va, a ? # A Weekly Hournal Vol. \. Charlottetown, Prince ' AS a of — slitices, ¥ — ne a eee ame aera ie a “'Phis is true Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”---Euripides. e Edward Island, Tuesday, February 21, 1860, itevature, and Alews, ——» New Series.---No. 6. the equivalents to * Thou shalt not kill,” * Thea shalt not | steal,’ and “Thou shalt not bear false witness.” Yet, | ffeaven help us! these are the very acts which are attributed | Hoctry. WHEN BANNERS ARE WAVING. When binners are waving, And lances a-pashing ; Whe) ciptains are shouting, Anl war-horses rashing When cannon are roaring, And !ot bullets flying, Ile that would honor win Must not fear dying. These things are cropping ap in our law books and taking rank in our police cases, They are growing into “ a custom | of manufactures.” They have been solemaly presented to a court of justice for its sanction, A manufacturer has bad the assurance to bring an action for the infringement of his , trade mark —that mark being a 300 yards label to be affixed | jupon a 100 yards reel of cotton. <A few days ago a rifle burst at the Kilburn Riffe-ground, upon examining the) fragments it was found that there wus no proof-mark upon it. This weapon had been sold without the usual test re- quired by law as a security that it should not destroy the | It happened, however, that no one Though shafts fly so thick That it seems to be snowing ; } : life of the purchaser. Theagh streamlets with blood ure ¢ t was killed and so sacred are the privileges of the British made, It seems to be becoming a sort of commercial belief that a quiet maa clad in superfine broadcloth, and transacting | his basiness in a little dark counting-house, may laudably | commit any atrocity, provided he has no individual malice | against any particular son of Adam, but bounds all his) motives of action by his desire of * turning a penny.” He \gets a Governmcnt contract for boots—as is said to have! happened in one case—aud just as the battalion is going | upon service sends in a complete supply with the soles glued | (on to the upper leathers. More than one man must have | | died out of all who suffered; but it was in China, or Cana- | da, or in the West Indies, or in some place too far off to) reach the prudent man’s conscience. He lackers over gas- | pipes and sells them as gun-barrels, and of course the barrels burst ; bat they are then thousands of miles off, and only shatter the hands of “ niggers.” He sells highly-polishe: , tools at such low prices that the emigrant invests his last shilling ia a treasure of English cutlery. They are his | mainstay wherewith he is co:filent of elcaring a space and building a home in the forest, When he has arrived at bs far away destination a few hours’ Jabour serves to shatter his axe, to double up his spade, ard to break the teeth of his saw. He stands alone in his misery, and perhaps curses bitterly; but the comfortable man at Birmingham, or | Sheffield, or in London, who made or scld this treacherous | trash never hears his maledictions, and, if be did, would only pious!y pray to Heaven to convert ihe poor reprobate. The \ thrifty housewife in some remote village, who has saved the 'seanty margin of her husband’s earninzss to c'othe her ehild- ren, bargains for her pieces of print and calico, her reel of | cotton and her needles, and, as her necessities compel her, | ‘takes the cheapest which the merchant will offer. When she gets home her prints are all short measure, the substance of her calico rubs off in dust, her cotton-reel has just enoagh | ‘cotton upon it to conceal the wood, her needles are pointless | and often eyeless, und her hooks and oyes area useless 1 ¥-t all these things are vouched for We speak of revenge. but We ne'er speak of flying. Come. stand to it herves! The heathen are coming, Tlorsemen are round the walls, Rid ng and rushing ; Maidens and matr ns all Arm ! arm ! are crying, From petards the wildfire’s Flashing and flying. The trumpet: from turrets high Lourlly are braying ; The steeds for the onset Are snorting and neighing ; As waves in the ocean, The dark plumes are dancing ; As stars in the blue sky, The helmets are glancing. } Their laddere are planting, Their sabres ure sweeping ; Now «words from our sheaths By the thousands are leaping : Like ‘he flash of the ievin Ere men hearken thander, Sw rds gleam, and the steel caps Are cloven asunder. | ' The shouting has ceased, And the flashing of cannon ! I looked from the turret For crescent an! pennon : As flax touched by fire, As hail in the river, They were smote, they were fallen, And had melted forever. —o——o— + BY AND BY. jumble of white metal. RY MARY CLEMMER AMES. by the most respectable KEuglish names. If there be a Toa. manufacturer who by honest dealing and excellence’of work- Ch! wonderful vision of long ago, manship has obtained a name, that name is sure to be found Rapreang 08 Sue Oana rs wee, forged upon these Jow-priced swindles. Zhe bronzed gas- You've lost your aura of gulden glow, You're tarnished now by the iouch of pain. Can love retint where rust hath lain? Can it kindle again for the eager eye? Oh, beaut-ful drea us will you live again, Will you live again in the by and by ? pipes—doub!e-barrela at 253;—are pretty certain to bear the vame of Manton or E-g. the cutlery is a:l branded with the | name of Rodgers, the prints and calicoes are ail by the most renowned fi ms, and the 100 yards of cotton are all boldly ' marked outside * 300 yards.” The first consequence of ail this is that the consuner is robbed; the next is that the manufacturers, whose names and brands are forged, are de- frauded of their well-earai reputation ; but the third conse- quence is that the credit and commeree of England are made a byword in distant lands. We are acquiring an il! name abroad for bad cheap work, and in many of our own colonies the American work is preferred to ours, as being more hon- They who began life's race with me, The ainber-haired, the dewy eyed, Who made life sweeter than dream can be, Alas! how many of them have died. The old, okl story—beside the way, In low. cold houses, mute, they lie ; When al! come forth to immortal day, Shall we love again in the by and by? ’ est. Yet the men who have brought this to pass are “ all Lectin meen tf Wee id ee ! The tangled web of our mortal life, honorable men. Piey hold up th ir heads, and boldly Will Jesus’ pitying hand untie ? avow their « system ;” and, assembled in grave commercial That error and evil mingle strife aSSOCIatlOns, they shortly auswer to all expostulators who Vespite His love, will He tell us why? suggest a reform, that * the subject cannot be entertained,” | Why glorious promises stranded lie ? } CNET OES "es Tabata) oF phy ts Why hearts are wrecked on this lower coast ? , Why heirs of a God-born destin n a raw? ver # Reel inty chaos, rayless, lost ? “GOING TO TUE DEVIL.” 4 ated tetadt teat Gulalinion hand Will nobody bring in a Bill, if not to abolish the English a o e in silence here : 2 , ga reine Pos a Divorce Act, at least to close the doorsof the Divorce | or a em naa oO ? That “ pimple” about which some simple Saxon in Never naming the name most dear, yourt § at ** prmpie ich § ple Sa Australia talked so indalgently not Jong ago, is now plainly ‘recognised to te a hideous and incurable cancer, eating away the last tissues of moral vitality in Knglish society. In the same page of the Times in which we find it stated that this or that going Judge of Assize (moral England cannot do without three circuits in the year) waa ** occupied all day ‘with cases unfit for publication,” there are columns filled | with delails of causes heard before Sir Cresswel! Cresswell, ‘which not even a wanton could read without a blush, and | which even the most cease-hardened man of the world must look upon with wonder andalarm. The lealing journui, | though incongistent, is not unwise in its generation. It is “necessary to keep ap some cant of decorum, but it is neces- sary also to supply that food which the public appetite de- inands. We are told that crowds of well-dressed females ‘daily throng the avenues of the court where these revelations | of conjugal depravity are made; and not the demi-monde | alone, but the region of high fashion as well as ** respectable” | mildle-class circles supply these eager listeners. * Oh, shame! where is thy blush?’ is quite a ridiculous qestion | here. What women are not ashamed to hear, surely both men and women will be fouad to read. ‘The chronicles of | this * Court of Reprobates” (as the presiding judge culls it) have, no doubt, an interest for the moralist as well as for the libertine, and it is in such a light alone that we can con sent to examine them. It is fraukly admitted by the Times ,iiself, which, however, makes very light of the admission, that no class of society in England is exempt from the taint | exhibited in these disgusting disclosures. The English middle class, though neither as idle as the class ab. ve, or as ignorant as the class below it, is as corrupt as either. Par- | The being born their twin in heart. In G. d's after-day will it all be clear, The story of fate, and its sorrowful ** why’’? The loved, and longed for, waiting here, Will they know and love in the by and by? = Gleanings from late Papers. TUE BRITISH MERCHANT In our (Ties) City Article of Monday last there ap- peured a notice of an attempt to establish an Associaiion for the Discouragement of Fraud among British Manufacturers. It scems a strange object to prcpose. [t sounds like a con- tradietion in terms—like a Society for the Conversion to Christianity of the Episcopal Beach, or a hospital to prevent the spread of * Deliriam Tremens” am ng teetotallers ; for, be it observed, this effort is not made in discouragement o' those fraudulent traders who feed us upon potatoes and alam and call it bread, and persecute us with all-encompassing a lulterations, giving much cause for triumph to the analyzers of the Lancet. Th: aim is even higher than to shame the keepers of those magic mills where the puzzled tiller of a pari-h allotment puts in three bushels of good wheat, and next day finds that it has ground up into a sack of bean flour. Difficult as it is to approach the fact even gradually, yct We must come face to face with it at last. This movement is actually pro:noted by and directed against those gou.tlemen who live in such large houses, and are surrounded by such gorgeous servants, and who have such awful accounts at their bankers’, and such coufortable pews in the parish church ; it is among these that the promoters of this suciety propoe-e to send forth missionaries, who are to carry per- suusion apon their tongues and a constable’s staff ia their pockets, Is it po-sible that these people cam want to be preached te or threatened like a poor starvcling who exercises every duty with a pang of hunger? Can it be that they who live under the protection vf the self-restraint which | honest principles im ose upon their inferiors can require to be taught that fraud is itlegal? They have sehools im their mills wherein they write up * Thou shalt not s:eal,” and * Honesty is the best policy.” Shou'd a wretchel clerk make a frauduleat entry in their books or embezzie a bank- note, they erush him’ upon priuciple,” ani never relent ti | the Central Crimina! Court bas branded him as an outcast for ever from pure and untainted commercial circles. It cannot be tha these people can have anything wrong in their daily practice, anything black under their white waistcoa's If when Doogeues and Policemen A walk the earth, the British manvfsecturer will not bear the fla-h of their bull's- eye, who sha'l abide it? Well, let us ser. This B-itish manufacturer has his yirtues,as we know. His home virtues we wil] say nothing about, Jest Sir Cresswell Cresswell arise to rebuke al! aiiversal eulogy. ut he also mus’ have hig | | } | } } ticularly revolting is it to note the facility with which the | | English woman of this class yields to temptation ; still more | horrible is it to perceive how frequently she is herself the tempter. The Times conjectures, with great complacency, that Kogland is no worse than her neighbors, the only differ }enee being that what she bas the candour to publish on the | house tops i3, in other countries, disereetiy confided to the ear of a confessor. But, even if this w re true, is not the loss of shame in a whole nation a mark of irremediable de- gadation? It may be, indeed, that in such a couutry as France, where the evil seeds of the Revolution have not yet ceased to bear th: fatal (ruits of irreligion and immorality, the standard of femule virtue is not us high as it ought to be. We are very sure, however, that in Prance itself the | /women who frequent the coufessional are not open to such | an imputation. Certain)y, a bad Catholie may be as great ‘a sinner as any oue else; bat if the Sacrament of Peuance | cannot preserve from falling those who do not resort to it. | we know, at any rate, that it keeps those who do fro.n re- ‘lapsing into sin. But, after all, what coustry in Kurope, at | least at this side of Turkey, do we hear of the incestuous | }abominations which have lately come to light in London ? | ‘and horrors still more oumeless, we are told, await as; for, | code of trade virtues. He must not forget a trade mark ;, 3°99 the London correspondent of the Liverpool Albion. | he must not send an article out of bis warehouse which would |” Martial, Vatal'us, and Juvensl, may be ransacked in vain kil! or maim any one wio should use it; be must not sell a | fer passages dimly suzgestive of what will be laid bare in wooden stick and guarantee it to be cotton; he mast not, Peo court ia this model moral metropolis of ours !"— Nation, sel) oast iron cutlery and cai) it steel ; he must not send ou: | & pair of scissors never intended to cut, or an axe that would | fly to pieces yt the first stroke. If there are people wio } — Pee + Manise Disasrens 1x Janvary.—There were 30 American have in the same trade a better name than himself he wl sane vessels und 7 turengn vessels, bound to or from) ' 6 dbandoned, 4 inissing, and one suuk vy col- | ing pins, handspikes, and every weapon they could Jay their | | United States ports, reported during last month as missing, : : ~ | wrecked or otherwise lost. They comprise 8 ships, 6 barques, } mind to forge their uames and destroy their credit 10 brigs and 13 schooners, of which 16 were wiediel: 6 Sarin, by affixing their brand to coarse and worthless goods. These| 4 sink a! sea, are of the Very rudiments of commergiy! morals, They are! t sion. i never outstep the fair pace of emulation ; it must not enter | into his to these very respectable persons as every-day practices. | ‘and sailed from Macao on the 8th Oet, lport they encountered & heavy gale of wind from the south- ithe chart. More than water are flowing ; . : : | Thorgh with sabre and bullet manufacturer that we have not heard of any One venturing eS : . . . . - Our bravest are dying, to inquire of whom the rifle was bought, or by whom it was had the smaller boa‘s in company, the pori-quarte:-boat with ‘and the boats parted company. ‘ment, and serious apprehension was felt for the safety of '20 fathoms. boils, aud suffered much pain. ,day, 12 days after leaving the wreck, land was made to the | Jy 3 ‘fishing harbour, where they were most bospitably treated scene of the disaster, Capt Johuson, his brother, and Mr. ‘They were very narrow, not over 150 yards in width. | ‘arrived on the evening of the 8th of November, }was almost by exertions beyond belief on the part of the i clusively. |afi), being away from his post, the Coolies, who had collect- | (on the poop just in time to see the rush aft. ; APPALLING SHIPWRECK. | pected shots from the revolvers produced, it was impossible |to say what would have saved the crew. On -inquiry it [turned out that a deep-laid scheme had ben planned for ) killing them all and taking possession of the ship, and it 'was this design, and the crew being constantly on the guard, FIGHT HUNDRED AND FIFTY LIVES LOsr. The details of the loss of the clipper ship Flora Temple, Capt. Johnson, master, from Macao for Havannah, have | , q ; come to hand, from which it will be seen that the whole of | we He te om sach apprehension ‘aed: terror aaeng thew the unhappy creatures on board, Coolie labourers, numbering 7 a or, struck, lt is reported that the boats were no 850, perished. The Flora Temple was a first class ship, more t an sufficient to seve the crew, 49 in number. Hevssey; incladine ship was 300 miles from land, and it is stated that it was ; ing}. ta ee on officers. were about 50 men, and four days after leavin | impossible to raft 850 men so grt » distance, mach less feed them, even had the erew been justified or encouraged west, with a high sea. Satl was reduced, and although on ee tae are 8 en - - Coolies i 8 a — the morning of the 14th the gale had abated, it continued | ~ And 4 Se ee the soe 5 nate Collies was their falling in with a ship, which perhaps south-west, and Capt, Johnson declined making more sail, |“. : : z being apprehensive that a current mig’t set the ship to the | might be induced (o go to their assistance. Although the long- ° > : : rOSse et fro ‘ - Y he, PE eastward, in the direction of reefs which were marked upon boat eros ed the most frequented pars of the ( bina sea, Bot At 7 20 p.m. it was discovered that the ship a sail of any kind was seen, It is thought that in all] pro- ; Z - . . Sv rae YOO? | he bili : ae ae 7 i was within a short distance of the breakers, which could be } ae 2 the : ship went = pieces on the night of Saturday, distinetly seen and heard, and which extended in a curved | oa, ee ee oe line from about four points on the port bow. It seemed im- | possible a large ship like the Flora Temple could escape) THE GURNEY DIVORCE CASE IN ENGLAND. them, and although the yards were braced round, and the | ship hove aback, she strnck first slightly, and then very soon A paragraph among the foreign news by a late arrival makes aftormacds. several times with s tgemeddous crash, the break-| brief mention of the elopement of the wife of John Henry Gur- ers running very high alongside. Pieces of her timber and | °°) with her footman. Mr. Gurney is the son of Joseph John planking floated up on her side, and after some more very | Gurney. the distinguished Quaker preacher and philantbrop- heavy bumps she remained apparently immovable, with a | Ist, a ae, o nis ee travels in this SOURirF, eothe heavy list to port, and the water rapidly inoreased till it | yenre ag, “ah ts Pe ‘wae ths" wenstings of the ° ' ey ? > > reached between the decks, where the Coolies were. It was | ae es t 3 = dy ener wae » brother ‘of found impossible to extricate her, While this was going on |. ao + Riis, bett " : oar eae 3 his eater was the (indeed, almost immediately after the ship struck) a fear | ° oe oe: enraten Sq «ARS Sep Wow * See of t > sal stink the Diestian wanld cian ae auandas Oi ta baled tees | sylvania. The family name and character are thus familiar do Kaye. gasssueed the winds of, the. eres: ned teach to thousands in this country, who will be interested in hear- ‘ sse ; ¢ ; : ae ; ; height did this rise that the captain (having at the time, | 75 nee oe ecce ene Tne tenintion tr Santilg however, no intention of abandoning the ship) had the two |p Sopatcned a seu aes ent aas oe ee = quarter-boats lowered, and placed an officer and five men in | 9 a it wr i ave been shown to me, which furnis each, with orders to remain close to the ship, so that refuge me with full particulars of the case. The fugitive wife was o ; : , . the only child of Richard Gurney, M. P., a cousin of Joseph and assistance might be at band. The crew appeared tO} John, and was married to the busbend she has shindlett have been thoroughly unarmed ; their enly anxiety was to. . ys get oat of the ship, apd bat for the oaptaio end hie brother When she was only fifteen years old. She is uow twenty- and a few others, the boats would have left the ship Gat eight, and has two children. Her father, at his death, left ay d ; © SUP [ “ ¢ 25 sd . lutely unprovided with the necessaries of life. These boats ° ee ee a w oes re: aed ory were. lotaced at 10 o'clock. At 3S dilack thi tiker bs (ee of the other half to her during her life—tie principal, , ; a , to go ulso to her children. In addition to this : .. .. {at ber death re gt — - va —_— eatong- bent, which tie | abundance, her husband is also very wealthy, a Member of Heer ee eee eee a nae 60 ort) olen, oad maintains Galen city establisiiment and Only 15 of the erew remained on board, and the labour and | saat cnbtecindaie.:, Miedo np ieee oe difficulty in getting the boat out was immense, At length Fe Gite perhaps all Send te i ae a te oni - sare aie Se ee eee es p it was got over the side at 4 a.m., and with its crew passed brighter character. He married for love, and was passion- safely through the breakers. Before leaving the ship the| |, ? + ete 7 : : lately attached to his wife, lavishing on her every attention lead was hove; four fathoms was got under the bows and | . g sald = ; : is j du!gence whi v g stern, and three fathoms amidships. Immediately through | bad iadeigesce, CRICK ‘sel Overtowing firthas end eivetion the breakers there was no bottom at 14 fathoms. At break of day the ship appeared to be Almost without motion. Her | masts were standing, she had a strong list to port, her back | was broken, and the sea making a clear breach over her starboard-quarter. The Coolies, who ha} remained below all night, were now up and clustered on the upper decks. | Fhe captain, after passing round the northern extremity of the line of breakers, joined the starboard-qzarter-boat, which av 5 ‘oem 2 out for a moment suspecting that her loyalty to him had been alienated, uutil he heard the blasting intelligence from her own lips. A young man whose name is Taylor, had been highly re- charge of Mrs. Gurney’s horses, us she was excessively fond | of equestrian exercises, and was accordingly employed in | that capacity. Taylor was an educated man, of fiue appear- | the second mate ia charge having deserted during the night, . . Thus thrown often toge - alarmed, probably, at the guns which were fired from the | - Pepin ets. she oon than his mistress. not retain the remotest idea until she openly avowed it to ‘ ; 7 oe The crews of the ding'es were then |, . . : = 9 ti ‘ ¢ ‘ " tunastadend kata loka iied aol astertoat. cod ai 9 i a. | him, declaring that, although the latter had been as faultles: sail was made to the westwerd. ‘The wind rose to a severe | : ’ . ™ : , } = » 4 » art be ‘ g a h- } gale from W.S.W. with a tremendous sea and heavy rain. love him; that her beart was with Taylor, und that sbe had From Saturday, the 15th, | till the following Friday the gale co :tinued without abate- | : infatuation, the starboard. quarter-boat, which contaiued Mr. Marshall, plead with her made no stronger impression ; and leaving her the mate, nine men, and two boys, and the port quarter-boat, which had in her the second mate, Mr. Walton, and five meu. The lorg-boat contained 31, including Capt, Johnson, his brother, and Mr. A. P. Childs, the surgeon. Through- out the seven days while the gale lasted, this boat was hove to under a close-reefed mainsail, with a bucket veered out to Most of them had saved nothing but what they stood in. ‘The boat was an open one, and they were drench- ed with the seas that broke over, and with the rain which fell night and day. They were covered with salt wate: A biseuit and a half a pint | of water a day was all they dared to venture on, and sleep | was almost impossible. On Saturday the wind and sea | abated. Fortunately the captain had saved bis sextant aad a chart, and as they found the boat drified by the gale as far as 15 degrces N., it was determined to make for Toaron, | the Freuch settlement in Cochin China. On the Wednes- | doned as admirable a home as woman ever inhabited, and left England for the Contiaent, in company with her seducer. ‘The letters referred to speak of this sad event as having | produced un extraordinary sensation in Eng'and, where the Gurney family has long been universally known and loved. ‘Lu this country, also, where their virtues are as highly ap- preciated by a very extensive circle, these particulars will be read with equal astonishment and grief.— From a Phila- delphia letter. UNITED STATES. GREAT FIRE IN NEW YORK! SEVERAL LIVES LOST! south of Touron. The boat was made fast to a fishing stake | New Yoru, 3rd. all night on account of the strong curreat which had swept her to the south the day before, and ow the following eveuing they came in sight of the French sqaadron, Finding it im- possible to weather the Cape that night they put into a smal! Him street, between Grand and Broome, in which twenty- five families resided, From ten to fifteen persons are sup- pose! to have perished im the flames, A number have been carried to the City Hospital suffe:ing from barns aud from injuries occasioned by jumping from the windows to save their lives. The upper part of the bu Iding was occupied by aboui jtwenty familes, and the following are about all the particu- lars that could be learned. Mr. Wise with his family, eou- sisting of his wife and three children, occupied a portion of the trout of the seeond flooz. Mr. Wise escaped, and one and on the next evening, the 28th, they reached Touron. They were received on board his Imperial Majesty's steamer Gironde, and Capt. Jobnsom at once put himself in com- nunication with the French Admiral, M. Page, and begze) him to send in search of the missing boats as well as to re:- cue the Coolies, With the greatest readiness the request was complie] with, aud the Gironde was despatched to the broken, No particulars could be obtained as to what beesme ‘of the rest of the family, and it is feared they were Lavut to death. Childs, the surgeon, accompanying her. They came in sight of the reef’ on the afternoon of the 21 of November. The sea still rolled and broke as before; bat no remnant could be seen of the ship till on proceeding closer in a boat cupied a portion of the second floor. Mr. and Mrs, White her port-side from the main chain forward could be observed | escaped, also two of the children, Kiiza, aged 20 years, and floating. Of te 850 Coolies no traces renained. Close to| Louis, 11 years. the reef, within a short distance of the wreck on the 3.3. Ester, aged 18 years, was nearly sutfieated ; Pauline, uge | side, the boat sounded, and found no bottom at 17 fathoms. | 7 years, ditto. The two last were taken to the Hospital, The breakers extended about half a mile in a cu:ved line. | but their injuries were net very serious, Francis Zérro, whose family is abscut in France, a!so occupied a portion of | lie was badly burnt about the body and The unhappy Coolies had, doubtless, perished, and the! the second floor. Gironde at once shaped a course for Manil'a, where she | hands, and was taken to the Hospital. Itisstated | George Burdner and two children escaped uninjured, but that it was impossible to make any attemp: to save the Mrs. Bordner was badly burnt. She was found nearly dead Coolies. Capt. Johnson aud his brother are very humane | by detective Keefe assisted by several members of the North and courageous men, but the crew were so terrified that it Liver Kngine, No. 30, The officer toox her to the shoe store of Gesrge Schegreyer, No. 126 Grand street, and the shoemaker inhumauly ovdered them out, but the poliecman pushed him aside and put the woman on the sofa, aud she was afterwards taken to the Liospital. Mr. M-Carrick occupied a portion of th: 3rd floor front, with his family, consisting of a wife and two children ; they were all saved uuinjured. A Jewish family, consisting of eight persons, also occupied a portion of the 3rd floor; the name cud not be ascertained, and the only member of the the Tuesday morning, at 7 o’clock, however, three days (ami'y that could be found was a child, 24 years of age, that after leaving Macao, the wateh on deck being scattered about | was conveyed to No. 15 Howard street, It is feared that the ship, and the guard at the port gate of the barricade,’ the rest of the family perished. which was erected betwen the Coolies and crew (who slept) Mr Dricks with bis wife and five children occupied a por- tion of the third floor. As none of them were seen after the fire broke out, it is feared they were all burned. Mr. Walks with his wife and two children, oecupied a portion of the ded floor, back. No particulars could be captain, his brother, and a few others, that the sufety of the evew evea was secured. It appears, however, that they bid | some reason fur distrusting the Coolies at this crisis. Un the Monday after they Icft Macao all seemed comfortable and cheerful; their food was p'entifal and goud, and their state was well cared for, the necessary order and discipline among them being enforced by their own head meu ex- An outbreak was the last thing anticipated. On ed on desk in large wambers, sud lealy fel upen the guard at the starboard gate, strack him on the head with an iron | belaying-pin as he was stooping down, drew out his sword. and having cut bim frightfully, afterwards with eruel fero- ety despatched him with a hatehet. They then made a rush thr ugh the ta rcace towards the cabin. While this was goiug on aft, others of the Ooolics were calling * Fire, fire,” to induce the watch, who were in the fure part of the stip, to go down below. Fortunately the captain had come He rau to his cabin, seized his revolver, and called the surgeon up. The captaiu’s brother armed himself also, and half a dozen shots put them to the rout—not before one of the crew. was hacked to pieces and killed, and others wounded. were armed with the cook's axes, the chain hooks, iron belay-| burned to death. the crowd to find if any them were rescued, of the fourth floor. the fire broke out. of the fourth fluor. Nothing could be learned of them. ‘portion of the 4th floor. hands upon, and bat forthe sydden papie which the unex- and she was not seeg after the fire broke out. The | jeould sugyest as likely to c.ntribute to her happiness, with- commended to Mr. Gurney as a groom or footman, to take | ance and pleasing manne.s, and three or four years younger | idetermined to abandon the husband for him. The tenderest | children without shedding a tear, this infatuated being aban- | A fire broke out here last evening in a tenement house in| child thre years old was rescued, but one of its legs was | Isaac White, with his wife, Amelia, and five children, oe: | Gustave, aged 17 years, was absent; learned of them, although a dilizent search was made among | Mr. Armstrong wih bis wife and child, occupied a part Noth:ng could be heard of them aiter | Mr. Sark with bis wife and two children, oveupied a part Mrs. North, a widow, occupied a room on the §fth floor, | ee Wm. Vopel and his wife cceupied a portion of the fifth floor. Mr. Vopel, on the discovery of the fire and finding that he could not eseape by the stairway, threw a clothes line out of the window and fastened the end to the window sill. He let his wife partially down, when she slipped and fell on to a shed, injuring her severely. He followed and escaped with a few slight injuries. Mrs. Vopel was taken to the hospital, and her life is despaired of. F rancis Tysmeyer, with his wife and children a part of the fifth foor. He escaped by jumping out of the window, and received severe injuries. No tidings could be jlearned of his wife or children, and it is feared they were burned to death, | Owing te the intense excitement that prevailed, the names of the occupants of the sixth floor could not be ascertained, and as the fire commenced pear the staircase, cutting off all hope of eseape, in that quarter, it is generally supposed that tie occupants of tais floor, about a dozen in all, were burn- ed to death. William North and his family, consisting of his wife and three children, oceupied part of the third floor, and all escaped uninjured, i ee i ————--20e.- THE ELECTION OF SPEAKER.—GREAT REJOICINGS AT WASHINGTON, Wasuinorox, 2ad.—{Herald correspondence.)—The city has been wild with rejoicing since the election of a Speeker— participated in by all parties who have euffered more or less financially from delay im organizing. Pennington, Sherman and Elickman were serenaded at Willard’s by Wither’s Band, accompanied by a Jarge company of citizens and residents of the distrier. Willard’s hotel was thronged with people. The eentimenta uttered by the Speaker, (Mr.“Pennington,) Sherman and Hick- man, “ere bold and decided againgt the questicn of the exten- sion of slavery. The serenaders proceeded to the residence of . Winter Davie, but did not find him at home. They then proceeded at /about I o’clock to the residence of Mr. Grow, and called him He responded in a speech congratulatory to | out of his bed. his visitors, and that a Republican Speaker had been el--cted of and the Union not dissolved, He declared in most unmistakable language the the Republican party to exclude slavery from the Terrnones, and preserve the guarantees of the Constitution and Union, and 'o elect a Republican President this year. All the speeches | were enthusiastically applauded, and cheer after cheer wae given for Pennington, Sherman, Hickman, Grow, Davis and ithe Union. Senator Cameron introduced Mr. Pennington to the people | and distinguished citizens from all sections were present and listened to the speeches, —- 9 6 ee | Patan Boier Fxrcosion.— New York, Feb. 2—~This | moruing & steam boiler in th> extensive distillery of Graham Poiley, in North Pourth street, corner of Fir-t etreet, Williaine- burgh, ex loded, blowing out one end of tie building, and instantly killing ove of the employees of the concern. A fly- ing fragment of the boiler was thrown into a biacksutt's shop, near at hand, killing the blacksmith, > ieee Srorm av tHe Sovurs.—The iate storm was much more severe in New York than it was in this quarter. Ten inches lof snow fel) and the trains south and west of Ne= York were : : celve passi ‘ rs i ie . ; id delayed by the drifi ‘ we he ship, and which to them seemed to denote the dreaded out- eived a passion for her servant, of which ber husband did | delayed by ifis of snow. The steamboat mail due here ‘break of the Coulites. vesterduy morning was not received until to-da Transcript, Feb. 2. y.— Bosioa | as a husband, and only too indulgent, yet she had ceased to | —— te om A Sap Arras —On Thorsday night, February 9h, Wm, Eh. Merriam, who lives nenr Ewer’s hotel, in this town, at- 'remonstrance and intercession availed nothing to lesson ker j tempted to take the life of his wife and himself. He has been Friends and relatives who were called in 10 | for some time past subject to fits and in a partially deranged jstate of mind. On Thursday night he and his wite rarivod os usual. About $2 0’c'ock he got up, telling his wife he wanteg )some pill. Shortly after he returned to the bed, and afier get- iting in, turned over towards bis wife and drew something across | ner throat twiee, which she at first thooght was a file. | She immediately sprang from the bed, found that two slight | wounds had been inflicted upon her neck, left the room, locking her busband in, and alarmed her neighbours, who upon repairing j}to the house, found Mr. Merriam ip is room with a gash cut from nearly ear to ear of his neck, baying bare the windpipe, \but the main arteries were not injured. He had bled profusely. Dr. A. C. Deane was immediately sent for, who found bim in a very iow estate, alinost pulseless, and his wound was sewed up jand dressed. The instrument with which he imficted the / wound upon himself and wife was a dull jacknite. Mr. Merriam and his wife are very worthy persons, about 63 veare of age, and have always lived very happily together. They have the |sympathy of the community in thew «ffl cnons, Mr Merriam died on Sunday from the effecte of his wounds.— Green field | Gazelle. Oe |} A Contixvovs Ramroap Fraom Maine ro Lovurstana.— A despatch from Chattanooga says that the gup in the Mi-me- sippi Radroad was finished on Saturday, and the connection throngh to New Orleans is now complete. The time between |New Orleans and Philadelphia by this route will be only 48 hours. By the completion of thie link, there i# now «@ continu- ous railroad from Bangor, Maine, to New Orleans, except 4 short ferries at Hudson River, the Susquehannah, the Potomac and James Rivere. This vast chai of railways is composed of 18 independent roads, costing in the aggregate for 2344 mies of road, $2,393,074. or nearly one-tenth of the whole railway system of We Unied States, of which 1996 miles are used in . this continuous line. i —_— | A Cray ror Venceance.—A “ Broken-hearted Father ”’ | wites in the following energetic strain to the London Times :— By the last news from Bombay, 1 perceire that the biaod- thirsty miscreants Khan Bahadour K van hee, with others, been isken prisoner in Oude. [tr wos he who assumed regal an- thority on the breaking out of the mutiny at Bareilly in 1857. It was he whe ordered the two judges of that city (Robertson and Raikes) to be banged. It was he who directed wad presided at he murders of Doctors H.y sad Hansbrow ; of Cari Buch, head of the Independent Coilege ; and at those of many other of our unforvunate fellow-countrymen who fell ino the monster's power. This wretch, previously tv the mutiny, wes a netiwe judze in the pay of the British Government. Is he to escape with anything short of capital punishment? ts he, | would \axk, to be en object of spurious clemency? Shall it be enid that any of them has died unrevenged where vengeance is at- tainable ?—When I tell you, sr, thut | am the father of as gai- lant a youth 4 ever drew @ sword, and that iy darling boy was brutally butchered by order of the bloody Ruffian, you will, iknow, make allowance for the warmth of « bereaved perent’s feelings, and will, | bope, give publicity to the express'0.:s of those feelings in the columns of a journal that finds its way to the aighest and mostinfuental quarters. My ery os for justice —-iny cry i+ for ample, uamitigated vengeance on the head of , the cold-blooded wurderer of our dear feiluw-couutrymen and | country-women. j _—— i 08° o | A Pue Reoanp ror Sarery —tIt is stated that when the twelve hundred clerks employed im the Bank of England leave ‘the burlding im the evening 8 detachment of troops march in tu guard it during the might, although burglars could not penetrate the sulid vaults in six weeks, — Penrectiy Coot.—A waggish friend of ours tells the lowing which we do not remember to have seen in print<— | A certain man, whom we wii} cali M + was noted for | possessing great courage and presence of and, and the cross- est wife in the neighborhood, More than one attempt had been made to frighteu M-—, | without success; but one dark, sio-my evening, one of his | brother chips resolved to see if there was any scare in him, fixed himelf up in the most ghosdly style possible, and fo _statvoned himself in a lonely pieew of wools through which | M—— had to pass on his way home, | The pretended ghost had searcely settled himself in his position when M—— hove ip sigh’, and eawe whistling along Mr. Keebecco, with bis wife acd two ehildren and four unconcerned as usual, Suddenly the ghostly figure confromed persons whose nates could not be ascertained, occupied a “im, and in a sepu'ehral voice, Nothing could be learned of them | The Covlies after the fire broke out, and it is feared some of them are bun to stop. M——-lid so, and afier regarding his companion for a moment, said, with the ulmost coolness ; _ © Lcan’t stop, friend ; f you are a man, | must request you get out of of the way, and let me pass ; but if you are a devil, come along sad take supper with me—J married your sister,’ ‘to