TERRIBLE SIIIPWIII-ZUK Iiisoxe ‘I'll! lCl~2Bl-‘.RGS. We gave some particulars yesterday, as received by telegraph, of the loss of ship John Rutledge, on the pass- age from Liverpool for New York. The ship Germania, from Havre, arrived at New York, reports: “On the 28th of Feb. ts ship's boat was seen ahead of the Germania. A boat was immediately sent from the latter to the rescue, when a sad spectacle presented itself. In the boat adrift were found one living man and four dead bodies, one of the latter being that of a female. The survivor, Thomas W. Nye, of New Bedford, sat amid the dead, frozen in hands and feet, and himself nearly dead from starvation. lie and the dead by his side, were all that remained above the waters, out of ‘thirteen who nine day before had left the wreck of the ship John Rutledge’ Capt. Kelly, of this port, belonging to Messrs. Howland di: Bridgeivay. The story of the John Rutledge, as given by Mr. Nye, is as follows: The John Rutledge sailed from Liverpool on the 16th of January. On the l8tli of February, in lat. 45 34, long. 46, 56 W., she fell in with the ice. On the l9th she entered a field ofice, but cleared it. Soon afterwards, however, on the same day, she encountered an iceberg which stove a hole in her bow, and daiuaged her to such an extent, that at six o’clock in the evening she was a complete wreck and evidently sinking. Nothing remain- ad but for those ‘on board to abandon the wreck as they could. Five boats were lowered, four of which took their loads and left. In the fifth boat, which was the one found by the Geruiaiiia, the mate of the John Rutledge, Mr. Atkison, and several others werejust about entering, when it broke adrift with the thirteen already in it, leav- itig the mate and those with him to go doivii with the wreck. Those in the boat now pulled it through the water and ice as they were able, but soon their compass was broken, and amid the snowy and cloudy weather which followed, they knew not wl.ich way they went. Days passed on, and one by one the thirteen in the boat sank in death, from the combined i.-ffccts of cold and starvation, and were thrown overboard, ttiitil on the '3‘tli of February, i\lr. Nye, with the four dead, among whmii was Mrs. Atkinson, the ivifc of the male, was picked up by the Gertn:tiii:i.” The Gcriiitiiiia Cl’ttlSL'Ll about in the hope of falling in HASZARD’S GAZETTE, APRIL 9. Tor: Mons'ri-:it GUN.-—TllC boring of this huge gun, which is being constructed at the Mersey Steel and Iron Comp:iny’s forge, Liverpool, is all but coinpletod. When finished the barrel will be I5 feet long; it will be 27 inches in diameter at the muzzle, or 84 3-3 lltCll(‘s in circumference ; and 44 inches in diameter at the breech, or [38 .3 inches in circumference. The bore will be I3 feet 6 iticlics long, and I3 inches in diameter, When completed it is estimated it will have cost the company £3000 in material and labour alone. The gun is expect- ed to be ready in about six weeks, and, with the tran- nions complete, will weigh something over 24 tons. When finished it will be drawn through Liverpool by twenty of the company's fine horses, and will ultimately be taken to Waterloo to be tested. The charge will be over I00 lbs. gunpowder, with one of the shots of 302 lbs. Mr. Clay, the manager of the works, is superintending the whole of the work. Au Ania LION llen-ri:n.—A rival to Gerard, the fam' otis lion killer, has arisen in Algeria. He is an Arab wal the killing of a lion and a lioness. In the night of the ‘list ult., after a heavy fall of snow, he went into the mountains of Aures, armed not like Gerard with excel- lent double-barrelled Devisme’s rifle, pistols, and a poign- ard. but with two simple artillery carbines and a butcher's knife; and, before long, he fell in with a lioness and a lion. He killed the former, and wounded the latter in the foot. The lion limped off, but Baba llassein follow- ed him, and seeing him in a clump of brushwood, again fired, and wounded him between the shoulders. The pain, with blood flowing profusely from the wound. The Arab sent him another shot, and then went up to him and ptit an end to his siifferiiigs by plunging his knife into his throat. The man afterwards had the lion and lioness convcyetl to Baton. The former weighed nearly 6 cwt. and measured nearly I0 feet ; and the latter was also it iiiagnificcnt animal. Baba llasscin had previously killed lltl‘I'(: lions.-—Galign:tni’s Messenger. l‘tt«:i..i'i'io.\'s or FRANCE: AN!) SPAiN.—Tlte Times Paris corrcspontlctit s:iys—“ It was stated some time since in one of the l’ol:ico papers of i\ladrid, and again repeated with the other bozita, btit it is feared that all on board. have pcrislit-ll, as the Germanic e.vperieiiccil very scvr.~rc weather after picking up the boats. The Courier and Enquirer rt-iiiarlis :— The rt.-ailcr will not fail to notice that the track where the Gcrniinii encountered the ':.- on the '2:-Qlth of Febru- ary, and where the John lltiilcilgo was lost upon it on the l9th of the saute month, is about the saute where the Arago eticnuntored it on the 18th of Jauuarv, the Atlan- tic on the 19th of February, the Arago onithe ‘.‘.2d, the Baltic on the 27th of the same month, the Persia on the 31st of January, the Africa on the 2d of March, and about the same as that were the lialiiibiirgh on the 27th of Feb, saw what has been supposed by some to be the wreck of the l’acific.—Bostou Traveller, '25th inst. TURKEY. M.utsi:ii.i.i-:s, Saturday. There was a financial crisis at Constantinople. The Exchange on London had risen to I35 piastres the pound sterling. An order to suspend hostilities had been sent to Omar Pasha and Selim Pasha. The months of the Danube were free from ice, and the ‘boats of the Austrian Lloyd's had commenced their service. The construction of barracks continued on both banks of the Bosphorus at Constantinople. The English were planning an encampment in Asia. nvssisir rnsuairions A1‘ AICHANGIL. PARII, Sunday Night. Letters have been received from Norway announcing that tho Russians have made good use of the winter in adding to the defence of the White Sea. The bar at the entrance to the Bay of Archangel has been rendered impracticable for vessels of large size ; and gun and mortar boats of small draught of water would be exposed to a cross fire from batteries on both shores. The despatches brought by the couriers to Count Orlofl‘ on Friday are reported to be entirely favourable to peace. They are said to refer principally to the rcctification of the frontier between Turkey and Russia. negro woman, in Camden, Arkansas, lately gave birth to four children, three girls and one boy, averaging weight about seven pounds each. The owner of the mo- liere, that one of the first acts of Napoleon after pcacc was C0lllflll|lC.'l would be an intervention tt"D.ltlSl. S anish l 3 and trc:i.:ii:-.rotis system which was so congenial to French stateszneo under Louis Philippe‘. it is, l aiu convinced, Napoleon has proved to the world that no man under- stands his own interests better than he does, and he well ing absoliitisin would be the coinincncement of his own ruin. the imperial Government to Spain has been most upright and ll0It('Sl, atid it is still engaged in removing from the froiticr the remains of what may threaten her tranquillity. ltdesircs that Spain should profit by her repose from civil strife to develope hcr immense resources, which have so long remained fruitless, and her wish is, that the present Government should be consolidated. With re- spect to a rumour which has circulated among the parti- sans of Maria Christina here, remonstrances had been made by the French Government to the Spanish on the internal state of the country, I can say that it is most un- lations between the two Governments have not been bet- ter than iit the present moment. The lmperatriz steam transport arrived at Spithead on twelve companies of the sledge train, numbering 780 men. They bring home their guns and various stores. The lmperatriz is order to proceed imniorliatcly to Woolwich to disembark the men she has brought home. EVER IN ‘rim Ciuiii:.i.—A letter in De Nord, from St. Petersburg, says:—“ We have just received sad news from the Crimea. Several young people of rank, sent by the Government and the imperial family to the succour of the unhappy victims of the war, have been suddenly seiz- ed with typhus, and one of them, Count Pahlen, has been carried ofll" A thief at Stockton, the other day, who had stolen a gentleman’s watch, was so terrified by a rumour that an appeal would be made to a clairvoyance lady who was ther has named them Mississippi, Ouachita, Red River, and Railroad; the boy received the last appellation. , performing in the town, that be returned the stoleti pro- perty before the entertainment commenced. lion then threw himself on the ground in an agony of independence and liliierty, b_v lt]C;itlS of open and brute force, like that under the llcstoratiou, or in the sneaking as iinfonndod as was the panic of English invasion. Louis knows that interference with the institutions of any coun- try for the purpose of producing a reaction and establish- l have good reason to liolievo that the conduct of founded, and, moreover, that for a long time past the re-‘ Tuesday morning, from Balaklava, with the residue of THE LATE Mr, Smyrna, M. P.—The verdict of fclo de-se pronounced by the coroner's jury empan- nelled to enquire touching the death of the late Mr. Sadleir, would have had the effect of preventing any religious cerenionial being observed at the interment of the unfortunate gentlemen, had not the body al- ready been consigned to its last resting place. ‘On the Tuesday after the late Mr. Sadleir was found dead on Hampstcad-heath, and after the coroner had given permission for his interment, the body was re- moved from the workhouse at Hampsteatl to the house of the deceased in Gloucester-square, Hyde- psrk, and on the following Thursday morning, at a very early hour, interred in Higligate Cemetery, in the presence of a few of his immediate relatives and others, the burial service being performed by a Roman Catholic clergyman. EVEN OUR PHYSIC IS ADULTERATED. Mr. Lindsay Bligh, analytical chemist of St. Blsry's [los- it.u.l,Paddington,said he had made examination! of the quality of drugs, and found many of them of very inferior . guality. He had found lime ‘nice adulterated, and out of our sam les he had examine he only found 1 Per cent. of citric aci and that was in the best sample. there was not the pi-bper amount of acid it would materially intprfore with the use ofit on board ship. great auto or 0 sam- ples ofchloroform were sent in, but not one of them _vt'as of any use ; but that might have arisen from decomposition, or bein-v prepared from improper materials. Samples of opiuia were sent in, most of which were adulteratedaand some of them to the extent of 75 per cent. Ha ha ex- amined the milk sent in, and it was reduced in quality, and in one instance he found itudulterated with chalk. The bread was good, with the exception of its being mixed with otatoes. English rliubarb was worth but 3d per lb., whilo oreign was wor 3s. He had found ground foreign rhu- barb mixed with flour and turuicric lle had heard that war Bapbury 3tt,£00 tons ofdrhubarbdwerlelgrown arnlntitilllyl. ie we 5 were to ‘on up an groun . to use 0 uiirv is I rhubarb liad not been discontinued at the London Ilosp-ital. lie was of opinion that there should be an inspection of drugs in this country similar to wliitt now existed in Paris, and that ollcntl.-,r- should be punished by fineiind imprison- tiicnt. lle had found porter aditlteriitetl with narcotic in- gredients. llo had it. t'.I."t3 bi-oitrrht before him, \\'lIL'!‘t} at fcinulc \\':tS supposed to be poistiii-:11, and it was use-.,-rtaiued that she llilll been taking (niyciinc pepper which had been il.tl|lltt'l‘3.l|‘tJ with red lcud. lle was of ol‘titiion tl::it :ilunt used in bread was injurious. By the introduction ofuluiii, it prevented the deconiposion of bad flour when made itito lire-.id.—l\lr. Wm. Bastie, chemist and drii;:,<;ist, axaniincd : Driigs were very cxtt-naively t1t.lllllL‘l‘;llt?tl. It takes place - trt)‘ittJ11S well as at home. by wliolc<.ile and retail dealers. Szniiiiiiiony coiiics licrc :ttlllliL'l'tllt‘ti witli chalk and flour. Es.--:iiti:il oils \\'t:l'(l iitltiltt-rated with turpentine at lmiiic and abroad. The same with musk, which was iidtiltcrutcd with sawdust, and 1'llt‘L'\.'8 of the tails of Iiorses were cut up and mixed with it to give it the iippciimiit-o of the genuine musk. Sweet spirits of nitro’.wt-re adulteratcd. White precipitate was not only largely adiilteratt-d, but in many eascs there was none of the genuine at-ticle,u foreign tir- pictlc heinlg (ii ltnixturel of_tc'hal‘l-‘rt: s]iili(sitituSteg.0 lied precipii it owns orgcyunxet wi I r on . a r n was lI'||X0t with safllowir, a kind of dye. 'l‘hc-re were a great number of wlzat were called by druggists compound owders, and they were technically culled “ composits gentian,” "com- 4 positis unisesced,” &c., which meant about one part of the genuine article to six or seven parts of adultcration. The ; medical man who prescribed those powders was not aware I of the proportions of adulteration, so that a surgeon's pre- 5 scription was rarely complied with. Many druggists were selling adulteratcd articles well knowing the fact. 2 now no rou Liirs irouit WINE, assrnussl l Mr. Bitstia further said : He had heard of spurious Port lwine being made from the following recipe :-45 gallons of cider. 6 gallons ofbrandy, 8 gallons of good Port wine, and 2 gallons of ripe sloes. He had tasted an article made of such a compound. He believed there was is sutlioiont: amount of adulteration to justify the interference of the . Legislature. Many wholesale druggists had it book similar to the one he now produced, contairiiii reci as for the purpose y ofniaking compounds, and for udufterat rig drugs in imita- ; tion of those that are genuine. Tho-book was not publish- ied, but was handed down from generation to generation. I It was originally drawn up by a man named Gray, but the last edition was edited by a Mr. Redwood, who suppressed ‘all the recipes for adultei-ation.—Mr. Mofiit wished the ,witness to read at length the recipe in the book " For Making Good Port Winet"—Tbe witness then read as fol- loivs :—-“ For making Good Port : 45 gallons of good cider ; brandy, 6 gallons: good l'ort. ti, gallons; ri osloos,2 gal- lons, water, 2 gallons ; stew the sloos in 2gillons of water, press of} the liquor, and add to the rest; if the colour is not strong and rough, add tincture of red sanders. In a few days this wine may be bottled; add to each bottle it toa- . spoonful of powdered ciiteohu, mixing it well. It will very soon present it fine crusted appearance, the bottles being packed on their sides as usual. Soak the ends of the corks into ll strong deooction of Brazil wood with slum, which, along with the crust. gives it an it peoraace ofa .” The preparation so made was sold at 1 s or 20s per gailoon. SINGDLAR Accinatc-r.——One morning last week, a Mr. Proulx, of Nicolet, when in the act of drawing on his pantaloons, lost his balance, and falling for- ward on the floor of his bedroom, broke one of his arms and two of his ribs.—Q,uebec Chronicle. \