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NO. 5413. SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 1, 1849. arnt he Eftorts mead Spiel Wapato montese troops a canis Recaee i Rea va But ‘Windisebgrats, to Te- 2 Taoukwang firs issued a sncsigeae atin ial oy inteligence trom siam. Phage allt fice Cana an Matters, nisamin Europes elamation, and it is evidently the interest of Charles | store quiet, has been obliged to forbid both one and | which he complains of the negligence with whieh s J . [From Toronto Patriot.) [From the London Times, Mareh 2) Albert to’ prevent it if he can—for ewen, saye | the other. the sffairs of the grain boats are treated, and the aa MeYioSe kare hese tevelved to pepeeeaa Ene Alas! Britannia an consed to care for her off- ‘The hope which had fora moment been enter-'| the writer of thie letter, in the improtable event ‘We learn that not one ef the magenien who sup- | Jarge embezzlements and bribes which ruin this by the death of many of the royal elephants, and pring! She hae ruined the West Indies by a most tamed that the Sardiman cabinet, uader Gioberti, | of his driving the Austrians out of Traly with the | Port the insurgent cause has made his submission, important branch of administration. There 18 | yao etili lahaumn under the a er er pg ie fagrant breach of faith. She bade them emanci- and the Piedmontese army, might be able to support | gid of the republicans of Rome and. Tuscany, he whilst several who had remained quiet till now | something paternal in his exhortations, which, no Pope rth yee manta deg satan hea peace ey Pe i an pata erate prot e1 cy 4 ingly, the cause of constitutional monarchy 1m Italy, iT have been so disgusted with the project of central- ) doubt, wil measu: f | 0 against the follies and excesses of the republican MS ee Xie lito oh hd ization and denny yng the rightsof Hungary, that decbts wall mettre pecan wh can none pc gag oy peat eae one ee ante of hte ances- they consented. She broke her word, and gave a faction, has been dissipated almost as soon a8 it | no more advanced with the Austrians out ef Italy, | they have openly declared their determination to | trance. sickness was prevailing at Bangkok, The | Preterence to their rivals, the slave-holders. It was an accursed deed, and bitterly will she re- pent it. Was formed. Fortwo days it seemed uncertain | if the republican principle be suffered to gain | Fesist it. Amonget those who have made this de- | Apprehensione were entertained that the large | Rey. Mr Caswell, Anseri A SPDT . Mr. an Missi ; d Ca See ee aee re mceounts were | e7euNG incre, then hoa now. wrench | mesunie, who seldom meddled wis polity nut | Szaly 1unks Would not be able to pase the grent | on 2ith September, afer nine yetre labour inthe | PE iy suffere mn like manner with the West contradictory, and she mente Conbitel. Re sia government had received positive information of wicep a lincace a maerel bem Hits BER, one therefore chartered 360 smaller vessels to lighten pk econ peer Ber Degree iagesmuty snd [ogi } Theses pave oe angaced ledge at bt a Air it seldom pent ns mew and important successes having been obtained Sacchnatn discemiontae a atat of Gras h them, and carry part of the cargo to Teen-tsin. N. Chau-Fa, is indebted for much of the suc | per hee’, d Pantie ha specie fs qualified measures prevail over the vio- by the Austrians in Hungary. Our Paris corres- sterhaz) content, the comi ol ‘a8 hus | The gradual decrease of the water in the great assistance and support. That support 1 suddenly lence of extremes. Gioberti was one of the most re-risen in a kind of insurrection. "5 tisfactoril: Tained ; | cCss.attending his study and cultivation of ship- | withdrawn. The lumberer is ruined—the farmer cumest members ay that yet mesniag but reck- poncent slaivey tmnt. paveres, piers .Marabe "rhe | . The Husgaraa Latherane are, to mee foots rei pipes Sore reat Macedadet pee) bufldina: and [TRAODINETY. Press, Ootober 19.] 18 Sisheartened English pete pod most ta liberals, who gave the impetus i f ir insurrection. Coun’ jarles Zay ant ron oO i i " Rieke Oger y, 2 selfish of mankind— ing thei he Pe i SH" they ‘h Mi tf Monitcwr publishes, a circular of the Minister of Zeezenak, the superintendents on chiefs of the Lu- ret bd eM ar ber que ee a the The progress which the Siamese, within the last | Ket, are covetous of hesrined markets ol! the ave since found it 1m- | the Interior to the Prefects of the de nts, de- i possible to control. It is'the common destiny of | sirng them to put pak Sperouslgt anal nei des theran church (the office 18 always held by lay- | grain from Shanghae to Teen-tain will make good beldinn oaeaey reed ag ee athe Srttod stl world! They advecate tree trade, because they tke authors of revolutions, to be devoured by diately the bonnet rowge, and all other red rerubli- | M2), are in Kossuth’s camp. And, indeed, the | a part of the loss which their cargoes suffered from | of individuals connected with the royal family or | 20P@ *© Prefit by at, heedlees of the curses drawm ‘the oflpouring of their eanguine aad fervent imagi- | can and socialist emblems; and we leara by a | £¢atot the Diet in Debreekzin, the chief city of wet on the passage. the court, has been very great, and very success- down upon England, from myriads of ruined fo- mations. After a single year of liberty, Balbo, | private letter that the President of the Republic | the Calvinist Magyars, shows that all the Hunga- fering the immense quaatities of rice, | ful, asis proved by the number of fine yeesels now | 7°19 .ettificers, whom she would fain undersell. <Azeghio, and Giobert: have lived to see the opel to insisted upon the dismissal of any public func- | T1228 of the reformed religion look to the preva- nd es which are annually transported | afloat, which have been turned out at the royal In England, evil counsels are in the ascendant; which to their eyes was the most glorious and | tionary who shall be wanting in the zeal and alac- | lence of Austria to be a religious, as well aga po- | to the capital from all parts of the vast empire, the | dockyardsin Siam. ‘The crowning achievement | C@Padais lett to depend upon herself; Canadian ‘hopeful in the world, degraded by political turpi- | rity demanded by the Minister ot the Interior. litical, subjugation. DY superintendency of the grain department at Peking | in this important art has just been accomplished by loyalists have to contend as they may with repub- tude, ‘disgraced by military defeat, polluted by The ‘Moniteur also publishes an official note, de- Tt must pict, bowever, be supposed from this that |. must be no sinecure, The officer at the head of | one of the royal family, who has constructed and licanism and disaffection, unaided by the mother assassination, and at last trampled wnder the fect | claring that the statement of the President of’ the | ‘he Catholic Magyars have any sympathics forAus- | the granaries is an influential man, and his respon- | Jaunched a emallsteam vessel, which works satie- | CU8'tY, nay, chilled by her indifference. What of the basest demagogues in’ Europe. Within that | Republic having interfered in the selection of the | ‘Ya The crown of St. Stephen, placed by Kos- | mbility is very great. Recently there have been | factorily, and who 18 about to undertake the build. | Marvel, then, that those upon whom the grievance single year they have seen, not the fall of those | members of the electoral committee of the Rue de | Suth in one of the churches of Debreckzin, and | many defalcations in the receipts, and much corn | ing of another on a larger scale, It isin the high- | Preese® most fore—those who are & second time whom they called’tyrants, but the persecution and Poiters is untrue. He has never, says the note, almost adored by them, 18 symbol enough that | was said to have been clandestinely subtracted. | est degree gratifying to find the princes of such a threatened with the terrorism of 1887—should cast ‘dethronement of sovereigns to whom these very | taken any part in matters connected with the ap- | ‘Mey are determined to defend Hungarian inde- | The Director, however, in a very able paper, has | valuable and important country as Siam, thus | SPout for aid a the. impending snfetion-— liberals had made the idols of the people, because | proaching elections, and intends to maintain the | Pemdence. The Magyars are, indeed, all as one | shown that the deficit 1s merely 1maginary. giving the best proota of their aitachment to, and should look southward to men of kindred blood, ‘they, too, were;weak enough to confide in these | game neutrality. We have no doubt of the sin- | maa, and no defeat in the sole however over- Several poges of the Peking Gazette are again | appreciation of, the advantages of civilization, in who, however differing on questions of pub- false promises,and to leave the states they governed | cerity of this declaration ; but it is well known | Wbe/ming, would quench their dogged discontent | filled with a Tong list of names of persons recom- | their successful imitation of some of the most use. | Hic policy, are at least English, English in name, at the mercy of the most ungrateful populace | that the Bonapartiat members of the committee in | &%d indomitable nationality. mended for promotion by the Governor-General of | ful and smportant inventions of modern ingenuity ; | janguages 10 history, in feeling, ay, even more end the most artful and ambitious democrats | question have been selected as being the personal [Since the above occurrences,the Austrians and | Keang-nan and Keang-se. 1t is by no means pro- | and it aflords good augury for the future of the | S°thamit wi ll own, a in Europe. These lessons are to most men | friends of the President of the Reputhe, and at | Hungarians have had several more skirmishes, in | bable that these wealthy contributors to the pub- | country, that she should possess such inen among | What hope for the British of Lower Casads as old as the world, and we should scarcely | the same time moderate aud well-meaning men. ; . 3 gee! will soon-be satisfied in their demands. | her ris ‘The following extract from a commu. | Who find that we of the Upper Province, instead 0 be pardoned now for sisting upon tne schisms | All the Bonapartista of the jouraal called Za | Wbich the Hungarians reapedas many advantages | Shi the number of claimants for emoluments 16 | nication from Bangkox, under date Lith ultimo, | 2ding them agaist the foreigner, are only, by our they illustrate. But from time to time it would | 7rderté, which has attacked the ministers of Louis | 88 the Austrians.—Ep. Herat ] fiers mereasing, and must ultimately press 20 | will furnish our readers with some account of the | TePresentatives in Parliament, aiding to rivet seem that men require the plainest expe- | Napoleon, and thus given offence to him, have been Sere eee eavily upon the administration, as to produce a | Siamese steamer, and its royal and truly illustrous | 8Bhter und firmer the shackles that were once sa rience to be refreshed; and these popular dead- | rejected. A new journal, called Le Powvoir, | S&¢ Revenue and Kxpénditures of the Ohi- | catastrophe. builder. It is to be hoped hat his highness’s ex- | B€atly forced upon them * ers,'whe professed to need but a few months in | which 1s to represent more correctly the senti- nese Mimpire, do , dio. A secretary im a prefecture was, in 1941, trans- | ample will be followed by many of his countrymen; | ,, 2#¢Te 8 other quarters from whence this word power to make Italy a free, united, and prosperous | ments of the President, 18 to appear in a few days. Weh Wa Vad chiss Lanes zl fthe | Ported for ten years to the Ele territory for smok- and that the cultivation of European literature, | ‘“80pexation” has been heard. In newspapers, at Ration, have been takenattheirword. Theyhave | The socialist journals. publish another letter | soso rey Seeger oe te substance o ie | ng opium. He was employed during this time at | arts and sciences, may be pecan by the success | Public meetings, in the street, the same soun had the power they asked, and more than they | about the pretended socialist banquet of nen-com- jebt ttle LO TR antogoation regarding Suo- | the areenal and the ecpper mines, and had been | which has attended the attempt in the cuse of | &choed, day by day, in Canada West, and the 90 asked. ‘They have been encouraged by two ot the | mssioned officers, from M. Sely and M. Othvier, 3 fund ee es Je of the Chi China: tem | Very successful. As a mitigation of punishment | Prince T. N. Chau-Fa:— cial meeting has been invaded by’ the unusual most powerful states in Europe, and unmolestd by | two members of the Mountain. They again affirm f mncements, Princip on ee noe Ba it” was Hately granted to convicts, the authorities ap- | Some time since, it was intimated that his Royal | °Pic- the others. Theresult is that Italy is in a state of | that the banquet was held, but they do abetain | 0! Tevenue is to make each department pay itself. | plied to the throne to procure for this criminal a | Highness, Prince T. N. Chau-Fa Khromekhun Isaret [Erom she Montren) Journel, Mare $8.) confusion and misery she has not witnessed since | from giving the number ef persons present. The {f there is any surplus, the money 1s put outat — = | reduction of three years. The Emperor, how- | Rangean, had commenced the construction of a small Renet.ion Losses —As we stated a few days the middle ages, and that the wretched authors | chiet object of the letter 18 to Tepeat the attempts terest, to ferm a reserve fund in time of need. Se- | eyer, would not hear of it, for his aversion te gine. This, under the most indefatigable and | go, but for the late pitch-torking ot ne leas than of these delusions lie scorched by the furnace they | to excite the ‘army, by telting it that it ie made to veral institutions, especially those belonging to | opium smokers is not yet abated. ve ing exertions on his part, has at length been | twelve political partisans, of the present cabinet, themselves had kindled. __ é allow the friends of liberty to be sacrificed abroad the court, have funded property, independent of The Emperor continues to pay frequent visits to | Completed, and the Siamese can now boast of having | into our Canadian House of Peers, their iniquitous The pro ef Gioberti to march the King’s | ard to play an mglorious part at home. The lan: the income from he State, out of Which all the | the Entprees Dowager, generally in the morning Fea ee Menem Bench Heridhanly rebel paying scheme wala, have Toonived, its army ito Tuscany, tofthe support of Leopold, was | guage used by M Joly and M, Ollivier 1s intended | £*PeBditure is paid, and a fair surplus always re- | after breuktast. The audience given to the man- | ana entirely by nativeartifoers. She ls 20% fect long, | “uteéus in the second bianco ot Eats jood and politic. Had the Sardinian minister | ¢xclusively to seduce the army from mainsintheexchequer. = | darins takes place very early, often before 5 o’cleck, | 8 feet 101; ino . |. She is 26%4 feet long, | and there would have been some hope ot peace is 1d le ’ i 4 whic trie, and employiug the military strength of North, | eat Will ad xt hicul: to control bureements, and depositsare ever published.” The | heen promoted, ae introduced. “After a slight re | erally actog stesteman aiauafia fall view ‘of thes ‘ ‘ man if, in full view of thou. | ration of our prosperity. That a house divided ern Italy against the insurrection ia the Central sovereign of China reserves to himself the power t t ii A d and admiring ectators, who | against itself cannot stand, we have the highest States, he might have executed a great design, and te tag Wh an yenaty: to appropriate any amount of money fcr his own Bale A cabinet conegy as Perriecped poles Be f the siver om ensh socasion” authority for saying; and no less certain is it, that Jaid the basis of a federal league between the Ita- (From dom News, Fen. 27.] use; and the twelve millions mentioned in the q ough very proud of his | a government which sanctions and rewards rebel- i is So long a period has elapsed since direet er | subjoined list, may be the | night. The papers which have been received the | steamer, and s H amar d se # H y be taken as the average mini- Fr, and some jee, passed up and down | Jion against its own authority, must fall. bert: stood was hollow. Turin was everrun with trustworthy J could be received of or | mum. On this point, however, no cc fain data Pitter imeacdigrely decided ‘p00, basins King of Slam, pow i her before his Majesty the | Ii the loyal people of Canada, who, in obedience to fugitive Lombards of the worst character, and | ‘Tom. + foe al. eanee Or canes at we have | exist. 2 SAB LGe Decider Sith onder fen dite ore [ead eee ractously pleased te pace the | the summons of their Queen, risked their all—life full of republican emissaries, both French and Ita- refrained from all comment, and merely repeated ‘The list contains solely the disbursements and | thereon. ‘The final decision, hi d mel rorent, os abo reat ith hie See | sad property—for, had the rebellion succeeded, is lian. “Genoa was on the eve of a convulsion, and | these mamifestly false, and, sadeed, unintelligible | income of the supreme government, and of the | eatirely om the council, and ia written Ly the line team vesvel. constrtsted: saitannnt? | there any man so basely insincere as even to aflect still meditates a declaration of republican inde- balletins which General Welden draws up for | provincial authorities, insofar as they stand in peror, cdi the vermilon wail Tare yt rt bee ing to ‘Siogepore, which that the loyalist losses would have been considered pendence. The cabinet was headed against the the edification of his staff. The proclamation of | immediate connection with the gener: adminis- Tousen If an ordinary nuatter, "at is published in to accomplish. From not by the successful revolutionists? We say, if those rime minister, and excited by the most ridica- Sea vEra that he would hang whosoever | tration. Of the strictly local and municipal finan- | the Peking Gaeette; if on business which concerns or fron here of sufficient thickness, the | who risked their all in defence of their sovereign’s us language. ‘The Court was terrified and feeble; would forward a letter from Debreckzin, speaks | ces, it does not appear that any accounts have yet | the country at large, the sovereign himself issues a | Poller Bas Beem constructed insuch a manner as toadd | authority, were wrong in 80 doing--if are even the Army was! not entirely to be trusted. ae z Bb tat leat or aie jepented been laid before e public, net isa standing rile, | mandate; if mere state affair, circulars are ad. Aeecinaaantn toon toa weed cha eee, vrild Highness | BOW, a8 a consequence of naving crates releiog In short, the scheme ef Gioberti was negative: cd z that the national granaries throughout the empire parties i Fi “ vindicated the majesty of the crown e and he fell. The last political barrier on which | ° per Brovghtip en the opening of Parliamnent | should always contain 31,355,077 shih of paddy Gregped te the: s! ey neon rsd ob sneer ameterientet ke ies Conewated building ae ot the law, fo be peritated for their well- the house of Savoy rested, fell with him. If any | 74 ae the A, fat there was eating wrongs and 12,022,458 shih of rice, to be used in time of | ment is sent to the Board of War, with a sentence | ® m quite a different model, more buoyant than | doing, tobe taxed to pay the losses ef the rebel= further resistance 18 to be offered to the assaults | S80 that tie Austrians must have encountered | famine.* | Whenever the new harvest is brought | written on lip of paper, specifying the numberof | the present one, and with larger paddle wheels; and | lions—if the Queen’s name, in itself a tower of af the republican party, 1t ean only be by the army. | S°me severe cl ecks and difficulties. an the old stock is sold at a reduced price. llowed for it to reach its destination, and the | De® #ent to Singapere to have copper sufficiently thick | strength, is to be prostituted in so foul a cause, and han sovereigns. But the ground on which Gio- di Charles Albert and his cons are placed between |_| Wimdiscbgratz entered the capital of Hungary ‘he receipts of the present year, compared with 2 for new boilers, brought up. ‘used the alternatives of unconditional surrender or of ache head of hs anes ms 5th pee Seay, — those ten years ago, show a great falling off, and pal speaeane oe miched,_ 1 seiforn bap- wth workmanship of even the most minute part of “To dress the ugly form armed defence; and the ministry which has suc- Bing Ky ates it in adh » Thies et, bres it is to be feared that the decrease of revenue will | are judiciously placed, and the whole system is cies credit on its royal, ssauakriistiey who tote Of vere oa peony. Pennaeee, ceeded to power under General Chiodo, is evi- e army, having retired behind the Theiss. It ts | be more considerable. The government having regulated hike clockwork. Any matter laid before th every ‘With its fair honors. it made under hisown immediate supe: nd constant inspection, and by workme! ? ion of Gently unprepared for the latter course. but three or four days’ march from Pesth to this | lost much of its vigor and energy, the collection i i i i in the pbs er Florence and Rome are aban- Sh and Ugls to oy ce of February, the 1m- | of taxes is frequently resisted, whilst a series. of aig fopectl is lmamedialely are oendauay, ie doned to all the excesses of a triumphant faction. | Pet?! ae ead not dared to cross it, or had not | famines and other calamities in some districts | experienced, plodding, an trustworthy men that Se replica Eivenee wan progumed i | SU mucin, Comm and fu it sioned a | Nav rendered wheviing ll eGo Yo realize he | cape ond ung ie mandate. el under the lexies 0! ie zll, . , ina! 1) . . " ie fatielsetiech: poe alpen even to await the | 80t far beyond the Theiss, in the midst of the ‘Whenever public works are to be undertaken, cis ames of tops members a the Pry Con in —if such be the ae o risers a the styesy what can be the claims to fealty in the sovereign “ paler op py ange oar ould be den | But it cannot be—we will not believe that the ¢ of the coarsest and simplest desoription; but | honor of the British crown, in North America, at ui spices of this prince, work of | the bidding of a temporarily dominant faction, is this kind can be turned out near! to be turned into abye-word and a reproach. * * operations of the Constituent Assembly. The red | 8teat plain of Hun gary., 3 or any extraordinary expenditure is to be incurred, * tei n | to that made in England. Tt is the duty and privilege of every British subject fg of liberty—that emblem of the worst times of ES ‘he army, abo whieh the veptes ope government collects Periotie contribatioas: Their 4 Ceiticioniin Ith ou i Sep. Civili AK to hin ‘exhil shes bs firmly and respectfull; e ean Ue th t revolutionary France—is hoisted in every street, for Guelode ¢ caterers to our tory journals relied | amount is now and then published in detail, and | tember Ke-ying, Koo-ching, Soo-too-lee, &c. All | ans who visit him at his urope- | the consequences which must result from 3 Bl ing Ke 3 “ lace. i t the un, and crowns the most sacred edifices in Rome. ing Kossuth, was that of Gen. Schlick, | they constitute occasionally large sums. ‘The do- Smentize adoption, by her government, o| ced The provisianal governments of these cities, des- whieh had marched across the mountains of North nor are frequently Tewarded with office and emo- Peeters pe ect rae served, sud the whole eiconna tien i ve ev branches has been peinapally and woheard-of prineiple, that, as it 18 within the titute of any other resource, have proceeded to | Hungary, and, we were repeatedly told, had car- | Juments for their munificence. tablished ; but ii i ly h ers library, which he takes the test care of, | bounds ot her royal’ prerogative to pardon, so it is ompute the value of the landed and moveab'e pro. | !ed all betore it. It is, however, very extraor- | Many small items which are expended in main- established usage ; put it frequently happens that ives much pleasure from, There is nothing | within the powers of her provincial parliament to ; ty the have plundered to an immense amount, dinary that this same Gen. Schlick and his corps taining the numerous dependents of the Mantchoo ja eee io ane y followed, while the matter e turns his mind to which he does not ac- | pay, rebels, at the public expense ; but it ean nei- reat in Rome the treasures of the church are to be | Should, even by the admission of the Austrian | dynasty, do not appear amongst the receipts. [tis itsell 1s overlooked. r complish, however irksome and difficult. Amongst | ther be the duty ner the privilege of any subject of summarily disposed of. Amonget other devices, | bulletins, be, in the middle of February, in pretty | on the whole, very difficult to come at certain re: The Chinese constitution of government is a | other things he bas directed his attention to pik Great Britain, while acknowledging his allegiance, the Florentine government has announced that the much the same positions which they had occupied | cults; but the following statements, which have | Consistent despotism ; there is but one master and | im which science he is no mean proficient; ship-bu: to plan and invite discussion upon schemes of sepa- British Consul at Leghorn had rendered an essen. | 18 the middle of December. The last Austrian | been extracted from Chinese state papers, com- | 9%4, the Emperor, the others being merely his | \26.be 1 also conversant with; military and naval | raion and annexation. The time, alas! may arrive, tial service to the new republic, and that England | bulletin states several corps, thove of Getz and | pared with other doeuments, may be regarded as | Haves; while the fo-called privileged classes are | SSironaSteal tostrumesteot il kinds, hets thosoughiy | When, it deserted by the crown, and left to the ten- Hedi pouliuas hersamwablesrsintons with the | Jablonowsky, to be in pursuit of the rebel army, | En approximation. It will be borne in Tee Cone | only such by favor; and no honors or emoluments sequaluted with; indeed, were all his’ aecuiremontet> | der mercies of a Franeo-Canadian faction, the Bri- Tasean insurgents. We certainly are unable, whilst the redoubted ,* Schlick, with three bri- | ever, that it 1s not the gross revenue which 1s here | £28 be conferred without his express sanction. It | be enumerated, it would be scarcely oredited by parties tish Canadian royalist may be driven to seek, by a after what Wweliave witnessed of the Italian policy gadee, etal a Lecveh hed at eee on the | stated, but the estimated surplus, after meeting | 1% '™e there is a numerous elass of hereditary ited with the versatility of his g union with those of his own race, although under pile “ity ep erg acobing N ow, one letter from, Hungery, of ‘the same | the same extent, in our own revenue ret hich | 18,¢oneidered as of httle value unless the Emperor fo stop, Or wi je] 1 - 7 ¢ returns, whicl rf nobility; but the title bequeathed from father to son He ie at present busily occupied in the ere: flerent form of government, those British rights local charges ; a principle followed, though not to 3 handsome Riek dwelliog-house, entirely after the Gl TANATGDOAs which are here denied him; but intende di : th nD B, n late, assures us that— adds fresh lustre to it by a new decree or grant. | Eurepean style, which promises, like everything elsehe | that time has not yetarrived—may it be far distant. Lord Falmctston and Lord Joh eumcle "Buttor | yfoecereet Gem, Selly exits no mor; it vas | Genarthent but whats actualy pad invotke sr, | A Beat of the acions ofthe imperil eianyhe great. | undue, preach tevarte precion, lage |‘ Tprom the boton Heri March 22. the honor of this country, and for the character | Hungarian corpe of Gen, Kis bds, who operands -2y he chequer. Thus, in the case of the post-office, the | ¥ Portion of the Mantchoo and Mogul chie! id of being laid out in divisions, flower-beds, feun- Pore hile dh grace Sem ctrat heed elo of its government, we implore those ministers to A ‘himee) £864,000 given as its revenue, 18 not above half | ® considerable number of the Chinese hereditary ke. H repeaimee as promptly eamplore. the as they can all officers so renth, and bas b 5 rent bi sito te Tha the gross income of the department :— nobles, have ag little influence im the affairs of state | “His Highness has already commenced models for the | IM€ @ projected revolution in, the djacent British i i " formed VER RTURNS as those who lately acquired their rank by pur- | new steam engine; a0 that ere long you must not be | provinces, and an intended simultaneous inva- Poort ok os a penidoncel rear to hea ‘ wy lee met pot aas.te ake tee ed Ravenve Retuans or tax Cuinese resitigal rik chate. Itis very far from being the wish of govern- | surprieed if 78 see a Siamese eantont steaming into oh thereof by a body of [rishmen from the United been thought and believed that these crimes are fact, Georgey's conduct of the guerilla war | Land tax...........seesee sess eens 28,208, ment that the nobles should occupy situations of | the roads of Singapore. fs States. nats b y the work of men protected by England. But itis | 12 Upper Hungary has not only struck fresh ¢ | Forwarded to the capital in kind from trust, and consequently few will be found in the ‘Affairs of pan. Since our first article, we have been comparin, go believed; and although to ourselves in this | ito the breasts of tue Magyars, but excites various provinces, 4719,385 shih of rice lists of high military or naval officers, or attached [From the Polyn Nov. 4.] notes with several persons who are cognizant o country such a charge appears incredible, yet avowed. name iran, OC the Auezien eos, His last paraneneny equivalent to, . cumee to the civil pane h It would seem asif the Em- | Public attention is now turned towards the em- | this affair, and are he Phares some further there is no part of Italy in which the policy of this ‘Whilst Georgcy pgs Ege only maintaining his | Transit duties. 704, peror were afraid they might ultimately become pire of Japan, whieh has so long remained a sealed | statements in regard to the scheme. 4,199,835 | too [roeactel and usurp those prerogatives which ove! ook in the history of the world, but which, to It was the intention of the committee who have 3,000,000 country 1¢ not held to be an accomplice in this | greund, but destroying his enemies in North Han- | Duties on for only to belong to royalty. decree has the direction of the movement, to have com- perth 4 Poder ad eee Mae teat Rery, General Bem has been equally succeseful in | Ss: oe is oe 2, pata'in Kind.. 2021109 | Jately been tseued prohibiting them from holding judge pis ig eet ag tema i soe aeaiined menced their operations in the early part of the seer dlike Giscreditaple to all who tay bein an ransylvania. At first he was sore pressed by the | Tribute of allk, eotton stuffs, and other ma: more than one office at a time, and directing that | osity is on the gut vive to get a peep at that ta. | month of February last, at the time when the St. Fray concemed with it; but what, it mai De beta eee ree MAC the | nufactures, equivalent to. 307.599 | great caution should be used in conferring appoint- | booed land, and to become better acquainted with | Lawrence was frozen to such an extent as to ren- wired he Ne taen ban to averee Or hat i y i | Transylvanian Rumen: are called;) but Bem has dries. . 2,729,607 | ments. the raee of people who have so long managed to | der the navigation ot it by the British navy entire- Seed dcwk toantclatiitneeciabiat, ‘at has not | succeeded in explaining to the people and their 463,043 ab Ba hPL BL araue their exelusive. policy’ witiee eecne | ly impracticable. By operating at that time, the en done to render it mevitable chiefs that Austria merely aims at the enslavement BP Policy without provoking ‘ 108,481 Affairs In Cochin-China. the hostility of foreign nations. would have been able to overcome the Bri The ultimate consequence of this revolutiomt is | of all Hungarian races, making use of on Surplus per centage paid o1 now not difficult to foresee. After a certain time | due the other. And this pases pcoeileg re caved into the public [From the Straite Times, October 21. J Formerly, the Japanese were a col ial | troops garrisoning the strongest posts in pesses- ‘ f 4,316,684 | By the arrival of the Jadul Karim, from T if iol ed. in trade | sion of tne Engl vernment, before aseis has elapsed, during which the fairest cities of Ital: i 7 ple sees ee IE 5 n Turon, | people, being, previous to 1586, engaged in trade | sion of tne English go . tance wall pn fe total anarchy—to be ruled by a eee Gore ae eget Repth fat Totals ooo s ee neat wae te cess wre + 69,406,008 | 1 Nave sets sate ea pS frem ‘Cochin-China | with sixteen countries, but owing to the difficulties | could have been procured, and thus ba i os Joseph Mazzini or plundered by he mob—the in- | since turned against Puchner and ie AVattias, {Equal paaen rma 000 sterling.] ete pene ot Sapte Be is eae ae — oo by eek and Ce ee, during eudy *4alE 10 complete a roan of power tervention of a foreign power will come to be re- | and the result has been the ory for aid which these usLic Exrenpiture, Poy nenorelthtouehder tite waa Ys at year, a prohibition was put upon foreign in + in Upper PER reve id arded at not only desirable, but indispensable, by | have rent to the Ttussians, Cur letter from-Pesth, Teele, | Sirkar that the tyfeon which ocoured mat yon | tereourse: | The external commerce of the country | Alter the acquisition, by conanery Ot iets the Italians themselves, and by the rest or Hurope. | of the 18th, doubts the entrance of the Russians, Pay to the civilians, police apres rll vi ny ich occurred last year, | 1s now limited to two Dutch ships and twelve | Montreal, with the arme Kod ith . ook Provided the Austrians hold back their forces long | which, however, 1s circumstantially related by the ‘scaeees * navy (0 7,087,108 h * conte tel Yd ee! hated: ‘th arrived at Turon, | Chinese junks annually. Nangasaki 18 the port of | stores and munitions of war saber or ee) enough, the time will come when they will be not | Vienna paper. y TIA veer en vice, Suerte 406,518 | a ed th ~ tA tecrn oF ition: Croll and de- | entry for these vessels. The exportation of nearly | Were tohave been made the bases of operationey dreaded and detested, but desired. {t must, how- | Whilst the war 18 thus carried om, and can be | Officers of the Supreme gi ty thee weno” fead yeh bitten. The ich were | every article except lacquered ware, camphor, and | and that part of the population of the provinces ever, be observed, that these recent convulsions A < WME chee then nearly ready fer cutting. The new crop | copper, 18 now prohibited. The profits of the | Which had thus far kept aloof from the stfuggle, inceabegl Stamerelst Giverny | febamranmenatantar ngs uh Bre | ec sinkscs wre | ine eed canbe ne" medan, | Dl bade Ste Yee eeu cea he. | Gs repent ee, Bruae POR tere robable. The governments over which the con- | plain beyond the Theiss, as to have for six weeks | ,,‘unctionaries. . see ess 9,014,084 | (pik oun re to meet th aman ee ser ftrictions placed upon importation and exporta. | loyalty to the Bnitish crown, wete to be invited to erenee of oad might have exereised some in- | Heterre athe ‘Austrians from passing that river’ In | For a¥xes, public buildings, and ‘ether ext- the growers to meet the expenses of the present | tion. They are only allowed to import $360,000 | join the insurgents and their allies, the invaders, fluence, have ceased to exist. Sir Henry Ellis is | whatever attempts they did make they were de- genol + 2,860,000 | one. worth of merchandize annually, and to export | and secure the political independenee thus placed there, but alone in his glory. Throughout Italy | feated; so.much so, that both Windischgratz and 1,817,108 | ~The new and youthful monarch has already | nothing but camphor and copper. within their grasp. Great reliance was plaeed the dominant party, from Turin to Rome, stands | Jellachich saw that they had now better return to 1a70.742 shown an independence of feeling and acting, in- | Several vessels of war have visited Japan, for | by the committee upon the effect which this boid pledged to carry on the war. Their presumption | Pesth than remain in the face of an enemy against stead of relying en the dictation of his ministers. | the purpose of opening intercourse. All efforts | movement would have Produced in the minds of in language is only exceeded by their cowardice | whom they could do nothing. Windischgratz, 293,506 vances made by the prime minister caused | have, thus far, proved anavailing. Tha Japenese the “ sympathisers” in the United States; and, 5 tl » thousa in the field, and their avowed preparations for this therefore, betook himself to the capital, and to the dissatisfaction, and he was dismissed from office | are extremely polite to thelr vietere—suppl eit fe enets see ticomawhn ele bean janed sandra Agar Cena leke toes | bug vedae ot, aketing end crenng eneery Nid i pain, ON |pined mate ss OM OP | Gears ctv detard to caen a ces | Renna eect nara aan ae <4 > ng that ere long his lieu- : id “i ‘ hali: i . tary force the present administration might have advance of an Imperial corps of 8,000 men upon | tenants would destroy the insurgent armies under | y¢t 401,669 Dg “4 Pitaadb Aepehes taal hain ‘ohne notation rennin wine rieeinare placed upon our northera and eastern fromtiers. Ferrara has already taken place, and the garrison | Georgey and Bem,and then march onDembinski at of the citadel has completely occupied the town. | Debreckzin, enabling him to cross the Theiss. In + 182,162 of the Ingates, and the fearful slaughter which | °f Japan. Several whalers have already had com- ‘We are not informed with certainty of the pre-- sad records of French slaughter | ™unication with the shore. Accouats of the vi- | cise reasons why this plan was not carried out at Marzini recommends the Italians to commenee | these ho the Austr: e} % les thetot ease took place. . ‘ Py there operations of war bythe eapture ofthat place. | pletely dieappomied, and ie nas now marched tg | [rival Waboat 270,000 wasing'y""* ™™41* | sre'conmanuy before the people=not merely by | 1st the Manliastan and nex have been publi. | the provoned time, 11s eld thatthe low tate of They may rely upon it that if they do attack it, | gee how he can hancle Dembinski by himself, and Iureasan Estap.isnment arp ov? oF the remembrance of the deaths of more than. {200 | £4 in our columns. Several wrecked Japanese | the Ete Wo d hed, ntl th lod, be that will be the first and last offensive operation en | subdue the Magyare in battle. S tue National Taxasvay, Teens, but also in the {get of there now being at | Juke were, last year, picked up by the whaleships | the eens rd with r “ iberali on theirside during the campaign. The Sardinian ue about 850 peor wretches, some with foss of | cruising in the Sea, and their crews put on | expended in the cause wi at ity—-or e Whatever be the result, the Hungarians have at army 18 conscious of its late defeat, and unwilling | jeast redeemed their character for military skill,as to renew a struggle against a now overwhelming | well ascourage. It is now, indeed, known that power; and the military power of the revolutionary | Dembinski from the first recommended the retire- party in the other States is a mere rabble, which | ment of the Hunganans behind the Theiss, and will net encounter the enemy on a single field of | that the defences made at Weiselburg and at Mor, battle. We still deprecate any precipitate imter- were merely owing to the impatience of the Hun- Capt. Tower, of the Moe- | the hentai one ane of the Canadian insur- hi f medical relief. The Cochin-Chi . | tezuma. informs us, that, during his eruise this | gents to begin their o ‘ions 80 soon, or perhaps sicact ite eieiseitanees eg Cochin Nop al | season, he fell in with a junk disabled and drifting rom both these considerations united, the com- onelaught, differs greatly from the account fur. | 08a, the crew of which he saved and put on mencement of ths siamese delayed for a time, nished by our Gallic neighbors at the time, and | board another junk. Several boats’ crews have | though the preparations still went on with as great which, iFentitled to any portion of credit, reflects | landed, the past season. Captain Swain, of the | activity, zeal, and secrecy as before; and ‘in oun limbs, and others severely wounded, with little | board fishing smac! vention, although we are satisfied that Europe has i } on the attackers. The following forms th ~ | David Paddock—which vessel was wrecked in | Opmion the time is not far distant when ogera- hitle to dread trom the opposition of French and | Svithout wre oa le eg eli be stanes of the Gochin-Ohinese vortion °° ">" | the Japan Sea, Aug. 20th—landed on the south- tions willbe } commenced, 1 earnesty aad Prose Aa ee Tat Gait he franue, deraanauee duenlayed a great want of gencralship, since had 844,674 sy The French Admiral Cecille having heard, while Tay i Sereirieteataninn tewmtonttenin cpio complete uccess. a I 18 all en serious resistance, he could have ying in China, thata Fre! missionary i _ i i id Fea eee sein Re aoa | Zeneted the pve ote Bakooy Wald myer || C™sense wineries SOA segs | toms, Fat Cohin-Chine ‘a contacment de- | They'erc wend wth aren Kindaewr-faganied | i the Province ‘Perlement, and te conse Pa eee pa eyes hl ba AJ ous, and attacked the Austrians with much advan- | provinotal disbursements for the 18 provin- spatched a ship-of war with a letter to the King— | with a house and food gratuitously—but not allow. | Outburst of indignation among the here loyak uillity | tege as they passed between the wooded line of esta establishme: ‘he vessel according! ded to Tu to be restored, th cee, Turkestan, and the at in pe “es ly proceeded to Turon, on the | ed to go into the interior, being guarded by a b party of the provinces—the threats of an insurree~ a oy he R egored: and te resane the neople ile and the Force ep etn ‘moet TRIB. eceeetee svereveee seenees 6,607,880 peti Lt sf me hate i nl Ma of 8 esiere-and, after being Cndentad ath vody thon threughout the colamns of the leading jour- forms of foreign oppression, Italy had never sunk | wanted was generals. And it 188 signal proof of ‘Total of public expenditure. . 45,008,648 | ever, was von ep rammed tely, Withordertneyre | of five thousand pounds of rice, were requested to | nals ot Her Majesty’s dominions, ecoompanted by to the lowest depthjof ignominy fant she seemed | Austrian jealousy, that whilst they have 40,000 or | Pald into the Jm Treasury, : to return again to" that territo Whites wan nce | SO.away. They accordingly leit, in their boats, | céleulations of the advantages to be, nin States conten to seonnt a al ra & dominion from a) 50,000 Hungarian soldiers in their armies, they ad- Foie il private une, see. «+ 12,000,000 suicrentiy satiofactery to the demands of tar Gale aon thip Globee nile German py to, tellin with all ener a athe peeset Free ea politcal vol. ine verah edie ot aR ee ed gene en td of ee nation to the rank or expe-| Sitimated) speclted, 7 lie neighbors ; they remained in Turon for upwards | were Japanese. and principal men cano, 0 long smothered, will soon break forth evilgbeyond even those of superatition and des- |" Meantim the proceedings of Windischgratz at of two months, with the expectation of their letter It is believed that the common people of Japan | with’a violence that will sweep the power of Great costes Gbickeltedekcary bein; eventually received by the King’s minister. ‘tel he Canadas. potiem. Pesth mark hig fens a , ae y, cebarreseenent. to about £16,826,000 sisting Alle ~ ad bt ape Ln ae files 3 and the A a ae Ta aenaine Tan, Biv are alormed ‘undoubted authority, that @ amass -— facies Gateon eta verti = re Peer Sem roe pe peo ven jn puaime 1847, King, finding the two vessels did not quit the har- Many of tke vessels cruising in their seas will | wealthy gentleman, o! Irish extraction, residing is bor, sent to acquaint Commodore La Pierre, that iscl id ewhat prominent member fear oe nd Mi the King would poe eyes e iif they wish will become rather unprofitable, and gaged in this movement, as one of the o icimal an- 0 erted to the utmost the in- veouslh Hic his letig aed chipping, Ia tho ano may, in the end, induce the Japanese to receive gommmitions and i ealtrana position among ins lime, every preperation was made. for an atteck, | Rey" So many whalers annually visit the Japan “ ve him, to carry out the projeet to 4 vessels of war having been sent down from Hue, palin cine tee eet tia lalee will semipiotions and so seeretly has he done that fons o be inreedmeseYortheatacE if found we | £008 be avi, for willbe impomblo 1 bow | nobedy but the nviurd nave been aware of his ne- tion wil e aflair. ceesary. The Commodore took umbrage at the Cane fe wonser tae tt Sen ponne eh ow ithin a few weeks past, a hardware irae dene Heri ger letantnyt | smntscoen ay treet ary | ance pane coat im, ¢ — — ously; conse- , ; arms by the Western Railroad, to some of the attack. According to a letter from Tarin, the | Minister, or of being consigned to a dungeen. | 2 int, See ore | quently, alter the third day, the King’s vessels fonght by foreign nations—lor inlerpontion by | ct tesaid Zommittee, in Western New. York, maul titi asp ators | eek cacy gua er | nme evn Sa | tel pe ee eee ge | ns soee a GW nm, | ica i a mn the territs; Hi og HCI. sree eveeeeeretereenreerens + \TIOM OF — n considerable quantities of arms Tsone Pyeines the Acoraae bat alee witha view to rive this, gave orders for fortifying Buda, ind he fon We 6,796,061 | being too small, and the forts too far distan' ¢ from the ‘oher day, whe had been spending the winter | ten engaged in this scheme. Perhage ‘ae e { ‘ aris journals of yesterday Count Louis Bathyami, when brought before a court ton Tals, scoonding 3, which fits maaan baa refused to plead. As a Hungarian, he de- division marching into Tuscany, with the concur. | Manded his legal judges, and refused to answer rence of the government of that country, was ex- | ®8Y interrogatories of the Austrian officers. He pected hourly to have a collision with the Aus- remanded to prigon, and his fate 1s uncertain, trians, and thus recommence the war. In the | ,. Windischgratz 1s also said to have summoned Italian journals which have thig;day reached ue, we | Deak, and proposed to himto form a liberal minie- see nothing positively w ooalrn the belief that | '"Y With a constitution for Heneesy. Deak refused on ro Sbopents wil P ihe Pieds s ofa Mery nich thet pane, St Verkave’ a ily oficred but in the excitement of the Piedmontese it is J angr no means improbable that they will commence ‘the | him, the alternative of taking the post of prime —' gifne tappud to the fri the 5 ke, | clected blockhouses with palisades at each end of ih Sa equal to 160 Tbe, where the vessels were lying. The Commod ‘and he told us he was surprised to | inform us of the whereabouts of there is, is suid, pL ‘Tuscan Moree: Tierney C! Suspension bridge: aol in wana to 134 oun, ly returned the aurault, destroyed four Had ibs itiect of the annexation of Cuba to the despatched by fulread, ‘and also how many stand ment, a party: favorable ie ihe estoration ‘of Leo. Cog at sree aes extract i saws ton Day. ‘ emarel psa Fie iupwards of 1,200 per- United States oe senerally Sincmaeed hate, and of ane have at various times been » a per i ters sample — (From Ganette. a tyfothe: t sent 5 ow 1 OO. ad te Tener are Tare cnenly if |" ‘The oftcers at the theatre always cry feohave, The Emperor has promoted those seldiers of the living at Hue, seme with the loss of litave, be at amously in favor of it. We kiso learn from told to gold augers, " t under the influence of terror. The goverament out nf ‘wome has demanded the immediate tusica of | <elt Astle wneer Keiser, (the Austrien God Tuscany with the Roman republic. Thisis 10, om ¢ ground that the republic in Tuscany haa pd be been formally see Isaally ac ad wwe the | imperial guard who showed themselves most sk:l- we 5 action, that amnexation was not only regarded there SS on of the favorite Mantchoo weapen, ships left the harbor at aer inet irae saa pogiie but as a probable tag ‘and that the Trntt iw intended invasion, and give the the bow. There is no aecount ot hleck prae- anion was, that something to ithad | pubhe sueh proet of the truth of our statemena, tice, which sufficiently proves that are the most d between the ments of the United | ag will place them beyond doubt or vavil, not held in great estimation at eourt, Biaten and Bpaia,— wwnore American, March 30, r lish ferther we a we shall publi thet partiew- ee C(‘(CN’CNOONN(NCNitiéCUit(‘(‘é#.Uttitiii( eee eee