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- tyranny. Should that be the o: ” " solely directed jast | me to heve an undecided peley, which may leon, in | they were determined not to present a candidate fer | tra was attacked by a of from 6.000 to 8,000]Vene- and there appears reason whenee we should tnfer Het ‘will comtinue umdecided for som: | PE siege apr ptr ry those objects | certain to another side than the moderate | the Preaidenoy, but that, on taking the sense of the | tiene. who, favored by the slowdyy weather, succeeded that this one defeat will break the idemitable spirit dis- tin elonger. The potency of its armies will afford no | rnicious designs.’’ one, feud for this motive, I preserve, with it to | Aseembly, 42 out of 43 had voted iu favor of General | in curprising the place. After hort: mish, the } ed im the unequal struggle they g® ranty for its safety h hree 5 renee with ty the Emperor, and bis government, are | bim, « distrust, not of him personally, but of his opin- | Cavaignac. It appears, however, that 30 members had | Austrians were compelled to re’ British government for upwards of thirty years. Our accounts from Vienna, of the eve: ofthe | firmly Some to arey on ‘ combat with alithe | ions. No doubt General Cavaignac is worth more | abstained from icipating in the ballot. connd sud leaving many killed and wou: | The loss of life in the action at Bloom Plaats *y bee Bdinst., state that the Diet had dissovied itself, | means at their disposal. ese ~means have been | than the governments which preceded him since the Letters from lepartment of the Saone and Loire | field of battle. The Venetians pushed on their ad- | great on both sides, in comparison to the numbers ¢: x be in th al.— | more acurately declguated by the manifestors of the | 24th of February, but he s not euch ® maa as could | annoumce that the majority of the pepulation of that | vanced posts as fer as Mogliano At moon on therame — gaged, and the victory of her Majesty's troops has mot (axty members being present in the capital.— | Tate seaitth inst. ‘The military meesares hove al- | be desired to ‘8 decisive effort in bisfavor. At | department will vote for General Cavaignac. On the | day, however, the Austrians, having collected a body | edvanced matters one hair breadth nearer to a settle 7 peseqnarere ~ Aging om a still at | ready boon carried into execution, An army of neatly | this moment the country ls attracted towards Prinoe | other hand, the northern departments, which were eald | of 1 00 infantry. and 1,600 oavalry, arrived to attack | ment, ‘The emigrant boers may be compelled to re- onbrunn. Jellachich ha en up his quar- : ‘ ded by Prinee Windischgratz, who | Louis B te. To check it am effort would have | to be similarly disposed, are now reported to be in fa- | the Venetians, who fled to Mestra, and thence to their | linquish their settlements within the Vaal River; Sir ters in the palace of Archduke Maximilian d’liste. | pestaxen bir hrad-quarters nr ivcrabet lots. | tokecaamenichesst tamipebemaneaup hee, vor ebdnes banks Neseees. ships, without awaiting an attack. Mestra was plun- | Harry Smith mey, as he threatens, confiscate the The intelligence from Vienna 1s, of the highest, ading the capital, and | have reason to entertain not sufficient confidence in Gen. C: mac to devote It appears that the republicans of Orleans, feoling dered and almost destroyed by them duringtheir brief | money which some of the boers have left in the colony; interest. Itappears from the German papers, and | hope that the more immediate object of those opera- | ourselves to his candidatesbip. Would it, therefore. | indignant that the Journal du Loiret, the republican | tenure of the place. but such treatment will only increas@their exaspers- fi ficial ity had | tions will be shortly attained. be right to propose @ third candidate to be presented | organ of that city. should have advocated the candi. Spain. | tion and unwillingmess to submit to the Brith oa acne ae that the alt! The |“ At the same time, hi ag Pag po bin Fd ie sountr pte same 4 the Club of the R Gucare of Prince oats Napaloom for the Poulseesy of | Madrid jourpals of fg $d and 4th inst. have ar- | government. If they are to be allowed to form settle- a convoke it to oitiers ? . ttack lasted from ii | transfer the Diet from Vienni F 4 the 28th to the evening of the | SOevet Kremaler on the 16th of November moment » third BARON VON WESSEMBERG. rate party ine) the Republic, have withdrawn their support from that | rived. ments beyond the Vaal River in the same manner and 29th ult., when a truce was agreed upoa, which ex- paper, and have established the Independant du Loiret | The Gaceta contains an official announcement of | on the same terms as they were formerly allowed to do | i The intelligence from Viennn of the 3d instant ‘The following ra the reply of the Emperor to the | the other nation being inevitably certain to support The Constitutione! announces that Gen Cavaignac Pro- | forthe British government by a forelble process of 7 eight Carlist prisoners at Fortanete. Should t Louis Bonaparte. Two things would therefore | bad offered the mediation of the French republic for | Pe eitas and the Carlists retaliate, wo shall have are. | Yery questionable justi i fet, the moderate party would cause its num. | the arrargement of the diferenco which had arisen | EWI ot tody'tecces of atrocity which so dlegraced | SYeHy new Begion to. whic! with commande to ack sion of the arrest of the Catholic bishop of Fri Spain during the last civil war. 1 tee comeoemaniee ane 7 me Our accounts from Madrid are of the dth inst. The | the consequence will socnsslon of penee that would be entailed upon this country by fuch @ course of procedure it is imponalble to oon- eture beforehand; and the waste of life must naces- rily be great, both among the British troops and the misguided emigrants, who have many qualities that command respeot.—London News, Oct. 27. Miscellaneous. 1s to the effect that that capital was in as quiet a i hich waited i jt state as could be expected, after the late scenes | thesis Racamupisurerane enn by =a ‘all, b: ‘ing to its witneseed there. | Windischgratz at Vienna :—‘ The General eatrusted | Pers to appear small, by securing to its 0 The battle between the Hungarians and Aus- | with the military operations against Vienna hasspared | ® Portion “ The Three per cents closed on th trians, which ended in the repulse of the former, | no pains to avold painful results, It wasnot untilfor- | secondly, ‘he division of suftrages preventing any of | 5 ook, Seat Fey see ar “S00; the. Five per | Fepert of the oooupation of Huesca by the Centrali bao jority, th posed th oe Hungarian ermy- Rad pee | naopted, 7" ore t! "ahve oxteprional iteatios in election would, In virtuocf the new constitution; fall | Cente at 64 85c; the Now Loam at 65f; Orleans | ¥&s Unfounded. It appears, on the contrary, that the poser jat the Ps 5 Railroad Shares, 77f 50c ; Roven, 365f ; Havre, 170, | eBtire band was captured by Brigadler Angles, who against Gien. Simonich, who, though once beaten, | poe Agee oe eee. agronomic homiuste Ure, Gotats Consequently, im propor- Genet Northern, S4if 250, Avigpons 1G: iViere oa, had been (raped fee bg ea hed hy oort hth jor- . d with 10,000 Austri | i third candidate in the mame of the mo- j, Bale. 77f, 500 ; Boi . BOE,’ 750.5 ? . . pe a eg :ciistpheaaitiaanedl fs aside. 1am not, ho! debate party, it tothe nomination of Gen Cavaig. | Strasburg, 827f, 500 } Tours and Nantes, 310f. Pictented oxsinst the Prince aud Erinces of Capus be pg allowed to remain in Madrid, and threat Accounts from*Presburg of the 31st ultimo, state | Sie opinion wy nac which would be secured. We must know what | The accounts from Havre continue to report a brisk | ¢15 if they were not ordered to quit thi If they are to be followed to shift their tents, ish sovereignty, cocesion ef ‘po! * rae! that this is the refult at | business in cotton, with an improving tendency in The Me | des Pryéenées of tl * 7 that active preparations were being made by the | sidered by the deputation as most unsatisfactory. we do, and say to a se obs ie nominees’! an Desi Mauredlllen, else, it ef na thectie @ Membrial des «} jenées Tar Arctic Exrepitiox.—The Lord Gambier, Cap- Lungarians to detend that town, | “tthe following proclamation has been isnued by Prince | Which we should arrive. Now. ould say it | burkete were carte noting hud thet Chace cst {he | mounces that Cabrera. belng closely pursued by Brig®- tain Hill, a whaler, which arrived at Stromness on Mon- ee ee aoe, svondence of the | -Winaieangene, of Gen. Cavaignac which is desired, we should say it | markets were mcre active, and that there was alto. oA the Seite’ with chick be eeapiorst intelligence four da; viously received from Sir J. | Gambler spoke Sir James in lat. later than any pre- Ross. The Loré 74 dog. 20 min. near y A “a frankly, openly, and labor for itearnestly. We might | gether increased animation in trade. retired with Breet eran: ee oe ‘Toyal | "To the Inbabitante of Upper and Lower Austria, | even derive sdvantageous rerulte to the country from | ““The Here, of Cee, sanounces that, 60 far asitein- oa Be move e, whe al . Ey that comination, ‘ing in advance with Gen. Ca- | formation goes, there has never been any intention | of his retreat, but i ase his attempt on Aragon y ‘ H “ longed resistance opposed to my troops by tomination, by treat! off his but in anye sp eaiuipages have already arrived. ‘The desertions | yy, Tun Prowtett the city of Vienna, after | had rae i | apoint called the Devil’s Thumb, on the cast side of 1 ain. | Vaignac, by requiring from him a programme relative to | amongst the electors of Calvados to put forward M. | hed completely failed. “y i from the Hungarian troops in Austria still con- | {).xerted every effort to obtain peaceful subiecion, | certain iawa, to withdraw or provent’ ce in nomins. | Guizot as their eandidate. "The Three per Cents were done at 18% for paper; the | Baitin's Bay. | eee Camus ise acnven tne beg. tinue, the fugitives making their way towards the | and after the accepted capitulation had been faith- | tions, to make or revoke. In that case we might, in dex THE FRENCH CONSTITUTION. Five per Contsat 9%; the debt without interest at'3'; | Qxdectea that the expedition would oross about the army of Kossuth. f | lesaly and treacherously broken, compelled me to have = rage poe fol ee wi hay drenched wig hf (From the London Times, Nov. 7.} and the Coupons at 5. | middie of the same month. The wind was blowing The Breslaw Gazctte, of the 4th instant, states | recourse to the most stringent military measures, | # Totty, Gon Hot 8 eknd Ottis Hoon the ‘natee ofthe | ,,The French constitution is completed. | On Satur. Belgium. from the S. W. No news of Sir John Franklin.—Nau- that perfect tranquility had been restored at Vien- | which will now be carried out to fulleffect. The city | vO drates, for that would be the election of General | °#y last the Arsembly voted the 116th srticle ofthe | The Belgian Chambers were opened onthe 6th inst , | tiea! Standard. na, inconsequence ot the excellent discipline estab- | of Vienna, and its environs, to the distance of two new code, and the ensemble of the entire fabric was t h from the King. M. Anspach | pie 7 i 3 ‘ | | miles (nine E-ngliab.) is from this day placed in astate | Cavaicnec by the Assembly, and without conditions. | 10) Subjected to the conclusive test of a ballot, amidst | ut, minetLe, Speech, Aorta ate’ buveane otter |. THE Cuouena._ The Times, after theccnclasen.ae py ee a Rb oc ries had order” | of selge, whoreby ail the local authorities aro piaced | It would, moreover; bethe division of the moderate | 3':f1' cf shouts, acciamationa and rejeiciuge, Seven | Pittitse Fiunase binlater wreconted nis budget for, | Py tee iia Ba Cd ee EE Or pillaged the inhabitants, It was reported that the | BRdet the superintendence of the military power, | Tritt 'yotes, and which would cause a part to be given | Hundred and thirty-nine members ageinat thirty, re- | 1540, The reductions made amount to 4.400,000trancs. || tobe an Asiatic production than a Baltie importation. 4 “ 5 ‘ded, in bebalf of their constituents, their cordial | The ordinary business was then opened, but no qu Srna “ty : “ to the candidate whom he might name—s pstt ¥ the'| °°" Itis but # modification of the ordinary results of im a portion of the National Cuamds bud refused (0 | 4ehtgene*Pnene wut AaueiamReounay, store | Pimee ‘Loui Fur theee molest blice that ma | Succhbancs of the, conaiions Antiadcd fo rgulae | tia of importance wat brought feemard. M. Damon partyaqd want, and should’: met wih the ordi ary hereafter the poiitical rights, the social duties, andthe tier was again elected President, who returned ol ” surrender their arms. Prince Windischgratz and | previous unshaken fidelity to the Imperial house aud | ™ust leave the ecuntry to follow its penchant, and not personal privileges of 35,000,000 Frenchmen. To con- tev vy a confidence, and cy meeting broke | *PPllances of cleanliness and care. F it. ich | tablished their quarters in | constitutional monarchy—that they will turn a deaf | Present it a candidate on our account Jeoture how the constitution may work, is beyond the | up. Posta, ARnaNcements.—The much vexed posta wee The eee of aecaeudema | ear to the evil vounsels of incendiaries, and save me It was rumored in Paris on Saturday last that M. wer of man ; but to presume that the experiment be Hamburg. differences which existed between the United State Legion had been arrested, together with an aid-de | fromthe painful necessity of prancing. the state of | Lucien Murat, cousin of the Bonapartes, intended to | will be a brief one, is no more than is warranted b; Our correspondent in Hamburg, writing on the 7th | and our government is finally arranged to the satic- oun of General Messenhauser, General Cordon | Soens other places in which an evil spirit may be | propose a decree to the Assembly, to exclude General | the lersonsofexperience, seeing that this last consti- | instant, observes that the commissioner from the | faction of both governments. The arrangement ha manifested. I earnestly warn the inhabitants of all | Cavaignao fromthe Presidency, on the ground that his | tu tion of the 4th of November, 1848, is precisely the | }; rt Central Government had given great um- tt to go before the American Congreas for forma these lands to be upon ‘ele guard against all seduo- | candidateship would be at variance with the spirit of q Franbfort Central Gov given gr yet to go gre had been appointed governor of the exty. twenty-second— reckoning the extemporized codes of to the German democratio by not having | sanction.—Liverpool Times. Letters from Linz, of the 2d, published in the | tive emissaries, whase deceitful representations only | that article of the constitution which disqualifies a | provisionel committees which hasbeen taken on trial | Hrekt to the German, democratie party by Net Having iit Ee nag t Mr. Bancrort.—The Lord Mayor, in proposing the Avgsburg Gazette of the 4th instant, confirm the | tend to the dissolution of the law and public aeengail, resident from immediate re-election, Gen. Cavaignac | since the inaugural year 1759. “Sixty go true; three ‘k's interests in the acttlement of the Malmo ar- news of the defeat of the Hungarian army, which | \ity—whoee machinations lesd to irreparable misfor- egarded as virtual president at present. o ackew." was the rule for the charmed bullets of Der | mistice; and peitions hare been sont from the town | hesitheot the foreign Ministers, at the banquet at the consisted of 15,000 men, for the most partirregu- | tunes, and are totally eppoeet to the di peanere of The project to ie 400 millions of paper money to ‘veischutz. The allowance for French constitutions | of Schleswig to the R verweser, calling upon him | sition has prevented his excellency the American lar troops. The rout was complete. The ‘Sap | all real liberty. (aigne ) WINDISCH government in payment of the | is far less liberal. Twenty-one misses have been | to diemiss M. Stedmann from the commissi the ibdoap i. RAT. be receivable by t 3 ; ¥ rains were scattered, and compelled to cress * Helzendorf, taxer, custome, eto., was rejected on Ssturday by the au ready seored up in suoceen The news of the surrender of Vienna had caused a peer oped aed Bh Pa tho jous readers may now calo 4 f committee of fi teat sensation in Ratisbon. On the Ist instant Count ‘sin hie Seniee fasts gatas ener a velo be _ eeean reer by i r Homhestmenl oe Vienne It is reported that Prince Louis is preparing s mani- | twenty-second will be a hit. ee the, ople of Gotechdorf the officlal news oy peak sane iD ai 3 eateorine 82 promote xx oor, Hetzendort, who arrived at Linz on the Ist at noon | bay) suifered acrercis, but orders bave been given net | festo to be addressed to the French Peoplesfor the pur- | Ther were six “constitutions”'—that ls to say, six | of the fall of Vienna; he made use of expressions | thay oN snag day, heard.on the road. aloud cannonade, so that | S'S Stcunes the nimber ef Milled, The working Poke of atl! more effectually conciliating thelr support. | several accepted forms of civil government—under | which caused the peasantry to suppose that thoso li- | ‘UN’ walt Ue Reprebemie, | the engagement had evidently not terminated. classes bad displayed s most laudable activity in ex- | [tis said that inthis declaration he will emphatically x Louis XVI., and eight more in that anarchical | herties eanctitioned by the emperor were in danger. | Loum Futures ann is Faniir The dlesemblee On evening of the 29th, atter the return of the tinguiehing the fires in the city. The palace of Count | disclaim all pretensions to an imperial restoration, and | interval which preceded the establishment of the Con- | They, therefore, rose in great numbers and proceeded a ‘ational ing a let ree en a ma don eae bat some pee ener the Communal Council assembled, and | i olowrath ‘suffered considerably. ‘The damage is will make a clear and explicit declaration of republi- | sulate. The Consulate i! ‘was so fundamentally | towards the castle of the count to obtain possession of | day® go ry = poy of m tort a. All of th, ‘rance calledjto its deliberations the Commander in Chief, and | Citimated at full 360,000 florins ( ret 000.) canism, suena by the appointment of Buonaparte for life, | his person. A shot was fired and the Count was se- ee amtaat atiecuen pe Fett with (oor nee ail the sub-commanders of the National Guard, in or- : en he Sth. a The Committee of the Constitution has approved this | that it may fairly be represented as Suppiyi two epe- waren wounded. Every train from Vienna brought | & ge, 7 ca do Namouse tartan aioe cehiog’ der to deliberate whether the city could be any longer | The Wiener Zeitung, of the Sth, publishes s Procls- | morning, of » decree for proroguing the Assembly from | cimens to the catalogue. There was then that prodi- | eyeral members of the Dict on thelr return to their and eex-Duke de Nemours having draak aa ng defended; and whether, if it could hold out longer, the | mation of Nato General Von Cordon, the ohief of the | the 15th inst. to the 8th December, but it was rejected | gious developement of the new principles which was | homes. There members montioned that a consultation s giese of water; the few drops that remained were capital would not thereby be exposed to the most deplo- | central commis:ion appointed by Prince Von Windlsch- | by the Arsembly, Liesl tha ance, bloh era waamreriale pad | Sena nn ne by the remaining members of | anelyced, and found to contain a strong deve of vary baa coe peng ona ite rendy to |e Tea or oe tag curation of the state | In the National Assembly, on Tuesday, M. Bastide, | fed in 1816 from its original form in 1604. In she im- | the Diet, whether they would or would not decideupon | Yirulent poison, produced by the decomposition of . Messenhauser at he was quite ready to z posed persons to sup- | Minister of Foreign Affairs, im reply to some questions | terval, that isto say, on the 4th of June, 1814, there | bh ital on the 15th of November. They | Copper of the conduit pipes and reservoirs by whioh continue the defence, if the Communal Council would | port the authorities, and promises them every allevia- | Dut to him, read’a. sort of manifesto on the present | tavarpntre tose ee ha Royalty of France, which | Meguré inthe c*Pivindlechgrett hed proceeded te. | Claremont houre is supplied. ‘The medical treatment command him to do #0; but that the position of the Im. | tion of their position compatible with the state of siege. | state of the foreign relations of Fra He sald that | was again restored and confirmed after the events of | worda Budna.Pesth at the bead of 65,000 troops, | by Dr. Clarke soon neutralized the effects of the poison Perial troops was such amto give the city no possible | The Common Counoll issued a proclamation on the 4th, | the position of the country, with relation to forelgm | Waterloo. This makes a score, and no person, we | ering a body of 35,000 In Vienna—46 ons | ond restored the sufferers to health. chance of an effectual defence. notifying the fact that Windischgrats had made the | states, has never since February been better than at | presume, will deny that the daye of July Added ano: | Kay Siretae Sen coniemned by martial Is, aad | ‘The Latest Liverpool Commercial Summary. ‘The Council then proceeded to vote, and the resolu- | restoration of the free Intercourse between the city | present. That France had contributed to the pacific | ther upon a new and attractive basis, which, after «| they had ecen several wagons loaded with | ors the Liverpool Mail, November 11.] tion = ipabenitm wecnaianaly; eae iaeneion bya majo. fae ielowing tg to honed satin Paine oie stern of i Schleswig caeetlon i ee. ae med ps longer and, we will admit, a more promising trialthan | Floresdorf, being conveyed into Vienn. great AMERICAN PROVISIONS. rity wO- of the votes. On that same eve! "apros ee fi ussia to give a ministration to the i a at | a a deputation repaired to the Prince to inform him of | Messenbauser, Fenneberg, and Schutte, The counc BL tangy te rarer arpa non ie Predecessors, was finally superseded by | number of wagons, with ammunition, hed arrived We are without arrivals of beef, but the trade are ‘ hose events of last February which have ripened into ted that {he revolt at Lem- ied by the Trish curers—new American will, how- this resolution, and the proclamation abeve quoted was | eccordingly enjoins those who may be harboring | With those Germanic States which had adopted demo- | the consummation now smmounoed: ee eee | Vienne, and it was repo pletely it oral, hate the peatutedhes eae Gaeeia doin, i in Galicia, had been letely suppressed b, ever, have the preference. There has been more doi: immediately posted about the streets. thore persons to deliver them up within six hours, un- | Cratic forms ; that she had brought the warin Sicily to mild be easy enough to depiot the character of | tie wilitary po Dre ANE 7 Wininanle: melleer et ertaueceaeeateisatine eerie teeatene Tho deputati to entreat the Prince te com- | der pain of being brought before a court-martial. termination; that her mediation had been accepted Ww work by teference to its published maxims, | ‘The Duke of Augueten! ig had returned to Graven- | of mess there is scarcely any left over. The sales of mand the Imperial troops to lend a strong hand to the The accounts from Gratz state that General Dablen | in Upper Italy, where difficulties had only arisen as ing some abatement for that mystidcation | stein for a few days, an s well received, bacon again reach about 300 boxes, leaving very little communal authoriticr, to effect the disarmament of the | Occupied the Mur Island between the Drave and Mur, | to the place of the conferences, but that no serious dis- ¢ which perpetual appeal to first princi- | Only 16 cases of chol: J occurred im Hamburgh | on bands: an advance of 28. to 4s. is now demanded, city. with 16,000 men, and that he would yey. Lisi sent hadarisen; that the negotiations were interrupted | ples has induced, tho decisions of the Assembly on the | since the first of the 1 ng the total number | but bas not yet been paid, For want of assortment In consequence of this declaration hostilities ceased, | against Pesth in conjunction with Gener ot | by the insurrection at Vienna, but that they could be | great questions of government and legislation are re- | of cates 3,302, of which cen fatal. there has not been much doing in cheese; demand is, and on the 30th the troops occupied the Glacis without | snd bis army, $,0¢0 strong. A space of fourteen days | resumed, and that the best result might be expected. | corded in phr: Aoguiarty Inoonic and sententious. | A letter dated Dantz , States that the | however, scarcely so active as it was last week, encountering any resistance. On the same day the | has been granted to the Hungarian officers by Win- | During the week there has been a full tide of flaan- y Englishman of practical habits wete to in- | cholera is raging in that ense violence.— | Beef, U. States prime mess, per tleree of 304 Ibs., inbabitants in the environs had already, ina great | dischgratz for their return to the service of the Em- | ojal crisis in Paris, produced by the present political | quire the position, privileges, or liabilities of individual | There were no Sites than ¢ in one day; 338 | 87s. 6d to 92s. 6d.; ordinary, bos, to 86s.; mess, per measure, laid down their arms. In the evening, | peror; otherwise they will cashiered. situation of France. from day to day the funds have | Frenchmen in any given case under the new constitu- | individuals had already beon d, of whom 185 | barrel of 2001bs , 00s. to 00é.; ordinary, 40s. to 46s.; twenty-seven companies of the National Guard had The ministerial crisis at Berlin continued at the | fallen with frightful rapidity. On Monday at one | tion, it would be extremely difficult toreturn any sat- died, $4 bad recovered, and 179 were under oure. prime 38s. to 40s.; extra India, family, &o., per tleroe, deposited theirarmsin the suburb cf Wieden. It is | date of the last advices, viz..the 7th instant, NoCa- | moment the Threes ion 41 to 45, and only re- borbe reply. In the first place, the operation of the In the small town of Gartz, in the district of Stettin, | 336 Ibs., 00s. to 00s.; ditto. per also stated that the National Guards in the city repell- | binet had been formed, apd it)was not certain that | covered 10 centimes at c -barrel, 100 Ibs., losing. The Fives fell to 65 | new codein all the most important contingencies of | the cholera has carried off 102 persone, out of a popula- | 26s. 6d. to 38¢.; pork, United States prime moss, ed the attacks made by the workmen on the Castle, | Count Brandenburg’s resignation had been accepted | 50,and recovered only 25 centimes, closing at 6575 | every-day life will be yet Pear ly modified, or ra- | tion of 700, ” . a barrel of 2001bs ibe. to 55s.; prime ay . to be; and that Gen. Bem had been carried wounded to the | by the King ; indeed, it was believed by many that he | fer account,and 65 40 for cash. Bank shares have | ther, will be altogether determined by the “organic Denmark. mess, family mess, &c , old, Shs. te 66s.; bacon, per owt., Hotel de Londres. Was doing his utmost to. comply with the wishes ofhis | fallen 50 francs, closing at 1,850. On Tuesday another | Jaws,” which atill remain to be discussed ; and, in the Advices from Copenhagen of the 27th ult. state that | western, 31s. to 40s.; shoulders. 00s. to 00s.; hams, dry, Fg The following particulsrs relative to the events of | Majesty; and that ina short time a list of names | fall took place of 1 50 on the Zarees, and 210 on the | recond place, many of its provisions concerned | Herr Nyholm put a question to the minister of peeign per owt., dds. to 42s.; in salt, per owt , 00s. to the 28th and 20th ult, are contained in the Schies- | would be presented to the King for his approval. As | Fives; the former closing at 40 and the latter at 63 60. | with such unpraotical and transcendental theories cf | affairs in the chamber,the preceding day,respeoting the | Cheers, fine, per owt., 46 to 528; ‘middling, 30s. to 45¢. sische Zeitung :— M. Jacobi and other democratic members had received | Bapk shares have fallen 50 francs below the previous | abstract polity, that their recognition scarcely in- | unexpected arriva) of the Commissioners dtz and | ordinary, 30s. to 38s. Importe from 2nd to 8th Novem: “On the 28th. the most viclent cannonade was rag- | a sharp censure from the Assembly for their unseemly | day's quotations, closing to-day at 1,230. The rumor | yolves any more serious results than would follow upon | Stedmann at Copenhagen. Count Knuth replied, that, | ber, 1548:—Beef, 0 tres., 0 bris.; pork, Obris.; cheese, ing from 10 o'clock, A. M_ till midnight. The inbabi- | and unjustifiable conduct before the King, no repeti- | was revived that the banking concern of MM, Roths- | « national acceptance of Kant’s Critique of Pure although the government was perfectly ing to give | 0 cask, 1048 boxes; butter, 121 casks; bacon, “188 tante of the suburbs fought with the greatest bravery; | tion of such insulting bebaviour was apprehended. | child Brothers had resolved to liquidate. Thisre- | Reascm. We are hardly warranted by experience in every information to the Chamber, he could only then | boxes.’ Previously this year—beef, 13.555 tierces, on the other hand, the courage of the military did not | No further disturbances had taken plai solution has, it is sald, been hastened 'n consequence | concluding that, under the codo just now published, | state, for its satisfaction, that the new government | 2054 pris.; pork, 92,925 bris.; cheese, 4,181 yield to theirs. In consequence of a very lively skir- The Hamburgh mail has brought letters of Tuesday's | of the recent events at Vienus. It is well known that, | there will be any more real constitutional law in | commission having greatly transgressed the limits of | 67,431 b: butter, 1,783 casks; hams, 1, 860 loose, mich the troops began to storm the lines on several | 4j ta. Money was easy. and the employment for it not | since the revolution of February, that concern haste. | France than there has been during these last eight | {ts lawful competency, M. Reedts bad determined to | 8.617 casks; bacon, 40720 bus. pointe, Those of Jellachich particularly distinguished | very general or profital le. At Vienna, as at Berlinand | strained its operations, so as to ‘be able to wind up at | months, when it has been commonly represented that | leave Schleswig, and was perfectly justified in so doing. AMERICAN GENERAL PRODUCE. hosegrt as bed cheeas bathe cratic, mint ree. | Cong ana Ml CeaGneak cae Mak ak ns | Ons Weanceday thete was « resction om the Bourse, | “ere weenonestall. | | t at The minister viewed the adhesion of the German to | ‘The stocks of Montreal pot ashes in the hands of im- urs. wen o'clock in the evening agai four x the ities excitement, an en foun: “4 ot ere, ma © correspond to our tl ish government commissioner as @ favorable ferent ‘of the suburbs were on. fire, especially in | necessary by Imperial order to allow parties having | The Five per Conts. opened at 63, subsequently fell King, Lord unt, Commer cote an cueitiann of ee Phomiced togive further explanation in the | Porters being quite exhausted, the quotations must be d_ nobility, and a concentration of the | course of afew days. considered rom! the taubourg Wieden and in the Landstrasse, where | billsdue between Ostober 6 and November 20, to post- | to 62f. 80c , but closed ultimately at 64f. 750. ‘This | gil royalt: 7 between 80 and 4) houses were burnt down. Atelevem | pone for one month from the date the pai ment thereof, improvement is attributed by some to an understand- | triple Fencasns in one cingle legislative body, which is Letters from Copen! nm, of the 12th, published in one but iso doi: a ‘small = United States 7 ovclock at night nothing as yet was decided, beyond Intelligence trom Vienna to the 4th instant has | ing that General Cavaignac has had an explanation | already condemned as aristocratioal and despotioal by | the Augsburg Gazette, inform us that the new elec- Jen oh ay at 4 |. per cwt. from the quay. the viotorious advance of the troops, The inhabitants | heen received. At that time the city was perfect- | with the elubof the Rue de Peitiers, in the course of | those men who brought its power to pass. In the | speculative inquiry ing appeared for quercitrom - | tions are completed. The result, according to the fark, about 10¢ hha. Th 5 ef the city itself wore said to have raised white flags il: i 4 which he declared he was stills republican, but that | place of a King there is to be s President ; who, or i f Danish rs themselves, be the ‘k, about 100 . Philadelphia have been disposed pr potas carly na the previous eveeding, Stich Epe- ly tranquil; the disarming was going on rapidly, di - i reasoning of the Dai papel ; , of at 88. 0d. to 9s per cwt, At the reduced quotations Shon, were tora’dowa by the operstivess’ Messeahew. | aid the barricades had been nearly all removed. "| he, .yat resolved to carry on the republic upon mo. @ shall be able to tell better next month; but | overthrow of the ministry as soon as the State P 2 derate principles. t and most conspicuous incident of his offloe greatly wes! for lard, a fair business has again been transacted: the ser, the commander of the National Guard, had pro- | The Wemer Zettung of the Sth contains a pro- | “The Moniteur publishes an article on the commerbial puapeiped 1a tha Provlitons widen ave sate tor | iia tiem vo% sales are bbout 100 tons, chiefly for ohandlery and claimed martial law, and threatened with capital pu- | clamution of General Von Cordon, head of the | and manufacturing situation of France, in which it | attainting kim, under pertain conditions, of high soap-making purposes. Tallow continues dull of sale; nishment all those who should shut their houses. On commission instituted by Prince Windischgratz, endeavors to prove that Srance is recovering the effects | treason sgeinst the people. The sole governing body | waeaend. heavy arrivals Oa) os poet Geeks and consum- the other hand. Prince Windisehgrats had threatened | from the period of the capitulation. In this pro- | of the revolution of February. In Paris, the improve- | of the Jand is constituted by popular election, in S hich | ‘The government has just presented to the States- = ipa = ot reise lower prices. Beeswax. with the same fate all those who should not shut their | clamation all right minded persons are exhorted to | ment was Leste visible in the branches ofin- | the right of suffrage is indiscriminate and universal. | General a project of law relative to the issue of new pk a — - in ord juanti er at late beri As doors and windows. The deputies sent into the camp | assist the authorities, and are assured of every | dustry, connected with articles of fancy and eene) ‘Thisis one of the very few points in which the actual pipe yl pee to the amount of Reine The ob- Seeeioenct Is, per tain om oan om comes thought fit not to communicate this proclamation te | aijeyiation compatible with a state of siege. and in the new impulse given to the conveyance privileges of Frenchmen are palpably advanced, and | ject of this measure is the avoidance of loan or an bom ‘ 8 pbood january, bon poy is have been in the city. Only a few shells were thrown, on the even- pa Be. merchandise, which had assumed of late a considerable | the estimation in which it {s held may be judged from | increase of the public burdens. The financial state | request at a further advance of £3 to £6 per tun. For ing of the 28th, asa means to inspire terror. They t Prussl developement, That amelioration likewise extended to | the fact that it seems to have lost ail charms what- | of the country is good, notwithstanding, since the | whale or lard oil there is no inquiry, and to effect sales were directed against the university, but a great num- Some disturbances took place at Berlin on the | the eutire of France, and particularly to the great | ever with its charm of novelty, and that, except under | existing deficiency only srises from the want of a mar- | lower prices would have to be taken. Turpentine is her of rockets and rhrapnelis were thrown on the fol- | 31st ult. Immense crowds were assembled on the | commercial and manufacturing centres. In the west. | circumstances of unusual excitement, little more than | ket forthe produce of the Dutch colonies, in o quite neglected, and all the recent arrivals have beon ing day. On the 20th, at midday, the troops were | Giensdarmen market, before the theatre, where the | the fairs, long deserted, had regal: their former | one half of the privileged electors condescend to avai, | quence of the political events of Europe, and there is | sent to store. Spirits of turpentine have been sold as a on the glacis, at a distance of only 200%o 400 | National Assembly holds it sittings. The mob | activity At Nantes, Cholet, Rennes, and St. Malo, | themeelves of the right which they overturned ago! | 20 doubt that the new treasury notes will be in great | low as 32s. 0d., bee She t has since assumed a steps from the wail of the inner city.”’ wanted to influence the decisions of the Assembly | t° works had recommenced, but the resumption was | yernment to win, The Preident is to be elected. every- | request, firmeraspect. The 8 Of rosin are confined to 1000 i si in Zeitung, still more general and marked in Normandy, ead the | four years ;—that is to ray, t bbls.: common at 88, 34. to 38, 4d. 500 bbls. tar just eee re a the atlacmein Zeitung, deted | as to the conduct to be adopted respecting the con. | Sill more Syrertmente, At Flers, Elbout?' z at is to say, the very worst element of f pearls there is a good supply, pot the 2 i viduals design: ., . vuvais, | mischief in the American Constitul - | _ The Ba Janded brought 14s. Fer linseed oil cakes there iss Windleehurcte tobe Sctiveseeayeen aise were Geneaal | dition of Vienna. Some deputies were ill-treated | st. Quentin, St. Plerre-lez-Calais, Verviagy Rhetel, | owed, without the advanteges it fd a circular to the poli oug! sheady demand, witbant change im price . No. Rowe Bem, Pullsky, (the Hungarian Secretary of State,) and when leaving the house. | Roubaix and Avesnes, the manufactories ha@ been re- | Exooutive. If France is to be governed after this plan, | kingdom, ccmmanding that all students belonging to | bere. The market for rice is depressed, \d_ sales Sohutte. x Berlin has narrowly escaped a similar catastrophe to | opened. In Alsace, although the price of cotton goods | jt will be governed by a House of Commons, chosen by | the University of Vienna are to be immediately ex- | could not be made in juantity unless at s reduction ; It ie stated im the Breslau Zeitung that the army of | that of Vienna, in consequence of the resolute opposi- | advanced but slowly, there was still an improvement. | the promiscuous and unreflecting votes of an entire | Pelled from the Bavarian territory. really fine is, however, scarce and wanted. In clover- ‘Windischgratz consists of 66 battalions of infantry | tion of the King of Prussia to the new order of things. At Lyens, large orders had been received from England popuation, which a strong majority of desperadoes Ventec: teed nothing bas yet done. (each battalion amounting to 1.200 men.) five regi- | That capital has been the scene of agitation and dis- | and ‘the United States; the price of silk had again | w it no effort to bias. The Venice Gazette, of the 27th ult,, in anextraor- | ,,A#hes—United ‘States pot, per ewt., 30s. 0d.; prarh ments of cavalry, and 220 cannons. turbance, which has terminated in the resignation of | reached that of last year, amd three-fourths | jt is in the presence of this preposterous condition, dinary supplement, gives the oMoial bulletin of the | 2%. to 3ds.; Montreal pot, 81s, to 32s. 0d. i, pa sae: The Preussische Stacts sAnzeiger contains the fol- | General Piuel. The King has appointed Count Bra- | of the looms at least were’ employed. At St. | coupled, as it will be, with eucll a state of the national | taking of fusina aud Mestre, ‘The Venetians, after | %0 &8.; quercitron bark, Philadelphia, 08. Od. to 10s lowing account, dated Vienna, the 20th ult.: denburg,are-actionaryand unpopular nobleman, tothe Etienne, Grenoble, and Vienna, the workmen, | finances and of tho popular temper as would disorgan- | an obstinate conflict, have taken 600 prisoners, eight | New Yor! . . Od. to 88. Gd; Baltimore, 7s, to 7s. 6d. “The Communal Council of Vienna issued the fol- | head ofthe Ministry, The National Assembly has al- | jong deluded by their ringleaders, had ‘at last | izo the best constituted government of Euro} orenat pieces of cannon, six horses, a veral ammunition | /#rd, See, 9s. to 408.; fair to good, 388. to 396 ; ordin: lowing proclamation :— most unanimously refused to senction the appointment, | returned’ to thelr usual avocations. The south had | we conceive all minor and particular regulations will | wagons, ‘The Austrians have had some 200 killed and | ?¥ t© middling, 94s. to 7s; inferior and “Citizens! The Commander-in-Chief of the Na- | but the King perseveres—bent, it would seem, on pro- | contributed, although in » smaller proportion, to that | be of little avail, rease, = Be.; tallow, 420. to 450, 0d.; beoswax, £5 0s, to £5 108.: tional Guard has communicated to the communal | voking a collision, and encouraged probably by the | gencral retirn towards confidence and prosperity, o have no doubt that the details | wounded. The seme bulletin jadds that the marine | p04.5 butter, aie, to 803; tf 5 munal and ich - council the intelligence that the National Guard and | issue of the Vienna insurrection. An imposing mille | ‘ite fairs of Aubenas, Trivas, aad Rodez, had been | Saccea with (hoc cece cmuinistration will be ar- | cfiice has received notice that fourteen Sardinian ves. | Gig'S pave Memo: eperm oil, per tun, £86 to lard, £35 to £33; turpen- ranged with that tact, farcilit; leverness 000, ; the Garde Mobile, a well as the Academic Legion, | tary force is collected in the vicinity of the capital, numerously attended. Bordeaux was crowded with | the French peopl ® borenariatie, a play hend enof meeeen enebored nse Yess ile tai tine, per cwt., 66, 0d. to 71 i spirits fuspantine, Se to have resolved to throw down their arms and submit to | ready for any emergency which may a: | foreign travellers, sales bad become more active, prices | wheels of the machinery will probably be admirably fv Birt athe ay 34s i rosin, Fe al 3s. 8 " to 3s, 6d.; rosin, ane the conditions imposed by Prince Windischgratz. A Letters from Magdeburgh state that aquantityof | maintained themseelves, and orders for wine daily st- | ordered; it is only the mainspring which we expect to The Em) 08 Tewasin Ima ind eds note 40 Ske thie pee to 86.; tar, per bb! 188. to 148.; linseed , deputation, composed of the mombers of the Commu. | gold and silver is conveyed daily to that city by Tail. rived from foreign countrics. “This accurate return,” | he absolutely failure. The Assembly has enjoyed Magyar mlnistey, calliag on it ppc en ake} ton, £8 to £8 10s; thin oblong, £8 enh y nal Council and of the National Guard, has repaired | road from Berlin and Breslau, sent by the bankers of | ads the Moniteur, “prepared from local and authen- | considerable advantages in its discussions. It is true bern. drone eclomen Avtatet cor ttsaeh eae Fi . bemP, £24 to ae pig lead, in bond, £15 ; to the Prince for the purpose of making this eommu- | those cities for safe keeping, to the citadel of Magde- | tic documents, affords the most convincing proof that | that all experience teaches us to look upon the task it army will be sent from Moldavia and Wallachia to put | sie? ae na De owt. 188, to 218.5 Loy. 80s. to nication to him. burgh. ae 4 | ‘verywhere trade and industry are reviving. The ex- | undertook as one altogether impracticable to human | Suc% the reyair ‘88s ; flax ceed, per tee, none here; Timothy seed, per “ Vienna, Oct. 29, 1848. . The French Republic. | treme protactivenses of the year contributes to allay | abilities. Such things, as every person fare, are neck Minoan owt. none here. Imports from 2d to 8th pean IT ‘Tue Communat Cournot or tHe City of Viena.” hi The siren papers of Thursday, the 9th instant, | wae he sey [Pippo da eee — not mage by the hands or head of one assembly or one ‘The Gazette of Florence oainias; in its offtotal pat eure ACY yA ; ad cravioual y bry cere er Zeitun ave arrived. - ‘o the suffering clas fort of w! neration. Yetifthe French Chamber had proceed- > ; y ie a 4 a Tint alk state thet Ge Hecgerkian Tabbed been deprived ; and everything an- | €q like the American Congress, to engraft merely such | *Be following decree :— barrels tallow. the Slet ult state that the Hungarians, 18,000 men | | Articles repeated by several journals during the | they bad lo strong, attacked the left wing of Windischgratz's ‘and | last few days, tend to create a belief that a serious | nounces that tl the right of Jellachich’s army. Meseenbauser made a | misunderstanding exists between the army and | than was at firet inter will pass over more happily | novelties as the emergency suggested u CD Pel Aeneene denen ie na i her gr xpected.”? tried stock, and if they bed rerlly confined themselves | ‘ional pow Reicett ecru it centre ‘The sirivals from British America since the Siet i Ni if order im Leghor: the vicinit oR 5 ‘The club of representatives sitting at the National | to securing thore consti cease on the re-establishment o: October consist. of 14 vessels, 0207 tons. The follow- sally fro non 1 thn ce OE ag A TON: the Garde Mobile, i ents ties | Institute resolved, om ‘Tuesday night, that it world | Sarees thor Ibe watoae fen Sar eine ak 2 order being now resumed, it declares the said excep- | ing have been the sales :—Pine timber—Of St, John’s and driven into the Danube.” Prince Windischgratz, | wii ntl h: ilesto, we a candidate ine the | ROtPropote any candidate for the Presidency of the | would have found admirable facilities for their ander. | tional powers atanend, (Signed) MO? "| one cargo, 19% inches average, was sold at 17544. ; ome the J0th, at twelve e'clock, sent the following tele. wi publ 18 mantiesto, 2s a candidate for the Republic. The msjority, composed of forty-two mem- | taking in that fortunate constitution of the Assembly Turkey. of 19 inches at 17d. ; one same size at 175<d. ; and one phic deepatch to Baron Weesemburg, the Minister | Presidency of the republic, on Sunday next, at the bers, next declared that Gem. Cavaignac possesred | whick'ineured. upon many points of detail, such com- | Advices from Constantinople of the 10th ult, contirm | of 18% inohes at 174, ; and » cargo of Dalhousie at 13d. President :— same time as the constitution wiil be promulgated. | their sympathies. One member delivered aspeech in | sistent and sensible decisions, But fisy bows been | the account of the flight of the Walachian chief Mag-"| Per foot. Of Quebec one cargo, 75 feet average, was “Vienna unconditionally submits this day; my | The mamifesto of M. Ledru Rollin, as the candi- | favorof M. Li f it twenty-one members ab- | driven by the farcical contradiction between their | heiroin Transylvania, carrying withhim asumoffour- | #ld et 14%d., and another, eanie size, at pei ) and soldiers will enter Vienne to-day.” date of the Mountain, is announced for to-morrow. stained from RE any opinion. MM. Garnier Pa- | situation and their sentiments to proceedings which | teen mililons of plasters, jonging tothe istrict trea- | one at 1444. per foot. Quebec red fine has been sold It was reported that soon after the commencement | M. Louis Bonaparte will not publish his manifesto | 8¢#, Duclere, a et lid del lowski spoke aguinst the propo- | their professions necessitated, though their hi { 317d. per foot. Quebec oak at 204. to 2id., and C 5 (3 earts dis- | suries and to peaceable individuals whom he had sworn . per foot. a "i hae — ao the | approved. They allowed those with whom thay have | to defend to the last extremity against foreign invasion. | © part t at 21d per foot. Qubec elm has been soldat 13d. nithstanding its sympathies for | no community of desires or hopes to proclatm « ropub- to 18/sd. per foot. Birch.—St. Johm with oat aaa the members would afford their | lic,and they have been compelled, therefore, to parade ite been sold at 15d. Quebec deals have been with firm support to any President elected Ly universal | themselves in republican trappings before the eyes of tober, 14, i pi Cathe $6 20 pee standard. | Bpence deais.—One cargo of the battle, agreat part of the Hungariam troops | until after those of his competitors. sition for choosin went over tothe Austrian army—among cthers, the | "The French Assembly have got through a task | “1™> resolved that regiment Lichtenstein, i fh a task | 9 partioular candi y oapaicy ‘Pupor also contains the following notifics- which at one time threatened to be all but inter- tion, posted in the streets of Olmutz onthe evening of | Mable: the constitution was finally passed on | suffrage. Such modifications end safeguards as repen: | _ Ybrabim Pacha is at Cairo, confined by an attec! of has been sold at £6 68. and one at £6 per deh ult. 26°" | Saturday, and 18 to be the occasion ‘of What 18 The French journals are taken up with the election e suggested, and opportunity permitted, they have | bronchitis and dysentery, from which be has beon standard ; a cargo from Shedrac at £6 .j and ccording to atelegraphic despatch from his Se- | ompously termed “a national solemnity.” Paris | for the Presidency. Little alteration had occurr carefully epplied, and we have recorded in these | Verely suffering since his return from Constantinople. ae ® cargo of St. John at £6 7s, 6d. ; of rene Highness Prince Windischgrats, tothe Minister | is fur from peaceful: there have been more colli- the prospects of the candidates; but if any change | columns euccessive examples of their undeniable con. | 80 little is said concerning the state of his health by | Richibucto yollow pine was soldat £7 per standard. President, Baron Wessemberg, Vienna has uncondi- | sions between parties of the Garde Mobile andthe | could be noticed, it is sald to be favorable to General | servatinm. But this fundamental inconsistency of | the people in attends oP “ Sore it aoa to Cee a) Lathwood with cargo has been sold at 90s. per tionally surrendered, and the Imperial troops occupy | workpeople, and more are expected. The agita- | Cavaignac, whore friends were manifesting an amount | thought and action must be utterly destructive of any | Correct information as iow far the disease may fathom. the city to da; LEOPOLD, Count LAZANSKY, | tion in Cpndection with the {erthoonting claction of electioneering skill for which they had not received | useful work, and the now Republican Constitution is | considered dangerous. my ay om Pacha superintends MISCELLANEOUS. “Vioe-President of the Government. ewer the views of the party who | the government business of Lower Egypt, Sheryff | Svcan.—The refiners ha “ Olmutz, October 30,” it ip, thay the party who nearly pied tecend oF ener, Eayrt and Abbas Pacha of the 8 pertal i th ndeavor to make it itropo! sntcslon ef Vinune, eter harley Geined peliiaion ot rolt mode by which to canvars the depertmente, | what it if not, The Sultan's firm of President has not increased to any extent per- | credit. For example—the resolve of Government to 7 discharge instantly all the soldicrs whose term of ser- ceptible m this country. As far as its character can be ascertained, the provincial current appears iif end with the distor next month, is decmed | evestugned the repeblic in ti an r appointing Ibrahim sole'gever- to run more in favor of General Cavaignac. The | th; bh 7 nor of Egypt, and S ler Pacha (or generalissimo of all the faubourgs. White flags bad fs rough the aid of 70,000 or 80, ‘n, to whom it Italy. a the bastions, and the troope nd return of Prince Lowe would es a national “re was natural to suppose General Cavaiznac had en- | A bulletin, iesued by the Provisional overnment of | ihe Pankh one ip.) was read at tbe Clade fe xpets "The busier received with # discharge of e Lal 4 The official organ of the government has deared himself. T! jonapartists are not less acti Venice on the 27th uit, states that the Croats had | 0? ony ep’ . yin p wy pa bardment was then recommenced, and it is enid that | published a very glowing account of the improved | Generally speaking, the humbler classes of the popul been defeated by the Itallans, the former having 200 | People of the country. inend Ge homed Cot the imperial library and a portion of the palace were | prospects of trade to be exactly reconcileable with | tion will, itis believed, vote for Prince Louis Napol for Jamaica, and 220 toes. have been sold with- 00 fahmil (or Hadtj) e men killed or wounded, and 500 tal rico: 16 celebrated procession of the Mi the general aspect of affuirs. not, as will easily be credited, through attachment for Tho Concordia ot Turin, of th eset isonert ib ult., sayn :— left Uairo on the 20th of September for Sues and | out change in price. Of fore! The Paris Papers of Saturday publish aciroular from | his person, because that © under his uncle the Eee * Although Radetski has sent against the! Mini d the troops occu: | M. Dufaure, Miniator of the Interior, addressed to the | Were better off than they are now, and that they of Chiavenna 4000 mon, with artillery, the insurrec- oa beg apy a vs at 268. 0d. to 208 Od. per ews. and the square | ’refects, onthe subject of the forthcoming Presidential that. treading in the footsteps of his illustrious rela- : og set on fire he sales are 20 toes ‘A titine Cor Pore pied the palace, the Kartner Str ‘nment, and two small steamers | cocoa brought 298, per cwt.; 1000 bage of black 0 tion is formidable. The insurgents ocoupy the best | semplated by the government, end ty poo 1: Peieeed rare of Sti Stepben, The troops forced the gates of the | election, pointing out thelr duties im reference to the | Sire. they will ance more, through Louls Napoleon, | positions, and recolve every day reinforcements of | RAT¢ been ordered ready (if necessary) for the service. | 3).d. to bie vores ond bape Burgthor and the Kartuerthor, and carried the palace | game,and which has been viewed with considerable | ¢@Joy comparative comfort. pumerous volunteers, who arri m Switzerland. It | Sommercial or political nature labar by Ro MAPA oe the only portion of the satisfaction. The circular concludes ‘ oR pets rt Dempurate as would sppear the candidature of M. ieee i opaaeine Py. 4 bee niet 9 oe] ‘Tho inundation of the Nile is higher than for many | 21s. per owt. all duty 2000 vw the Gallery of Natural His- | ossion my object is to call on you to re! on dru in,” says Our private letter, “itis pushed ustrians. Vive jes of women have 2 foun: val ; tory. On the ist inst. the tire in the imperial library | great poileiot ash Wihbn Weanes ts .ahoe} $0. aoeran: | with degree of Vigor ant carnestners'that would ar- | horribly mutilated, years past, and hse committed mush ravageamong the | bags of Bengal have beon fol was extinguished, and it was expected to save the manuscripts and the valuable books. The students defended themselves to the last in the neighborhood f the university. On the Ist inst. they were till in possession of the Salzgrier barrack: was occupied by the imperial troo, plish, and on the attitude which you must take, in th ue belief among his friends jarsha! a a is said to hi Villages along the river banks. It is now receding, | broken to fine white. Ri he has « chance. | The same journal says the valley of Torlerza is free. | though very slowly. ‘The botanical ostablishment om | extremely depressed, and effected of the government, under the new oircumst: | owas formally withdrawn | They are fortifying the important military pointe. | the island of Rhoda, under the superintendence of an | still in fervor of theibityer. Tes.—The market continues from the contest, and M. Lam: is said to rocom- | ¥resh troops have been sent from Como to Colico. The Englishman, Mr. Trail, ] learn hae beem sadly devas- | quiet, though a little better nding sprang up for thi tional Assembly, on Saturday last, after | mend t! lection of General nac, between | sacrifices of money made for the insurrection are im: | tated, The effects to tho unfinished works of the bar- the lot deroriptic f [i t university | several abortive attempts to introduce amendments, | whom and Prince Louis Napoleon, ly real strag- . ate abe RoTatled. Cieatar tae ene A4\t added | iC completed the revision of the project of the consti: | gle wil therefore take place. The dissussion in the | '"The'Nationat Saroisien, of the Sdinat, states that ececioany sy a memeainay wipers | is prieyeba te gused Cusue Very Un eae that the barrack was carried by ast tution, and voted its ensemble by @ majority of 719 | National Assembly on the appointment. of M. Beth- | rumor war current at Tete thasan Oouawer. srop b safer onc ted lpr crest umber ot pcboueet mere, ‘gelent G0, "A committe ef 15 was tem named to | mont, tn excraprtsentaivem be fveedent of the | iuimetgrae Pent, t¢ Furia that a ight hed taken | The mew crop now coming forward to market, po. TUE wANtACTIRING DiseRICTS. wee tik tees te bstracted from the | Cyucert with the goverament the public solemaities | Cour dAppel, has rather injured the popularity of | Austrians. General Popo is ald to have driven back | held for higher, prie mand is fedat pre- | _ The Manchester Courier reports less animated : ev ims large cum abstracted from the | which shail attend the formal proclamation of the com- | General Cavaignac, because the appointment inques- | the Austrians as {ar as Padus, and taken eight | sent by private parc inue to come freely | feeling in the market of that town, but oe ox. ba ons stitution, and which is to take place to-morrow (Sum- | tion is deemed a violation of the decree of the Assem- | cannon. forward. Quotations for beans and corn of all kinds | tensive busin n= ain ~ Seabal er tee treme eb taenh on oy) 1 dint iacth | bd Fog reas poem's ean that Co repre: The Sardinian minister has deolared in the cham- | are less than by | pee ‘he init 9 <p Me- u ¢ committee a inted to regulate the ceremony | rentative shou! el le to @ public employment me tl ny oderate the sation, have propoted the fellowing prozramme:—A gizamtis | pending apencion of the Assembly” fie of Turin, on thed inat ; that theking | which then prevailed havi a the Anglo- Bi t the following elr- | altar will be erveted sn the middle of the Place de Ia | “Great preparations are in progress, or projected, for | French tmeditatenn eee oe ener eae Glo | the intelligence by last FE: strian aaibaseadors at the German | Concorde. The Archhishep of Paris will oflciate there, | tke inauguration of the new Constitution om amag-| ‘The Oyiniens of Turin, of the Sdinst., atates that | (ee sence etter rene tard ae tanduced | Cfcthe, long alo ‘. oon ion ovate aa bishops yhe are sopeeee sntanives lo miter and fey Sag Boge a! ere of | notwithstanding the entrance of the Austrians at | this moment from 21! ‘ble for the Le’ ) in Gi , evel , after which a Te Dewm wil chaunted by | government denounced by the opp nase ion | Chi t ibardy. gute ig 7 Im order to form a | G0 clergymen and S00 professional singers. All tho | of the clectioneering factiguc Pace se limonene bt wep gaa pe Wy Be ~ | extent for . wens lene lish mall, that cereal pro- sative, but the market was pretty well cleared of T nd shirtings of low qaltty, mens im under contracts, continued to be neglected. The on the subject, attenti Nati Aseemdi: quoted as the ext home Lo gl Lesage oe z pr ig ¢ ee ings wulject, attention | National Asembly will be convened there, as wellas | ral Dac ° pony ing toany extent. No i ern oe ne Nbeing peldinre. deputations from all the al guards of France. | ‘The Moniteur du Soir denics that any conflicts had ph 1 pig iron still brings 42s, Gd., and mixed numbers 42s, <The mblitary operations which, at the present mo- | The poor of Latis will receive SOW0T, und those ot | arlecn between the Garde Mobile and the teocns ot the tpme . The market is upon the whole steady, A highly ree: ment, take place under the walls of Vienne, have but | the provinces 5,000. To cover the expenses of the | line Nevertheless a (at the . . Mr. Jape of Ge pectable firm in the cordage trade have, through the ‘Be objcot—pamely, the suppression of anarchy and | |anquot only. the representatives. of the people will | Courtille) is mentioned in the journals of this day.” | Temple's errival wa ously looked for, as itwas | Acanvsssovs ov THe Baits pressure of the times, been obliged to muspond pay- the re-establishment of legal order. It has nev each give up four lary, “ pia generally sappored that he would be the bearer of the Hore. —The government version of the tered the thoughts of the Emperor or of his AC Wiseskas dacleses to Corer af eae Our correspondent, in his letter dated 6 o'clock | confidentiol and definitive instructions of Lord Pal- | the emigrant boers and the troops. w SI ment to retract the guaranteed liberties, or to realine t to ac vee | Thureday evening, Nov. 0, says :— mereton. It was generally stated that the French | §mith,on the 20th of August, is ominous of ptotr: the chimera put forward under the name of re-action | frinee Louis Napoleon as Presidente, eee MACE |” rhe Bontee was rather calm to-day, The five per | Itepubiic bad rent in its wiimatum, demanding that ment. Liabilities said to be about £16,000. ‘THE COMMERCE OF THE COUNTRY. Tho returns of the Board of Trade for the mont operations, that cannot lead to neo rides by the ansrebicel party, mach loss to conquer for one Poitie cents rore to 66f. 60c, but witimately receded, and | thov.h Stoily should still be united to the Neapolitan result. ‘The boers have been beaten ending the 10th of Qotoder, as regards imports, ai of the Austrian nationailtiee, Fupremacy ever the rot revcived ust to recommend apy oaadidate forthe Lon? | cloved ate trifling advance on qTeiterday's prices, al- | crown, it should te governed by a separate constitu. | Qlepersed: but what Is to be done next! The notifen. | Keneraletendiness of eur home consumption of artiotes There is no strife of ationalitien—no change of the | tidenoy to its members, ‘The following were (he shoce, | though It was generally belioved that (he election of | tion and administration, and have likewise ite separa: | tions pubilshed at 7 food, compared with ths everemee: - a ¢ Town on the 30th August a ng pert . | 1847, Wheat for the first time during the year ox= ina ot eer ee errect | hibiie an increase, and there hee also’ ben's some: what augmented consumption of cheese, oggs, 00008, sugar, tea, opium, tobacco, and fruits; with a decrease in coffee, spirits, wines, and apices. A slight dimant+ tion bas taken place in the importe of raw silk, which up to the present time re been very woo! the increase still continues, Silk manufactures mopareby into Sclavonianm Austria, as the German press be vations of M. Thiers Prince Louis Napoleon as President ofthe Republic | rate army. The King of Naples has resolved, accord- | oth of September \ wascertain, The friends of the Prince seem to wish it | ing to court goseip, not to eubmit to the last condi- | ment, either an over e vd st anarchy, of legal authority, without SPEECH OF M. THIERS ON THR PRESIDENCY. to be understood that if he be elected President of the | tion, though he is willing to grant free inatitutions to which no goverment can exist, against terrorism, of | | 8m perfectly disinterested in the question, baving | Repubsic he will surround himself with men of eapaci- | the island. Rumora of Re ete a Ba preservation againrt destruction. We cannot but de- | ured the candidateship to the presidency of the re- | ty 'withont reference to the political opinions they | current, but Naples enjoyed rages gg: yy TS cad oy nominate it « confusion of idens, a misconception of | PUbiie effered me by ceveral departments, | anineither may be deemed to entertain, In short, his adherents | equadron, with the exception of the Friedland, 120, r if another meaning be given to this combat, cand! reridency nor for the ministry un- | omit nothing caleniated to raise expectations of vast | and one steamer, had left Naples. Veseols from Lon- nts at prosent possible. I know | benefit trom hie povernment, and th bject : ‘ef, or pretends to believe, but a combat of The revolution has put ons German dress. The | SF the two preci thus create an | don, Edinburgh, and Hull, are refused itique at ‘ierman colors bave become the colors of the anarcbi- | Dither General Cavaignac nor Prince Louis Bona- | amount of expectation that It will nov be found easy | Naples, Those from other ports of England, Scotland, by the shew © leseeiy inceenced conremption, Wh whieh, cal party The liberty, the greatness, and the welfare | Parte. 1 a: t to to ratisfy. nd Ireland, are eubject to 20 days! quarantine ‘Délieve it, that they have dispersed in all | howover, ma) ave more than kept . y. the pri The Scoretaries of the Club of Representatives who | | The viugshure Gavetti r meet in the Palace of the Institute, have addressed a | the Sixt October, whio! he country, General Cavatguac appears to | letter to the Constitutionnel, stating that, as a body, | lingly, that om the 27th tion of which the Fmperor of | &PY senti sp ial duty, are mot to be op. | seek to di me, but the measures of bis Majes- | Darm tot and wi from Trieste of | directions; but they are men acoustomed to a nomadic Jeeves a tee eee vere, = cone decrosse mit, although very unwil- tite They rein a country tco extensive, too dimoult, | Infdyes and dying stuf hides there is an Increase Avetrinn garrison at Mes- | and too litt!s known, pote deny cf their belng caught; in tonned,and « diminution in untanned desorip- poeed by force of