiten, li ilti wore via Bath. Pas?enfj rs ArrtVMf* N st' vitas ? Sohr II Tnwiiarud Z Mayiiew, Isid'.ra Aruaii, Mr < (. la 1 1 r, R Wilson. N i n itas? lla: k Ell/% Bnras -Maj Gordon, laly and son: 1 r li Wi.Mi.CCfigitii.il Taylor. II llar.ey, Mr D ius tnt Hi s- I. ao. lla Samuels. Mra Maxwell, IS K lib, \ Peters. Ni? Om.rARa? Ship Mlaa IMmw- Mr ami Mrs Minillls. family aud .? rvant, of Anatralia; Mrs J a inn S Talhot an I ditifhtov. N York; l>< v J P Knox, family and 1 nor^anl^ < a| t 11 I'ptoB, i f Macs, * l^issfii),eM S illicit. . K\VV ,kA lK'"rr" N, *ada -Mrs Fergtiaen, ?.r. fm.th, Miss Ahly S,.r..,,l. Ml a M Newt,.,,, j ltt?!t? J. hr- R. rnern Mrs Sa, noer., Mr- I Haines, Chus ? IUII. llslre , Henry lloftr. k. J E itlllm-n, K .-had.'a ,f II.iiiul . ladj- a Pd tl-r-e ablldren e d .rvant. J*. It,.r Mi it.. J <-\ i Ii? riiften ai d '.ady, .1 K l' n im- ?. h ? imor .1 r?. wk ?.? li I II , ,n /<|Hira,r ** K."<cUtil ^ Brlcht. ll aitrriiki >i <>' '??i JJ '! r m o " . J W I la' ! ! L KV? V? v' Vi1 0,?:- a. a k,'H/ ^ Nrwt>n ladr. <1 Muvi.ard I r \ L |,m ,ll !. 11 KuMtr. " i Kr nelr. ? U? l?0* mail. ?l It' I > li ft M ? \\ 111 FdltBHrri.' ? I K ,? ,r.i? V V'J1 ,lr" M W'UI AUrrfhal! , ' ''' ' 't r, J H t it Dev. K iiho an I Vnu / Imp h A , H ?lli?.n?n. y J Hli.inm K ?? ||Hr^ .1 liohMi ff i liartona. I# .lam*| ...n, r |h ,,.KLf i ii ark ?! ( utiil ? rfM nu, .J (,' l.illt', i' h ? ,<| ( u ? <i ' i Jl ;,Zr;;Z Js,Vr"" "n ncn d and i .,d y J iM-'g b-v;!. e7.:vKe^,. k, il .vi.Td. II I. Mnrinj "I ."n and Udv ^ M <. Mi <ktr | . II, U I> In. II. MrsSbsl L e ,f' j w , ' Kr A Ja. k.on, W < I amiM ii ii., i . . ' ''""L .S Dcltrieh, R A Wall?,e, '^riw. J r Djin?reat,