J HASZARD’S GAZETTE, SEPTEMBER 9. LENA] IIWI. ° no. on sea... Transcript. 1n.itrar.ir cum in aaoan sraaa-r. About (o'clock on Tuesday a _ its fronted stores stasdiag as its Bread strsst. sad eoostitsti g fiche! north to the corner of Battery-mart-h must. fall in with a terrific crash, jarring the éule vicinity like an earthquake, and sending up C dense cloud of dust from the broken walls. Chich immediately after caused the sounding of imtslegrspltie fire alarm, on the supposition that Q smrnssse ccnflsgtation was suddenly discovered Die in progre . The spectacle was one of horrible grandeur to l The street was entirely filled with the erous blocks of granite which fell from the _ wall, and lay piled against each other like a are “ iant’s Cause\vay;" while on the dept’ the late noble looking stores. scarcely a wottge of the'building was left standing in its groper place. but all was one vast heap of ruins-— Clslted bricks and mortar, whole and ahivcred flora. various merchandise, and loose fragments ‘every description. in the wildest cnnfusion— $108 like a jagged mound of destruction to mark flowery pit of death! 'l‘o complete the melan- doly picture, an immense sheet of the darkly gfiated tin roofing left dangling from the end of iremainder ofthe block. hung over the ruins on huge metallic pall above the grave of life 1 fortune. It having been well ascertained that three or xrs persons were tindernesth the rubbish, a begs force of men were soon organised under the fisetion of the police. and after hard work for dout half an hour, a young girl was extricated flee from ondertwo masses of stone forming a pstial arch over her. Her name was Mary Riley, g I0 years, whose home was in Burgess alley. had received injuries which were pronounced bbe fatal, and was taken to the General Hos ital. Ca cousin, a boy, of8 years, named David iley, Ole llelt found. having been crushed to death. These children were in the adjoining passage Cay. gathering chips, when they were over- nhelmed b the falling mass, though only comparative y a small portion fell upon them. A fiaug man of 19 years, named William Downing, was also known to be buried, but his body was odrecoversd last evening. . Thecause of this accident was owing to the uakneaa of the foundation wall. The foundation fiving settled by the immense weight upon it, the titre wall between the stores cracked in the Corning before the accident, and than «y-up Oarriing of the impending catastrophe. \\ u were -Gldbya person belonging to one of the stores Oat be measured the apciture at 2 o'clock in the afternoon and again at 3, and in that hour the Oidening increased an inch. Messrs. Lewis vacated their premises of their numerous work people several hours before the «ash, and at the time there were but three men three boys inside, who all escaped unharmed, Iy running out at the rear, into Hamilton palace. u Messrs. unnrman, Hazc&Co’s. store. the heck-keeper, Mr. John H. Baker. and a laboring use named Mark Gillespie were on the lower Ioor, and hearing the first sounds ofgiving way, & across Broad s'reet and barely escaped being ueebed by the front wall. The young man Dewnintt. before entioned. was left in the second gory, sitting by a window and reading a news- gaper. He had been warned of his danger, but does to remain. As the front wall fell he ran to ahorear, and was seen by masons at work opposite Qjsmp out ofa window, where it was supposed is was buried in the ruins which immediately fill. Several customers had been in the store hat a few minutes previous, but on being warned —-‘finally retired, and one man who wished to pay a’ hill seat the money while standing on the aposite sidewalk and had a receipt brought out nous. At I0 minutes before 5 o'clock, a sheet of clear flames suddenly burst out through the pile of asbbiah nearest Broad street. unaccompanied for a tfiw moments by smoke, but soon dense and black dunes rolled forth, enveloping the workmen ever the rains. sad cassing the crowd of spectators files in terror to a sale istasce The f Cgiaes which had remained after the first alarm were, immediately brought to bear, and the Ireman grappled with their old enemy with the Ievcest vl or. The alarm was again sounded, a‘ econ t a whole department returned to the fund, and their active services were required . remainder of the afternoon and evening in ipittg the dunes in the combustible mass from Cashing the adjoining block. Three streams were ks t ptsyiag daring the night. The tire is supposed to _hsve caught from the action of demluels in theruins of the drag store. which aarsssvsral tiisss heard to explode, but with no grsstvidlsoes, just before as well as after the .1 eke out. lathe engines were running to the spot, an “Din named Joseph Gosling, 30 years of age, Clrssidsnt in Hamilton place, was run over by Q casino in Purchase street. and had a leg and ,fissltlsr ken, besides other injuries. The Hon. Henry Wise was recently married. To any bachelor friend still " halting between jwsopioions" we say, “ Go and do like Wise." n y and of "Tildsn Block," which N, GBEYTOWN OU'l'RAGE—'I'IOUBLI AHEAD. '50 recent wanton aiifrianjuatifiable destruction of (Esytewn, on the Mosquito coast,by' the United States ehip-of- war Cyane, Capt. ollins, has ' created mach indignation in Great Britain, as it will have in every other country, where the circumstances of the case re known. A cor- , sacs has sccordingl aken place between the British Secretary of State for Foreign Afairs and Mr. Buchanan, the American Minister in London, in which the former re-sllirtas the British claim to the British protectorate, and the latter denies it. The Washington corres ondent of the New York Courier an Ertquinert us announces this correspondence :- "wAlHlNGTON, Thursday eveninr.—I ascer- T Iain that an im oitant corres ndence has occurred between Mr. och'anan'an the British Secretary of State for Foreign Ali‘-ire. Lord Clarendon re~asserts the British territorial claims on Central America, founded on the Mosquito protectorate. Mr. Buchanan denies them in two elaborate notes, and demands an unconditional relinquisb- I merit ofthe protectorate. It is understood that our Government has de- termined to adopt decisive measures to obtain the complete evacuation of entral America, as stipulated by the Clayton and Bulwer treaty.” 'l‘he London Times thus speaks of the outrage perpetrated by Capt. Hollins :— “ The object of the Clayton and Bulwer treaty was to promote ' the construction of the commu- nll‘IlltIlI between the two oceans for the benefit of mankind, on equal terms to all, and for the protection of the same.’ It is certainly a most extraordinary violation of the spirit of that treaty that an American ship of war should have presumed, in defence of at bests very doubtful cause, to attack and destroy the principal com- mercial station situated on this ver line of corn- overnment is The munication which the American expressly bound to maintain and protect. act of Captain Hollins speaks for itself. It is, indeed, without a parallel in any history with which we are acquainted. for the place was wholly incapable of firing a shot in its defence. not a man was killed or wounded in the attack, and the enterprise was one of mere destruction. There is in this case no war and no provoca- tion to account for or to palliate such a measure. Far from being at war with the states of Central America, the Government of the U. States has always affected to regard them with peculiar interest ; and the first proof given ofthis interest is an act ufsiolence which would have disgraced a buccaneer. Indeed. considering the species of rotection Chllbllslrd by the treaty of 1850, an the en- gagements cotttractcd by the United States to- ward this enuntry and the whole world for the security ofthe passage. this outrage of Captain Hollins is a contempt of the authority of his own government and a gross breach of faith to every nation. which niav have mercantile transactions, carried on across the lsthmua of Nicaragua." It appears by a telegraphic dsspatch from New York, that Capt. Hollins has been arrested there on a civil suit for damages to property occasioned by the destruction of Greytown, and held to bail in a large amount. A correspondent of the Boston Post announces the death. a few days since in Pawtuclret, R. I.. of the mother of the world~renowned Sam Patch. She died an humble and faithful christian, at the advanced age of 80 years. GEIEBAI. IITEIJJGENCE. Bell‘: Wee Messenger says a rumour has reached it thfily the Earl of Aberdeen has large possessions in Russia. A French steam-frigate has arrived at Marseilles from Alexandretia, with sixteen beautiful Arab horses for the French Emperor. They are valued at £ I000 each. Orders have been received in Edinburgh to prepare the royal a srttnents in Holyrood Palace for the use of her ajesty and the royal family on their journey to Balmoral. They are to be ready by the beginning of September. Tits Mains Lavv.—Eighteen thousand of ‘the citizens of Glasgow have signed the tltiou in favour ofa Maine Law for Britain. he docu- ment was despatcbed on Wednesday night. Tsaairic Pownea-atii.t. Exncstcst —An ex- plosion of a disussnus character took pl_ses a few minutes before five c‘elot'k on the morning of the l0tb inst., at the government powder mills st I-lerodafoot,Gornwall. whereby upwards of five tons of gunpowder were destso¥d, and damage donde tohtho amount zgssooo. ' hhe explosilrin is ssi to avs original in onec t amen wa ing carelessly into the drying-house with his trousers on fire, can by a spark from the lrsplses. The duty which called the workman into that part of the mill was to ascertain the stats of the thermometer. The man first discovered his perilous situation from the ignition of some loose powder on the floor of the drying-house. which, serving as a sort of train to the bulk of the manufactured powder than lll process of drying, allowed him time to run for his life. With great presence of mind ‘he ran from the premises, and lcapt into a deep trench a short distance cl’. w he escaped with only a few rom stories which reached him. The drying and packing houses, were entirely blows up; the dressing-house was unroofed; t glass of the windows in the manager's house was sltlvsved to atoms, and the windows of the houses is the village adjoining were very much injured. The magssine, which is situated a quarter of e mile from the mill, was shaken to the. foundation by the force of the explosion. Happily, no personal injury was sustained. in the course of a few months Melbourne is ex- pected to be lighted with gas. Iacit Scasw Coi.i.isas.—1‘hers are now It screw colliers running between the Tyne and the hames, and during the month ot' July they carried 93,587 tons of coals to London, equal to 8 per cent. ofthe entire importation sea. M of them make a voyage every WWII. and upwards of 4800 tons of corals were carried by two of them 9 or .- in 28 days. There is also a considerable number of these vessels building in the Tyne at Blackwell 3 which will be put into this trade. E iteéafnaiaous. CHINESE FASHIONS. The Chinese are spared all trouble as to fashion in dress. Not that foppery is any more rare than in any other quarters of the globe, or that the toilet and the proper arrangement of ornaments is by any means neglected, but all matters of dress come under two categories. The summer and winter arrangements constitute the only changes which the Chinese, from the Em- peror down to the meanest peasant, ever adopts. And this, too, does not depend on individual cupi-ice. The board ofrites, which regulate customs, costumes. religious obser- vsnces and etiquette, has the entire super- intendence of the affair. At the proper time they notify the Viceroy of each province that spring or winter, its the case may be, has come, and accordingly assumes the summer or winter cap, without any regard to the state of the weather, and the people follow suit. Among the Chinese no relics are more valued than the boots which have been worn b an upright magistrate. In David's interesting description of the empire of hina, we are informed, that whcnevcra judge of unusual integrity resigns his sittin- tion, the people all congregate to do him honour. Ifhc leaves the city where he has presided, the crowd accompany him from his residence to the gates, where his boots are drawn oil‘ with great ceremony, to be preserved lll the hull of justice. 'I‘lieir place is immediately supplied by a new pair, which in their turn, are drawn off to make room for others before he has worn them five minutes, it being considered sufficient to conaecratc them that he shoul have merely drawn them on. DEATH ON THE BATTLE FIELD. The following reflcctions presented them- selves to Mr. Patrick O'Brien on viewing the field after the battle of Oltenitza, a s iritcd account of which he gives in his Jpournal o a Residence its Ute llantsbisrs Pr-irici ahlies. " he sight of death on the field of battle does not produce the same fee irrg o awe that is caused even by the view of a passing unernl. You ride over the field the day after the fight, and on thread your way amongst the dead, wit strange indifference at the elght of so much carnage. Whilst listening to the roar of battle, to the clash of arms, and the cries of the combatants, your mind is being , red for the specta- cle which awaits it, ,u the smoke will hays cleared away, an ‘opposing raalts have ceased their work of in Mar. Then the free wind is blswin fr-es ly over the bodies of the slain; the s _y above is bright and sunny, birds are singing on the neigh- bouring trees, and the broad Danube is flowing calmly on to the sea. And close to where the soldier lies dt~ad,his comrades are busy with thcireamp-kettles cooking their mornin meal, or are going through the routine o their duties. Nothing around you is in harmon with feeling of mourning and regreto An soyou continue our way over t e field till you have satis ed your curiosity as to the state of the living and the number ofthe dead, and then you, too, look anxiously alter our mornin meal, and as you are sipping your co co and smoking your pipe, you speculate calmly on :_be chances of war. How difl'srsnt is this root the fcelin of in awe with which you lookgott death in cfties, in the sick chamber, in tbetlidd of quiet, daily avccatluus‘! In the laotlfl where there is death, you walk nciselcmly and hold your breath, for perhaps you hear some stified sobs. It maybe a child that is weeping beside her d ing father, or amother's heart that is breakit , for the boy who was her pride and hope ies dead. " Tue Put.rtr in Paussia.——Sevsral ec- clesisstica in Prussia having been of late in the habit of preaching political sermons, in which they im lored the Almighty to accord the triumph o the Christian arms of Russia over the Pagan enemies of the cross, the Minister of Public Worship at Berlin, has issued an order prohibiting for the future any political allusions them the pulpit. Tun Oc:a.\'.—Few who have ‘ gone down to the sea in ships,’ sailing day alter day over its stormy waves, continually exhausting horizon after horizon, and ' still the end was not‘ few, we as have done this, but will feel the force of the following eloquent extract: " The sea is the largest ofthe cemeteries, and its slumbercrs sleep without a monu- mcnt. All grave yards in all other lands show some symbol of distinction between the great and the small, the ric a the poor; but in that ocean cemetery the king and the clown, the prince and the peasant, are all alike undistinguiahod. The waves roll over all. The same requiem song b the minstralsy of the ocean song to their honor. Over their remains the same storm beats, and the some sun chines; and there unmarked, the weak and the powerful, the plumed and unhonorcd, will sleep on, until awakened by the same trump when the sea will give up its dead. I thought of sailing over the slumbcring but devoted Cooltmttn, who, after a brief but brilliant career, perished in the Presidcnt——over the same ill-futcd vessel we may have assed._-In that cemetery sleeps the accomplished and pious Fisher; but where he, and thousands of others of the noble spirits of the earth lic, no one but God knoweth. No marble rises to oint out where their ashes are gttthcre , or where the lovers of the good or wise can go to shed the tear of sympathy. Who can tell where liethe tens ofthousnnds of Africa's sons who perished in the ‘ middle passage?’ Yet that cemetery hath orna- ments of Jehovah.-—Never can I forget my days and nights as I passed the noblest of the cemeteries without a single monu- merit." Ex-ritaoitniiuttv P.-.orosirioa:. — The following extraordinary paragraph appears in a late English paper. It would be a novel kind of warfare to wage against the Czar, that instead of breaking down is stone walls, we construct formidable breast- works, and thus destroy the navigation of his harbours. " Short Path to Success.—A proposition has been sent to the Admiralty by an officer of the navy of high standing, for the perfect scaling up the entrance to Coiistradt, by doing which, the Russian fleet cotild be kept there for years, and if necessary for ever. The Inn is now under the consider- ation of the Admiralty, and we are credibly informed the gallant Anglo-French Ad- mirals are being consulted on the prsctace- bility of the same. To ive further cxplanation at present wou be most injudicious. If carried out, it will release nine-tcnths of our tleet from that part of the Baltic; after which Sysaborg and Helsingfora ma have similar cards played atacnatofa ewshctorshel, end most certainly without loss of lives compared with Gsmla Cat-lsby." . The best evidence that can adduced in favor of the elbcacios-neas -of Honda ‘a German Bitters, prepared by Dr. . M. Jackson is the unprece- dsnt demand for them from all parts of the Union: and slthon b there may he many com- pounds prepared and, represented as being worthy of a liberal patronage, yet we feel constrained to remark, that the vast number of testimonials with which the worthy doctor has bass honored. by persons of the highest character and respectability, who found it necessary to have recourse to his preparation, is testimony saficiently conclusive, that s more e ctnal remedy for the almost imme- diate relief of those alicted with that dirsful malady. dyspepsia, has never been discovered.