so _ i‘. 0 ' WVM’ Those who remained, reached land nae I ‘ She tried to fix a rope from a gun, after Cap- ' DREADPUL SlllPWRECKS. ‘ l Fnox lama—There is a narrative from m- bcy Times of June 18th, of the disastrous _ ' two transport ships from England—the L0 in. Bentinck, and Lord Castlereagh, with the loss of a t number of lives. The following is an extract- in this narrative! The Lord iVm. Bentinck, Captain 0rd, with one hag ithem with a fiery spirit, and meat; a few of their number, former, were lying senseless on the floor; otherS, cursing and howling like half-furnished -wolVeS,, lwere, with utter disregard to the safety of their hundred and fifty troops and passengers on board, had been beating off the mouth of the harbor, for’ two or three days, but was prevented entering by the violence of the weather. On the afternoon ot'thel 17th, she was seen standing across the opening of ', Black Bay in gallant style, and every hope was enter- i mind, if she could stand on five minutes longer; of her weathering the S. W. prong of the lighthouse. Unhappily, an immense sea forged over, and pooped her, and she struck heavily on the rocks, at'ten iii.- nutes past four, r. M. Heavy squalls of mud and. rain soon drove her masts over her side, and a quar- ter of an hour after the commencement of the occur- ( qua . rence, she was a complete unmanageable iViecquéZ:x related the following instance of these men’s con- duct. The Aga was ill, and tended by his boautiful and beloved wife, when the ruffians burst into his chamber. “1 read their purpose,” said he, “ in their ‘ looks; but 1 was stricken, and could not lift a finger to save her for whose Jill: I would gladly have for- ifeited my own. A savage ruflian approached her entreaties for life were unavailing; yet for an in- stant her extreme beauty arrested his arm—but it 'was only for an instant; his dagger again gleamed l on high, and she sunk a bleeding Victim besnie me. Cold and apparently inanimate as l was, I felt_ her past me, as With her life it ' ebbed rapidlv away. My eyes must have been fixed ' I even felt unmoved ’l‘liecrew and passengers were seen to crowd forward to the forecastle. " ' Three ladies were on board, Mrs. Fraser, Mrs. Eckford, and Miss Robertson, also a maid servant , and some soldiers’ wives and children. Captain C. 5 _Benbow was in command of the troops, and Doctorj ' Fms": Mr. Mason (a cadet,) and several other pas- I sengers, whose names we are not able to learn, were on board. She ’kept firing guns and showmg ignals of distress, but, alas ! little aid could be al-l 1limited—The surf was too violent for a boat to live in, and the most dismal apprehensions were enter- , tained. She first hoisted out her gig, which rodey lantly for awhile, but was soon engulphed. He aunch was then got alongside, and some men were ; seen to enter her. One gentleman was observed, before he descended the side, to elevate his hands to i heaven as if in prayer; he then went into her, and i in a moment she shared the fate of the other boats. ' Having nothing to hoist her out by, the long boat appeared to be pushed over the side by mam force. , She also sunk, never to rise. fortunate were distinctly audible in the lulls of the wind, and filled every spectator on shore with hor- , For and distress. N0 hand could be held out to save. ‘ ' Alter much delay, boats were brought from the dockyards by Coolies, and we observed the very, great exertions made by the captains belonging to this rt in endeavouring to bring them up and launchothem. As boats were brought down, of course afler great delay, from the distance from t e .fim,) every means were tried to float them and steer them to the wreck. Captains Saunders and Hayman, of the Indian Navy, were especially con- spicuous in their exertions, leaving no means un- tried riyhile Captains M‘Gregor, Baxter, and many ’others, "attempted in vain to steer to the ill-fated Manby’s principle, but failed. The Victoria steamer proceeded as near as she could to the spot, - but ig'was evening before she could get her steam 3“ ' ' tly up to move, and even then she could not ,hpprouoh the wreck with the smallest chance or ‘ ~luccass. ’ Thousands of anxious spectators were assembled at the lighthouse during the evening, and perhaps a more painful and intense interest was never excited in the society of Bombay. Night, dark and lower- ing, fell, and we believe many a heartfelt prayer was offered up to the throne of grace for those who were so near on the brink of eternity. The moon rose about nine o’clock, and hopes were entertained that she might hold tovether until morning, but the gale still continued violent. By twelve o’clock at night a rafi with ten men, had by great exertions reached the shore' ; but 'at half—past three the vessel finally went to pieces. Another raft had been prepared, on which the ladies, seven children, and the passengers Were laced—Hopes, however faint, were breathed that s e might bring her precious cargo safe to land, bug'- alasna lofty wave struck her, and when she arose from the shock, neither the ladies, children, no: 16 ‘oflytheir comrades, could be descried by the I "cold and shivering—Captain Benbow, Doctor Fraser, and Mr. Manson, were among the survivors, also two officers of the vessel. - , The captain and his son were reported drowned, but as yet no accurate information on these points can be pollected. Another raft with 17 men on it was carried into Black Bay, and getting entangled them (two having died during the night,) were saved by the exertions of Captain Saunders. But as if misfortunes were never to come single, the Castle- rmaglggiaptain Tonks, from Karrack, with 150 troops I on , about 12 o’clock at night, having it is said seen the lights in the wreck and mistaking her for a vessel at anchor, bore u , and also went on shore a few yards distance 0 the other wreck. This morning before day light, as active means as could be taken (considering the paucity of boats and men) were set on foot to bring off the crew and passen- ge'n, and the same parties still exerted themselves, and about 10 a. in. about 150 sepoys of the 24th native infantry, were got on shore ; four were unfortunately ruflians, who, witfh a ‘ ‘fearful osition -. orme I I 0f derleagers,mo’re demoniac than themse ' ts. On one occasionlpasse I merit, and a state tch- her form almost bent double, was supplying swept the wet; _ group, who had collected into a low apart were whetting and lashing themselves into .companions, brandishing lsabres, or firing their inatc :of the apartment. idin, - _ greater number sat Sllellt at the board, their eyes :gleaming with a nianiac’s wildness and ferocity, iliii the spirits in almost incrediblequantitiesi' their effect in prodnéing a fit state of 'tement for them again to sally forth. An Aga ,. _‘ warm blood flowing ! with the vacant look of death : _ _ ——as he bent down beside me, and with spider-like ‘fingcrs stripped the jewels from my hand—the touch of that villain who had deprived inc pf all that l which in life I valued. The figures of his compan- 4 ions, as they came to ride the apartment, appeared and their eyes to glare upon 1 me, as they pointed, with fiend-like gestures and ’horrid laughter, to the bleeding innocentbeade me. At length, a happy insensibility stole over me.” E The Aga was afterwards nursed and restored by the ‘exertious of a faitnful shwe,-—Wellsted’s City of the C The cries of the un- i '0 dilate befdre me? wise to commit so buried in every avenue. Then arose a number of I. ' , growing out of their d themselves into‘bands, nil-- Ives, find courage hich would fit them for further outrages; a wre lumps of halfgrllle and the confusion of this pandemonium, t waitm g alipha. FROJII PAPERS BY THE CflLED OJV‘Ifl. TURKEY AND EGYPT. ( From the .Ma-nzari Shark, Smyrna paper, qf29th Aug.) “ In a few days we ought to learn in what manner the first odor of the SUI/TAN, on the treaty of the 25th July, has been received by MEHEMET ALI. Many imagine he will order Inaanm Poona to ad- vance upon Constantinople, but We can scarcely join in this opinion. IBRAHIM’S army in Syria does not exceed 50,000 men. It is reasonable to suppose that he will not attempt to march forward without leaviii in Syria troops enough to guard the various strong olds, and garrison the chief towns. “ \Vith the country in a state of insurrection, this will, merely to preserve a defensive attitude, require at the lowest estimate, 20,000 men; then he must keep up his line of communication, which being long, would take fully 5,000 more, so that he would remain with only 25,000 to carry him to Constanti- nople, through a country in which he could get no available recruits, and which would supply very inadequate means of subsistence. ness to attempt an invasion under such circum- stances, particularly, as» he knows, that befire he could get halfway to the capital, he Would be met by a superior force of Turkish troops, which might succeed in thinning his ranks at every step, without accepting a decisive battle. invincibility be' once destroyed, and all, who now crouch before him fi'om fear, all who adhere to his cause, for the sole purpose of being on the strongest and safest side, all who have been disgusted at his tyranny, and many more, would that moment abandon him. “But let us grant a physical impossibility, viz. ' that lBRAHnI and his victorious bands reach the shores of the Bosphorus, and take up their quarters in Scutari, how are they to get across the sea to Constantinople? Every boat, every possible means among the rocks, remained um“ morning, and 15 of» of transport 'would previously have been removed from the ASiatic side, and with a fleet of foreign men-of-war lying in the intermediate space,- he would find himself disappointed of his intended prey. What would then be his situation? These are our reasons for imagining that he will be too . great an error as to attempt to invade Constantinople. He may advance a few marches to frighten us, but that will be all.” The greatest activity continues to prevail in the war department, and several foreign steamers of Mehemet Ali’s, the Hajjii Babe, among the her) have been kept at work, in conveying troops to Samsoun. Large quantities of artillery, ammunition drowned in the surf, getting out of the boats, and ‘ and Stores: have 3150 been sent forward- Captain Saunders, with one European seainan be- lon ' g to the Clive, who tried to swim from a part 9f e wreck of the Lord William Bentinck, was lost in the attempt. The Officers in here are Captain Earle, 24th Regt. Ensign Grant, lst European RegL, Licut. Walker, Engineers ; and Dr. Davis. The Castlereagh, as was reported by a ‘Seacunnie,’ who had come on shore, had lost her rudder, and was full of water, and as yet did not pump much, but we fear she will beia total wreck. At the time we left the spot, ex- ertions were being made to reach her. thou h of course can only guess from column, that from 50 to 70 find 300 souls. terday’s extra, we II. at about ebb tide, the Castlereagh went to pieces, and the crew and «share on pieces ofp the wreck. In attempting toiwould be '10 W813, , save them, Mr. Atkinson, second master attendant, i “ that MEEEMET A“ might, in a fit of desperation, nearly lost his life, his boat bein u set. Captain order IBMHIM ‘0 advance, as would render French intervention necessary, and so originate a general war.” that “Admiral HUGON, M‘Gregor, (late of the Hannah,) 1'. \ cbster of the American Press, and some others, at considerable per- sonal risk, picked up the commander, Captain Tongs, clinging to a small plank, and in a sinking state. Out 0 nearly two hundred souls, it is feared that 39‘ more than seventy are saved. Ensign Grant, one of the passengers, was a survivor, but of the rest we have no certain accounts. Tim PLAGUE IN BAGDAD, 1N 183L—All distinctions of society, friends, or relations, had ceased: the fin- ger of God seemed pointed to this devoted place. thousand died a day; the seats ofjustice were un- occupied; the wailing for the dead, which at first had ncessantly filled the air, was now hushed to a silence and a calm more frightful; the dead lay un- | Gazette \Ve believe, ’ sailed mange” were seen drifiing the best informed quarters in Pa The Turkish expedition for Cyprus, consisting of 5,600 troops of the line, in 26 transports, proceeded on the 20th Aug. under the escort of the remainder of the squadron, to be under the 0rd VVALKER, united with the British 22d, authority was sent hence to our gallant coun- tryman to hoist the flag of a Turkish Rear—Admiral, which is a distinction no forei hitherto obtained. fleet. A letter from Constantinople, In repeating once more that “ Sept. 18. from the overpowered with the about their daggers and h-locks against the roof ' he clamour ‘the ‘ , . But amidSt t ’ he and arrived on Friday. It would be mad- Let the prestige of his (one num- ers of Captain On the gner has, we believe, . _ published in the {9/ Letpstc, states, that the Turkish fleet which rom Constantinople under the orders of a rough cap , Commodore WALKER, had on board 25,000 muskets persons have been saved and 1,250,000 081101101188. mm the Lord William Bemmck out of between 200 I that the Ottoman Porte had despatched a courier to Rome, to request his Holiness the POPE to give or- In addition to what we have reported in our yes- =, do” to, the Pamafdl 0f Lebanon ‘0 exho“ the are deeply gn-eved to have m m,_:pop_ulation of Syria to observe obedience to the mum a,“ the catalogue of human suffering and I SULTAN. 1f the POPE acceded to this request, there woe had not reached its climax. Yesterday, at 3, P. l “mum very 500" be 60,000 men under arms in Syria- the impression in ris Was, that there ’ our Paris correspondent admits lt likewise mentions or take such other steps . He adds, however, . who arrived at Vourla on the 26th of August, had, in order to prevent the too probable occurrence of quarrels, between the ofiicers of the two communication between the ships of war.’-—Lo7ulmt Times, The Temps asserts that MEEEMET Am had antici- pated the petition about to losses MONTEFIORE and M. don of the Isrealites condemn the murder of Father Tnomaso, and had remitted the sentence, in consequence, of the accused having died flicted on them. at such a juncture, fleets, forbidden all French and British be presented by Sir CaEMiEUx for the par- ed at Damascus for as he added, of four tortures in- FRANCE’. . _ that :certain the Padsiairfioperetwes L . in better term I p I _ - did: Edit-aim symptoms of d180rdet‘,¥el"e qgserzf ed 03.1fm” r.§d..§:rn£i:';:.:z that y’th’e' wor m _ bar ed by a in the Plain of St. Denis, and weredc Ug was of ron of dra oons and disperse pw .(siflllaiivere brought in pz‘licpttfé‘skggfbVJEEQ 5 iefs of sections, 0 . . lgalrmcinhations showed that secret societies pgi‘zrat (the bottom of the whole aflhir. At one menu a my; three ser ens dc ville, placed there to protect it aga the: com inators, were stabbed With kniyes, on; mortally. From eight thousapld to éipetrzcgltilsliiéid " - ’ t the eau , troops, encamped at Foil); samrdém the: bakihm; o chsmiths wlicelwriglits and printers jome e godlitionists: On Monday week, several thousands of “turn-outs”. assembled in the plain of Ville Juive and Chatillon, and a large body occupied the Fau- bourg St. Antoine, and attempted to form Bilbarri- cade, by upsetting a waggon-load of hay. T e ya- tional Guard beat to arms, and the troops of the line,. horse and foot, paraded the Boulevards, whilst strong patrols were directed to other paints, and, if Illle mob had. attempted violence, a strong exainp e would have been instantly made. Not a shot was fired, but the attempted barricade was dispersed in an instant without opposition, and at eight in the evening the city was perfectly tranquil, the crowds having entirely dispersed from the Boulevards and public places. Several detachments of troops arri- ved from Fontaiiiebleau during the day, conveyed by the steamers that navigate the Upper Seine. It was reported that an attempt to rescue Prince Louis Napoleon from the Conciergerie had been medita- ted, and that the Prince had, in consequence, been removed to Vincennes. Both these rumours were unfounded. In the afternoon, a workman, who had been encouraging others to revolt, was arrested on the Place de la Bastilc. A loaded pistol, some car- tridges, and a dagger were found in his pockets. Since Monday no disturbance has taken place, no large bodies of workmen being allowed to assemble. Yet what must be the condition of the capital in which 50,000 troops are required to preserve the public tranquillity ! s from their employers- o 7 SPAIN. The great question of the Corporation-law, which has mainly caused the late. disturbances in Spain, is likely to be productive of another Civil War, unless the Queen relinquish her purpose of placing the corporations under the influence of the Grotvn._ In this struggle, the object of the corporations is to maintain the unrestricted privileges, which they obtained conditionally at the time of the Cortes Re- volution. It was then understood that the law for their regulation should be the subject of further consideration; but they have, until the present time, succeeded in ' maintaining their perfect freedom. The law recently passed, and which the Queen was obliged to suspend by the riots at Barcelona, places the nomination of the Mayors in the hands of the government, and imposes a qualification on the, members of the corporations. To this the Exaltado or Radical party, at the head of which is Espartero, are violently opposed. The Paris papers of Saturday bring news of con- siderable importance from the Spanish capital, announcing the formation ‘ by the Queen Regent, at Valentin, of a Moderado Cabinet, and the conse- quences to which that step had given ris ' , Madrid. The ministry was, it seems, appointed 'the 28th Aug, and is composed as follows :—-President of the Council and Mniister of Justice, ad interim, Senor l Costazar; Minister of War, General Xavier Aspiroz; Foreign Affairs, Antonio-y-Zayas; Finance, ad interim Senor Secades ...... ..No sooner did the news ofthe formation of this ministry transpire, than the muni— cipality of Madrid declared itself permanent, and the national militia took up arms and occupied the principal posts. The Captain General Aldamais’s horse was killer], and his aid-de-camp wounded. He then took up a position at the Retiero with two battalions, one squadron, and several pieces of ar- tillery. The political chief of Madrid, General Buerens, was arrested and confined under a guard at the Hotel do Ville. In spite ofthese events, how- ever, the aspect of Madrid had become tranquil on the evening of the 1st Sept. The Messenger gives the above list of the new ministry, but expresses its fears, that although the city had become compur- . atively tranquil, a desperate struggle would take place on the ensuing day. The French government patronises the Moderudocs. / Our correspondent at Barcelona has forwarded to us, by special courier to Perpignan, the important reply of ESPARTERO to the QUEEN REGENT. It is a bold, decisive, soldierlike manifesto, not wanting in courtesy, but absolutely refusing to iinbrue his hands innthe blood of his fellow-citizens, and renew the cm] war, in order that the Camarilla might reign, and the alcaldes of the great towns be nominated by the Court, instead of being elected, as they have been from time immemorial, by their fellow-sitizeiis. On the receipt of this letter, the QUEEN REGENT must come, to the (decision of either accepting the terms offered by the citizens of Madridhhended by the respectable and moderate persons composing the Junta, or she must embark for France. Embark for France ! Abandon the Regency! Simply be- cause her MAJESTY cannot exercise a power which FERDINAND never exercised, viz., nominating the alcaldes of corporations. This appears madness past belief. And yet it is likely the QUEEN REGENT would rather trust her daughter to the hands of the French than to the Liberals of her own countrv~ Let us, however, not anticipate the consequences of a step which is possible, but not yet irrevocable. Meanwhile the insurrection continues to spread. The towns of Segovia, Huesca, and Grenada, as well as Barcelona, have openly declared their concur- rence in the acts of the junta of Madrid. On the 9th, a body of troops amounting to 2,500 or 3,000 men entered the capital, having joined the move- ment. A Captain General had been despatched to Madrid by the Queen, to replace Almada; but it was not thought that he would be admitted by the junta. ' Salamanca has given its adhesion to the glorious demonstration of the capital of the Spanish nation; the municipality of the former city has'expr'ess'ed its etenmnation to combine its efl‘orts With those of the Ayuntamiento of Madrid. v ' A f LPORTUGAL. v ccounts rom isbon to the 30th Au . fibeen brought by the Royal Tar steamer}. It Ephaj that a serious disturbance had broken? ‘— gquncofll theh6th regiment (at; infa " a p oe aving revolte, an i," p. -. turns C(li‘nstitution of 1822. Measurfifiwere immd iately in en by overnment for the suppression of the revolt by t e despatch of such troops to the spot as could be depended upon ; but the general aspect of aflhirs in the interior of Portqu was of a very ihe menacing character. The law _ I . d 1' st week classes filth?- 1’*”dcfi£§'wfle;d,.'; We state d had resolved mimike, in [35¢ 1m. ' Th; “co 1 V and up , concluded; but Lhalgctto ,. “’"'Advices from ' nof . the official communications from.“ commanding the seventh military ' _ government, transmitting the proc * Augusto de Sousa, cpmiuandin tha , ,, I infantry. Th e jocuments o p - r Moscazo, inst ad bf w a; made by de Sousa to jom him_in ch. instantly forwarded a aflair to ' _ z "a: suppress the disturbance, having song, I I . force to act immediateiy Governor of Moroao alsp writes, a. .-i. of the some proclamation to the ;. _. assuring it that the garrison and l..-. . cominqu were observing perfect . ...,,«,, that all needful measures had been ‘ ' tain the public peace—The co . Chronicle, of date the 3lst of August, _ only thing new which had transp .. the revolt, was that the cavalry w». joined the insurgents had moved from . Aldea Gallega, on the other. side obedience to orders from the Executive, V actual insurgents (about200 mend/instead 1 ’ Abrantes, were supposed to have gone... ’ tion of Almeida, which is close upon- frontier. ‘ the steamer left Lisbon, say, that the Min Interior had stated in the Cortes that mom had received telegraphicdespatc .parts of the country, announcing that . had not been disturbed in any quarter; Castello Bronco, from which the rebels, moved, having failed in obtaining any : ‘ . ments at Plymouth. . . missioned on the 28th, by Captain Sir S. C. B. The Bombay, 84, is ordered to be without delay ; she is expected to be com I. immediately. Vengeance, 84,arid the Fotidroyant, 78, as ready for speedy commissmning. dered for service except the Britannia, Queen, 110, is to bear the flag of Sir E. C and is preparing for the purpose. correspondent of the Brighton Gazette says-u, panied by the Secretary and Surgeon of = , 3 have been here since Friday, on their annual a” inspection. Their Lordships will quit on 2 day morning, in the Admiralty steam-yac brand, for Plymouth and Milford, Cork and 1" at which two latter ports, it is said, frigate ships will in future be stationed. ' The V 3; 84, Captain Sir David Dunn, is ready and, expected to sail. Their Lordships inspected :_ Sunday, and directed that she should in I, instance go to Cork, and thence to the Medite , “1 She takes out for the fleet a large 'quantity 0 3 , and shot. and six-inch guns. One hundred I - ' ers are ordered to be entered for harbour-d ' the gun 2 ships ofthe several ports, to admit i men, now in them, being drafted to sea-going port on the 3d September: It is estimated, thirty thousand persons witnessed the cere; Upwards of three thousand Were on board the Josef, 120, which was brought from her In H, to 11 part of the harbour whence a good view ’ r launch could be had. 250 guests at his house during the day. The a of the St. George was structed on the princip The cost of this vessel is—lbr labour, £15, terials, £77,878 ;‘ total, £93,521. v guns, for sea, arrived at Sheerness on Th I: se’nnigln. She was accordingly takeninto the, g at half-past twelve o’clock; thence into one ,' -, dry docks, with all her masts, guns, etc a.- every thing on board. by the steam-engines; she was blockedz bottom examined, and her copper repaired necessary; and she was ready to go to sea the evening. dock. Thus the whole process oftlocking, ii mg, cleansing, and examining the bottom, ,‘ . pairing the copper of a first-rate of 1‘20 guns,- 0 all standing, was completed in the short w , twenty-four hours; and, had it been nece might have been completed even in less tim9. ed to be launched, at VVoolwich, on Month! 28th Sept. The stem, which was original . structed after aplan of the late Sir R. Seppi‘ been removed, and replaced by ' Mr. Fincham, the )resent master shipwri Chatham Yard. of the Loudon—extreme length, 242 feet, 9" breadth, 54 feet 3 inches, length of lower (1 ' feet, depth of hold, 23 feet, tonnage, 2,598t to] on Sunday, from Launceston, New South“: we .have the particulars of the following I: - acCident which occurred to her * at sea. Launceston in the latter end of April; and 13th May, having been out a fortnight, she was 300 miles to the east of New Zealand, in la‘t. ‘. long. 175 W. Just at break of day, a sudden, Ht. came on, and a tremendous sea swept over the :f forcing in her bulwarks and, car ' g ofl'hel‘ 1-5 with the man at the helm and 3:] deck, in which the passengers and part of the V slept. In one moment 11 human beings wereih n into eternity. No arm could be stretched to : them—no assistance by any posfiibillty 00"” rendered. In an instant, in the twinklin ofan i) . the whole were whelmed in the midst o the roll '. billows. _ _ escapes. One man was caught by.tbe _spin the wheel as the waves were hurrying him a I the deck, and another was driven with great i ,, against the sides of the ship. A large the stores of the ship were also lost. v- The . U - the unfortunate sufferers are Henry limes," second mate; Dirk Vanderson, the carpenter; M‘Biide,seaman; and Alfred Shelton, B "‘ ' ' Of the passengers, Mrs. Younghusband and ‘ " three daughters, all young girls about 81! 011 " "' years of age, and Mrs. Matthew's- and m c ‘ ‘ ‘- 7 I. United States h m Lisbon, and used energiic~ ‘ Letters written at the last The greatest activity prevails in the nav " " The Calcutta, 84, M The Nile, 92, the Claren F“? ,At Portsmouth there are at present’no a The P “Earl Minto and Sir William Parker, The 8,; George, 120 guns, was launched at " Admiral \Varren cute in 1827, and she is c: ,. of Sir‘ Robert ,Se pin 3,: ll yd" l‘ 9‘. “its An order for preparing the Howe, first- Tlie water was pum : ‘ I The following day she was taken The ship of the line London, of 92 guns, is i one s: l be following are the dim' s By the Arabian, Captain Bankier, arrived in! ' v round-honey) . Several others of the seamen had mg? ’ quanti... Job were lost. Mrs. Matthews had another!!!“ sh her on board, an interesting, intelligent about six years of age, who was p ' The little fellow had been taken byvon ors into his berth, and thus escaplil‘l1 Mrs. Matthews we a widow lady, atla‘ return to her friends in England. K. who was a coachbnilder ,in Laupcefi. denly a short time before. All now lefip,~ , 1y is the poor little boy; but he is mile!) ‘ -’ with the generosity which characterkflgmi - - .ii are! r ' it: