Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE NEW YORK HERALD. — = NO. 6489. "AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. | ARRIVAL OF THE CAMBRIA AT THIS PO ADDITIONAL INTELLIGENC: or THE IMPORTANT BVENTS on THE Other Side of the Atlantic. &e. Be, hee The steamship Cambria, Capt. Shannon, arrived at this port yesterday afternoon. She has made the passage from Liverpool to New York in a little ever thirteen days, We are thus enabled to give some of the details of the important news from Europe, anticipated by telegraph on ‘Thursday last. It is impossible to give ail in one day, and we shull, therefore, con- tinue our extracts, and publish a portion of our fo- eign correspondence in the Herald of to-morrow morning. These details are of a very interesting character. Annexed are the latest quetations for, American State Stocks, THE LATEST LONDON PRICES. June 1, 149, MOMs a ry ¢ per Cents, (Ster. Boi pi Six per Cents, (Planters’ Bank.), jssippi Six per Cents, (Union Bank) ma Five per Cents... a Five per Cents, (Ster, Bouds) Virginia Five por Cents, Virginia Six per Cen Kentucky Six per Upper Canada Five per Ceuts, ( Dei ‘We learn, by private advices, that there was con- siderable improvement in English securities in Lon- don, on Saturday the 2nd inst.—Consols having reached 92 on that day. The London papers give full particulars of the Astor Place Riots. The Londen Times contains four or five columns, copied from the New York Herald. We find that to do justice to the news from France, will take more room than our columns this morning will allow. Our telegraphic report "yesterday gave a very fair outline of the events in that republic ; and in our afternoon editions to-day we intend to publish our Paris correspondence, which will give a pretty clear view of affairs in that country. The very latest news from Paris, however, will be found in this morning’s Herald. Austria and Hungary. In Hungary, the contending parties appear to be on again the eve of changing their relative positions. The Austrian forces, concentrated in and near Presburg, and on the line of the Waag, and supported on their left by the Russians, are reported to be on the eve of making a forward movement, and it is supposed that, having rovisioned and reinforced the garrison of Comorn, any will again retire behind the Theiss, and trust to the pestiferous climate of southern Hungary to fight cir favor The alleged victories ever the Russians, and their reported capture of Buda, have not been con- firmed. According to aecounts from Pesth of the 20th ulti- mo, Ofen wus still in the *ands of the Austri nd the Magyars were sti'l firi. ». the place. The garri- son of Olen had ceased bombarding Pesth, which had vatly suffered, many of the principal buildings being troyed. No certain intelligence has been received ding the movements of the Russians, large bodies of whom appear to be assembled at Geding and Hradisch. The estimates of the Russean force intended to be euaployed inst the Magyars vary, but most fix it at about 170,- Nomen: who will be reinforced, in case of need, by large reserves assembled within the Russian territo- ries. ‘The Vienna papers state that eage- ment has been fought at Kac, in the Csaitkist district. ‘The Magyars, with four battalions of regular infantry, four squadrons of cavalry, aud two batteries, attacked the Servians, who, with only two battalions and ten ns, were taken with a panic, and about to fly, when jtratomirovich rallied them, and making a desperate rush, drove baek the enemy. Areport of Baron Welden, dated from Presburg, on May 21, eontains the following account of recent t the seat of wai amy began to advance in the groat island Schut the enemy has’ been by daily attacks driven back more an more into the line between Bos and Vasarat. The wounded and prisoners which the enemy le‘t ages fell into owe Bands. Also Vetween the Waug and the Neuhausler the enemy fell back on Guta. Prisoners and deserters told us that areinforccment of newly-levied recruits was expected m Comorn, which fortress the rebels were busily em- ployed in repairing and provisioning. The commandant’s me was Lenkci. The enemy maintained possession b as far as the Abda Bridge and the envrance of the Schutt; fr come daily deserters from the two bursar regiments stationed there, formerly Emperor Nicholas and Alexander. They said they were ill taken care of and ‘worse used from the moment that many of them refused to take the oath of allegiance to the republic, and that all those ‘who were distrusted were sent to Debreczin to form recruits, ‘which were gathered thither in great numbers from all parts of Hungary. The emissaries of Kossuth were occapied on all hands with picking up partisans for the republic; but had, as t, only succeeded in Stubl-Weissenburg. The imperial er floated still in Grosskaniva, Funfkirchen, and us fat as Bata, where a portion of the corps of the south army, un- der Baron Jellachich, was stationed. The Ban's right wing extended as far as Peterwardein, ‘There is news up to the 17¢h from Ofen, about which the enemy had drawn together force of 3,00 men. The fire from the fortress still continued; a part of Posth was bombarded, and the battery planted by the enemy upon the Schwabenberg silenced. ‘The brave be- havior of General Hentzi met, naturally only with insult: from the rebels; and the Pesth newspapers exhausted themselves in the most terrible menaces against this excellent man, Several a directed from the Ofen water-town which supply the fortress, were attended with great Ives to the enewy, whose brigade, under the rebel chief Kimery, fell upon, ome oceation into a tire of grape and canis ter, which destroyed more than 500 of the 43:h battalio Honved on the spot. Daily a crowd of people leave the for~ tress of Ofen, who can no longer cever their want of food supplies, vhile the garrison is not in the least straitened for provision. The head-quarters of the enemy are in the Leo pold field, where Gorge wad , Fal differences with the rebellious government, which had charged Joies, like Bem and Dembinski, with ‘ar, which they waged more on their own thacof theirnation chan for the Hangarian cause. Desertion nm the increase among the more regular divisions ts, A subaltern of the King liam hussars, rom the enemy at Ri declares that the Dussars are only restrained from des en masse by tl most. korrible, menaces, and by th ‘tion ‘they Hould be shot by the imperialists. On the Waag from Sellye Yo'Prlestadth, on ‘the Neutra 'at Neutra, Mags, Tapolonan, fn Yeambrokret, great indecision was visible in the mover Srente of the enemy. General Weldon comure.aded, there night of the 8th, the eB 'y pursued along the road to Neutra and Tapolesan, The rij the army extended several day: tach lish communications with Gen memy, whose columns we sted in Rosenberg, Rajetz, and even in Trentsc! without venturing an attack. It is said that the Magyars have again utterly de- feated the imperial forces in the neighborhood ef Oden- burgh, and, in consequence, Welden has inserted in the Presburgér Zeitung an order of the day, forbidding the publication of any news of the army, except in an official form. Great surprise is expressed in Vienna at the non-appearance of the Russians in [lungary, and eons are asking what are become of them. Probably Bem and Dembinski could furnish some information on this subject. A ranguinary battle has taken place between the Austrians and Magyars near Raab, in which the vic- tory is claimed by both sides. Dembinski has, it is anid, defeated the Russians on the confines of Galicia. Baron Haynau has arrived in Vienna from Italy, and isto proceed to Hungary. The Russian government has issued an order to suspend the duty of exportation on corn sent into the Austrian dominion: ‘The Vienna papers state that the Ban of Croatia has marched into Smyri He bas calle: tered imperialist troops, and se: adequate force ise the siege of Beda. The Hunga- rian Gereral Perczal has left Panezova, after having fined the inhabitants of that town, According to the Pesth papers, the major part of the Austrian prisoners have enlisted in the Hungarian army. The stay of the Emperor of Austria was very brief at ‘Warraw, His majesty, who arrived there on the 22d, took his departure on the 23d, arrived at Vienna onthe morning of the 26th, at five o’clock, attend- ed by Count Grunne, Schwarzenburg came on the reviour day. z On the 22d, the Austrian garrison of Kannischa, in Hungary, were expelled by an insurrection of eee and obliged to retreat to Warasdin. News of the |, from beseg, states that the imperialists were out of Mohacs and Funfkirchen, which, it may iv fre mbered, were the posts of the extreme left of the corps, and that the whole of the said corps ‘was obliged to concentrate itself al at Easeg. Perezel had addressed a note to the Servian govern- ment, informing it of the proclamation of the republic in Hungary, and req tokens of a friendly under- standing. We have intelligence from Mungary of the issuing of @ proslamation by the Hungarian nobles, ranged on | mini, MORNING EDITION----SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1849. TWO CENTS. the side of the Austrians. The names of many ladies figure among the signatures to this document. A letter in the Cologne Gazette, of the 25th ult. says that Ofen was not surrendered to the Hungarians, as travellers, who just left Pesth, saw the Impe- rial banner still floating upon it. The destruction in Pesth, cauged by the cannonading from Ofen, was far more considerable than was at first supposed, The largest and finest edifices had suffered most. (Ano- ther account in the German Universal Gazette, said the luce was burnt down at Ofen.) All the reads in the ingdom were described to be covered with crowds of recruits, all of whom were going to Debreezin for being drilled, armed, and incorporated inthe army. The fa- naticism was even more intense and general than ever, now that the certainty of the invasion of the Russians was known. Gorgey.Dembinski, Klapka,Bem, and Repas- ay were all said tobe there.for deliberating ona common plan forthe ensuing campaign. (In the German Universal Gazette ag nf was said to be ill.) Another correspon- dent says that the imperialists resumed, on the 23d, the offensive. The northern wing, under Vogel and Benedek, joined the centre; the southern wing, towards Oedenburg had previously executed the same manwuvre, and advanced towards the Fleischacker | The Hungarians had, on their side, retreatod in quence. An action took place at Boos, fought obstinately on both sides, but terminating unfavor- ably, of course, for the Magyars, according to the ac- count of the Austrians. The Hungarian Republic was reclaimed at Kaschaw on the ath of April. All the rvians, from fifteen to forty years of age, were, on the 15th, pressed, at Neusatz, into the Magyar service. At Lemberg, May 22, several citizens, supposed to be quite peaceable, were suddealy arrested, on suspicion of having circulated Kossuth’s proclamations over the whole country, Whole bales of them were found at one individual's, Mark«t people, coming from Sanok, related that there were hundreds of wounded Russians brought from a ravine in the Carpathians. where Hun- garian troops had been posted to receivethem. THE LATEST. Vienna papers of the 27th give the following details respecting the surrencer of Ofen:— “Up to this hour official reporss are wanting concerning the fate of Ofen; meanwhile, we give to the public what de- tails we have been able to gather from trust The first #1 erming pet fadvanced to the ededin reaching y #, but Were repelled with great 400 to 0 being killed. ‘The second assault was made leven on the night of the 19th, on which eccasion they vot advance 30 far as on the former, and retreated, leay~ ing several hundred on the field, The third storming, at leven on the night of the 20th, was suc o'clock on the following morning the fort hands of the Hungarians, The colonel of the Cevtpicri in- fantry was found dead, Hentzi severely wounded in three Places. All the officers of the Croats and the Granzer were out do without quarter; the castle and single houses, rs were hunted down, plundered. The major of ¥ (the troops ef the military confines), who with en held. the. tete-de-pont, gave orders, when he rming of the fortress and the thronging assault of the rebels, to blow up the bridge. His men refusing to obey him he seized a mateh himself, with which he set fire to the mine, Sufficient of the powder exploded to rend the major vt Mimb by limb, but not th harm was sustained by the Uridge, The loss of the Hungarians at the final storming is estimated at 250 men and 40 officers. ‘This news appeared in an extra Blatt of the Weiner € Zeitung, and its distribution was very soon afterwards forbidden by the authorities. 54 The following pe facts relative to preceding operations On the 14th of May, Gorgey crossed side, occupied the Blocksberg ana Atte ealieer| advanced into Ofen as far as the Place of Bombs, Gen, Hentai did not comply with the summons to capitulate, but opened so heavy a fire that the besiegers were ob: liged to retire. On the same evening he also bom- barded Pesth, from whence there hhad been ome firing on the imperialists. In consequence of this bombard- ment, the insurgents, alarmed, kept quiet for several days, and threw a bridge over the island of Chepel. On the 9th the Hungarians began to increase the severit; of their fire from the hills, in consequence of which Pesth bombarded with greater fury than ever, and a house (of Trattner Kareley) was set on fire. The worst etiod of the bombardment was, however, at seven on the evening of the 13th, whe a great number of houses ‘were destroyed by rockets. The |Schluss, the Burg, and the corn magazines of Ofen were destroyed|by fire, so that it could hold out no jonger. By the capture of Ofen, the army of Gorgey, amount- ing to upwards of 3,000 men, has been set free. Affairs in Italy—The Roman States. The French expedition to Rome remains in the same embarrassing position which it has occupied since the repulse it sustained at the gates of the city. Negotia- tions have been proceeding for some time, with tho view of procuring admission for the French troops ; but if we may believe the accounts which reach this country through private and public channels, there is not much chance of a speedy accommodation. The French are stated to require the re-establishment of the Pope asa censtitutional sovereign; whilst the Ro- 6 man Provisional Government insi: as 8 prelit upon a recognition of the Hepat." it fant easy pi ree how demands s0 exceedingly incom ible with each other can be reconciled, or how the French com- mander, at any rate, cau relax in his demands, after the check which he has received before the gates of the city. Oa the 16th ult., the triumvir Mazzini informed the Roman Assembly that M. Lesseps, the French envoy, had requested that NE commission should be ap- jointed to confer with him and General Oudinot. bree commissioners were appointed, one ef whom is stated to be M. Cernuscbi, president of the com- mission of barricades. M. de Lesseps left Rome on the morning of the 17th, for the head-quarters of General Oudinot, and that night the city was illuminated. On the same day, the Triumvirate addressed a circular to the governors of provinces, announcing that all rurther hostilities were stopped, as the French envoy had ar- rived for the purpose of examining into the state affairr, On the 19th, M. Lesseps is understood to de- liver in his ultimatum to three delegates, selected to confer with him, which consisted of three articles to the following effect :— 1, The Roman States claim the protection of the French Republi . 2. Th ple have full right to pronounce freely the form of their government, egwill receive the French army as an army of brothers, and the service of the city will be performed b them conjointly with the Roman troops, but the Roman civ! and military authorities will continue to perf functicns according to their egal attributes, poner ‘The Triumvirate on recviving these propositions, called an extraordinary sitting of the National Assem- \d laid before it the cotsuruniestion made by M. The meeting took placeat midnight, and, atter a very brief discussion, the je Ai bly, una- nimously rejected the three articles That resolution was = - the following form:— iy regrets that it its power to accept f yor the Froush the duty of rate rmination, and of taking nay facilitate » better understanding be tween the two republics. What may have been the result of any subsequent negotiation is uncertain, but a French officer with des- patches from M. Lesseps has landed at Marseilles. and proceeded to Paris, The Journal des Débats denies & report current in Paris to the effect that M. Lesseps had negotiated with the Roman government, not oni; an armistice, but a treaty, which he had sent for ratifi- cation to Paris. It appears that M. Forbin Janson has merely brought the heads of a pacific arrangement to be submitted to the consideratien of the Freneh cabi- net. The Journal des Débats also states that the resto- ration of the Pope, with the constitutional guarantees claimed by the people of Rome, forms the principal condition required by France in the negotiation which is now pending. - ‘The National mentions, as a report, that the French government has disapproved’ the terms foran arrangement with the Roman J'riumvirate proposed A M. Lessepe, inasmuch as it would deprive the Pope of his temporal power. No further engagement is known to have occurred between the Romans and Neapolitans, but 12.000 men, under Garibaldi, hi left Rome for the purpose, it is said, of attueking th politans, whe the neighborhood of Velletri. A reinfore men has arrived in Rome from the legatio According to the Messagiere Modeneae, the Austrians, after leaving a garrison in Bologna, marched in rection of Faenza, The Riforma, of Lucea, states from Ancona, that the extraordinary commissary of that tewn has arrested as Janae two brothers of Monsignor Bedini, the papal commissioner who accompanies the Austrian expedi- tion againet Bologna, as also several members of the Mastai family, related to the Pope, as reprisala for the arrest, by the Austrians, of a member of the municipal deputation of Bologna, We have letters from Rome to the 23d ult. They state that the armistice between the French and Romans, which weuld expire on the 26th, had been | extended for ten days. ‘The Austrian General, Any was advancing on Rome at the head of ieee 12.006 and 15.000 troops; but General Oudinot had forwarded a dispatch to the imperial officer, requesting him to suspend his march for the present.’ The defeat of the Nenpolitans, on the 1th, at Velletri, is confirmed The Minister of War and Marine of Rome, Joseph Avezzana, publishes two bulletins signal by Rosselli, Commander in Chief of the Roman troops sent against the Neapolitans; the first, dated from headquarters under Velletri, at one o'clock after midnight on the 20th, stating that the Neapolitans, six thousand in number, sallied from Velletri on the 19th, andjattacked the Roman guard under Garibaldi, but were re- pulsed with joss of thirty prisoners, and many dead and wounded; the main body von under Gi Rosselli then attacked Velletri, and fre lasted dark, The second bulletin is dated from Vall: iteelf, at half-past nine A.M. of the 20th, and an- nounces that the advauced detachments sent torward to reconnoitre, discovered that the town had been evacuated during the night by the Neapelitans, The Romans were in the act of entering it at the time stated by the bulletin, The Opinione of Turin, of the 26th, states, from Forli, that 16,000 Austrians, with 40 pieces of artillery, had passed through there on their way to Ancona. A government junta had been formed at Forli, by the Austrians, entered Florence on the 2lst. The The Austrians bey pel Fa ge at Naples, ie pon commissioner extraordinary for Bo- Fronsignior Bedini, had issued « Proc! jon from head-quarters of the Austrian Governor neral, Gorzkowski, at Villa Spade, dated the 19th ultimo, in which he regrets the evi it upon the city by the late obstinate defence, and advises the Bol: to join with him in ing tranquillity and obedience to the Pope, soon to be reinstated on his throne, The Austrian forees, after doing what they eall ro- storing order at Bok id Fi net only Faenae but ino For Veessa sept I the di- | of the French feet at Ancona hed proposed to the go- vernor of that place to Cpe it, and thus prevent the intended entrance of the Austrians; but that official has refused. ‘THE LATEST. The Milan Gazette, of the 25th, announces that the relgnto, Duke of Parma has arrived in that capital. hhe Riferma, of Luces, annouuees, from Civite Vec- chia, @ reactionary movement took place at Naples on the 19th. ‘The white flag was hoisted, and the constitution burnt. The Genoa Gazette, under date of Civita Vecchia, May 24, says the King of Naples has removed his head- quarters to his capital. himself is at present at Gaeta. On the 22d four steam frigates, three trans- ports, and two corvettes, with reinforcements, enter our port. The hostilities of the French with Rome ap- pear to be suspended. Our correspondence from Turin, of the 27th ult., states that the negotiations for peace are proceeding, if not concluded, An agent of M. Rothschild (of Vienna) has come to solicit the Piedmontese government to ac- cede to the proposition of Austria, and to effect a loan to pay the contribution. Austria wishes Piedmont to enter into treaties of alliance offensive and defensive. ‘The health of the king still causes much alarm, ‘The new chamber includes 505 modera ultra-democrats ; total 7é4. The total num| nufirages (we do not say of the voters) represented by thero 724 members of the new Assembly 1s 37 00418), Ifeach party be separately examined, # will be found that the 605 moderates represent a mass of 26,625,383 suffrages, whilst the 220 ultra-democrats only represent 10,468 804, which gives an average of 52.000 votes to every moderate, and one of 44.000 to every democratic candidate, We ought to observe that, in this compa- rative calculation of the votes given to each of the two great parties engaged in this electoral contest, we have only reckoned the votes attributed to the elected candidates, Now, apart from the number of thoso votes, we must, in order to appreciate the ensemble, take account of the votes disseminated amongst the non-elected candi- dates. These amcunt to a considerable figure; and as, in general, it is amongst the candidates of the moder. ate lists that the dispersion of the votes principally took place, it will be seen that the proportion between the moderate and the ultra-democratic sufftages is still more considerable than that which we have just point- ed out, To take only one example—we find that, in Paris, more than 60 000 suffrages were thrown away on non-clected moderate candidates, Thus the vote: given tothe candidates on the moderate lists may be estimated, without exaggeration, at nearly 30,000,000 Several journals have made a nomenolature of the de- partments which have elected—some only moderates— the others only socialists, and others again moderates and socialists simultancourly, We have thought it right to generalize this point of view rather more, In fact, although of all the powers of Europe, France is that’ whieh presents most unity and cohesion although the old divisions have long since disap- peared—it cannot be denied that the empire of tradition has left its impression on certain parts of our country, Apart from statistics of population and purely geographical considerations, it is evident te every attentive observer, that ideas, passions, the degree of instruction, and political spitits—-in a word, the moral and wiaterial wants of the people—-are still, even in the present day, marked by profound differ. ences. It is in getting out from these data that it has appeared to us interesting to divide electoral France {nto zones, comprehending a certain number of depart- ments which seem to be subject to the same influences, and, this distinction made, to investigate, in each of them, the result which tt has produced in the late elee- toral contest, ‘The most correct division is exactly in- dicated by the four cardinal points, which giver tour divisions, into north, south, cast, and west;to which must be adjoined a fifth, including the departments of the centre. We include in the northern zone the eighteen following departments, the Nord, Pas- de-Calais, Somme, Aisne, Ardennes, Marne, Oise, Seine- et-Marne, Seine, Seine-et-Oise, Seine-Inférioure, Eure, Orne, Meuse, Calvados, Manche, Morelle, and Meurthe’ These eighteen departments represent the fourth part of the population, and the most enlightened in France. They contain 9,856,618 inhabitants, It'is in this part of France that the really moderate party has achieved the greatest victory. Of a contin- go of 213 members, sent by these 18 departments te the National Assembly, 195 belong to the moderate, and 18, only, to the ultra-democratic party; and of these 18 members, 10 are elected by the department of the Seine alone; of eight others, one only, strictly speaking. belongs to the pure socialists, These 195 representatives of the north combine a mass of 12,805,424 suffrages; the other 18, 1,733,851, of which the department of the Seine alone imcludes 1,165,616; that is to say, two thirds, It is the eastern zone that has given the largest num- ber of members to the ultru-democrats. ‘he 13 fol- lowing departments—the Vorges, Bas-Rhin, Haute- Rhin, Haute-Sadne, Doubs, Jura, Ain, Rhdne, 1821 Haute-Marne, Cote-d’Or, Sadne-et-Loire, and Loire have returned 79 democratic members, the majority of the most ultra opinions—that is to say, more than one third of the total number of the representatives of this party, and only 37 of moderate opinions, ‘These 79 ultra-democrats combine 4,261,000 suffrages, and the 87 moderates, 1,296,400. The west offers two remarkable results, In the 12 departments comprising that zone, yiz., tl Nord, Finistére, Morbiban, el rieure, Mayenne, Maine-et-Loire, Vendée, Deux-Se- vres, Charente-Inférieure, Sarthe, and including» population of 5,500,000 individuals, no socialist candi- date has been elected. Nay, more, without wi attach too great an importance to party de ina- tions, it is remarkable that of the 121 representatives of those 12 departments, eight-tenths belong to what is called the “ Legitimist” party. The lists of the * Com- mittee of Civil and Religious reer Ae cir masse principally in the Morbihan. Finista: Vilaine, Loire-Inferieure, and the Cdtes-du. the deputation of the last-named department, which was very democratic at the elections tothe Constituent Assembly. is entirely renewed, The 121 moderate members of the west represent a mars of 0,545,000. In the centre, the ultra-demoerats have triumphed in the 18 following departments—viz., the Kure-et- Loire, Aube, Yonne, Luiret. Loire-et-Cher, Indre-et~ Loire, Indre, Cher, Niévre, Allier, Creuse, Vienne, Puy- de-Dome, Haute-Vienne, Cantal, Corréze, Dordogne, and the Haute-Loire. The number of the ultra deme- cratic members is 73; that of the moderates only 49 It is remarkable that itis precisely in this zone that we find the most illiterate departments, The 78 socialist democrats have been elected by 2,587,630 suffrrages; the 49 moderates by 1,680,187. Lastly, in the zone of the south, moderate opinions have prevailed in @ very large proportion. The 24 de- partments included therein—viz,, the Var, les Bouches- du-Rhone, le Gard, lHerault, l’Aude, les Pyrénées- Orientaler, l’Arri¢ge, la Haute-Garonne, les Hautes- Pyrénées, les Basses-Pyrénées, les Landes, le Gers, le ‘Varn, Vaucluse, les Basses-Alpes, les Hautes-Alpes, la Drome, l’Ardéche, la Lozére, Aveyron, le Tarn-et- Garonne, la Girende, and le Lot, have returned 10: moderate members, and only 39 of “advanced” opinions, The proportion in favor of moderate opinions as regards the number of the elected members is considerable, and still more so egards the suffrages given to the elected representatives of each party. Ez. gra., the 59 ultra-democratic members have been chosen by 1,826,266 sutfrages only, whilst 103 members of moderate opinions have been elected by 4,387,656, ‘This result shows that there, as elsewhere, the ultra- democratic party only succeeded in carrying their can- didutes by close union, and by availing themselves of the dirsensions amongst the moderates. Had we been able to expatiate at greater length on the interesting data, we'should have drawn compari- sons which afford more than one useful lesson As it is, we submit it to the appreciation of the moderate Be -which,in presence of this number of about 30.000.000 of suffrages, which it represents in France, will be able, we hope, to re-assure itself. ‘Three bundred and forty-one members of the Con- | stituent Assembly have been re-elected to the Logisia- tive Assembly. Of this number, 224 veted fer the pro- a of M. Rateau Lanjuinais, und 105 against it; were absent from the division, The Americans at Leghorn, Leonoun, May 18, 1849, Asthere will be most likely in some newspapers a great deal of fuss wbout the quarrels of the Austrians With the ‘Americans, | shall say two words about it. The American ships before Leghorn took upon them- selves to rave the ° proater part of the compromised per- sons, or leaders of the revolution of Leghorn—some fay, as Brother Jonathan always does, as a mercantile Apeeulation. it is even stated that the American con- ful received for bis part 20.000 france for this charita- ble undertakin, Yow it happened that a sailor of the American Lamartine remained on shore on the 12th of May, when the town was still in a feverish state, and began to fight (most likely tipsy) with Aus- trian soldiers in ® tap; and when the patrol made the regular tour, and arrested the whole party, he Turhed at the patrol, wounded two of the soldiers with ae Fay. shot on Pet Another less jal affair pened en @ drunken Austrian soldier offended the doc! steamer. The soldier has been they come on shore, No such thing is the case, as | hear from the best authority; and, in fact, it would be Just as impossible for an Austrian soldier to know an American from an b-nglishman. or even & Frenchman, an it would be for myself to distinguish a Polish-Aus- trian soldier from a Bohemian or # Selavonian,—Cor- respondence ef London Chronicle, Downing May 18, 1949. My pecans bare baw aoe TO I Ld if the Queen lords! despate! Seth wii Siecuns of seenes by which the city rooteat eal 2 |, and im the course of which have not impaired the confidence which her majesty bas hitherto felt in your ability and judgment, and that she continues to regard your administration of the affairs of the provizce as meriting her entire approba- tion. Upon the act of the Provincial Parliament, which has afforded a pretext for the outrages which have been committed. it is the duty of her Majesty’s servants to reserve their judgment until we shall be in possession of the full information which you lead me to expect, as to its character and objects; but whatever ra’ be the view which may be taken of the merits of that mea- sure, there can be but ene opinion as to the guilt of those who, in resistance to a law constitutionally pass- ed by the provincial legislature, have had recourse to violence of so disgraceful a character, or as to the very serious responsibility incurred by all’ who have, even by the imprudence of their language, assisted in pro- ducing the’ excitement which has led to such lament- able results. Her Majesty’s servants entirely concur with your lordship as to the consequences which must follow, from submitting to the kind of dictation by which it has been attempted on this occasion to over- rule the decision of the legally constituted authorities of the province, and they confidently rely upon your firmness. eupported, as | trust you will be, by the Par- Hament and the great majority of the people of Cana- da, to enforce for the future obedience to the law, and compel those who may disapprove of the measures, either of the legislative or executive government of the province, to confine their opposition within legal and constitutional limits. lappreciate the motives which have indueed your lordsbip to offer the suggestion with which your des- patch concludes; but | shoul t earnestly depre- cate the change it contemplat the governmentasf Canada. Your lordship’s relinquishment of that office, which, under cireumstances, would be a most se- rious loss to her Maj service and to the province, nt state of affairs, to be most be ayy © the public welfare. from the encouragement which it would give to those who have been concerned in the violent and illegal opposition which has been offered to your government, I also feel no doubt that when the present excitement shall have subsid will succeed in regaining that position of * di neutrality” becoming your office, which, as you justly observe, it has hitherto been your study to maintain, and from which even those who are at present most oppored totyou will, on reflection, perceive that you have been driven, by no fault on your part, but by their own unreasoning violence. Relying, therefore, upon your devotion to the inter- ests of Canada, I feel assured that you will not be in- duced by the unfortunate occurrences which have taken place to retire from the high office which the Queen has been pleased to iutrust to you, and which, from the value she puts upon your past services, it is her majesty’s anxious wish that you should retain. I have, &e , GREY. ‘The Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, &e. The English View of the Astor Pince Riot, From the London Times, May 29 j it was but the other day that the British public were rtled with the news that a senseless mob, excited and led by ® bankrupt faction, had burnt the Parlia- ment houre of our principsl colony, with its archives and invaluable libraries, and bad grossly insuited her Majesty's representative, on about as empty and beg- garly o pretext as ever inflated the lungs of an agitator or filled the hands of a rufflan, It certainly did not occur to us that so extraordinary an incident was likely soon to be followed by & more marvellous and more painful affair. Such, however, is the unhappy purport of the intelligence brought’ over with unex- ampled rapidity by the last ocean mail To our English readers we shall aeem to speak fables when we relate, that, on the pretence of an utterly ground- less quarrel got up at New York between the respective admirers of Messrs. Macready and For- rest, the theatre in which the English tragodian was pofeains been besieged, stormed, and all but destroyed, audience and all, by an infuria- ted mob, which did not desist till after a collision with an overpowering military force, in which more than twenty lives were lost, and’ many were seriously wounded, Certain it is that the most populous city of the New World has for a day or two exhibited the arpect of those European capitals which were last year poseesaivaly the scenes of revolution and civil war. Cordons of troops, skilful operations, guns loaded with deadly discharges of musketry, barricades car- re results that we associate with ancient rr v- ances and new constitutions. In the city of New York they confer an adventitious ixportance onthe wounded vanity of an American actor, who, having tried to do what no living being can do to the perfect satisfuction of an English audience,and what it only tolerates in two or three men of an age, did not do what nobody else could do, and did not attain to the ronk of the two or three tolerated performers of Shaks- peare’s principal characters. To the English reader it is perfectly unneccessary to defend Mr. Macready from the guilt of Mr. Forrest's comparative want of success on the boards of this me- tropolis, On thie side the Atlantic it will hardly be credited that the proprietors and editors of London journals have been required to send over their solemn “affidavies” that they did not conspire against Mr, Forrest. did not take bribes against him, or admit in- terested critiques, or bow to Mr. Macready’s dictation. It will hardly be credited that whole columns of the American papers are full of letters pro and con. on the question, whether Mr. Macready’s malignity did not pursue Mr. Forrest from the principal to the minor theatres, from the metropolis to the rovinces, from (Great Britain to France, and from curope to America, We will not attempt to re- peat ever £0 briefly what will bo set down at once reveries of @ monomania. The whole inven- jot only groundless in fact; it is utterly irre- ble with the usage and taste of this country. If Mr. Forrest could establish his cha: f inhospital- ity, persecution, subornation, and heaven knows what, aguinst Mr. Macready, he would drive that gentleman from every stage in this country, as well as from the Opera Houre at New York. Wein England know no such practice. There is rivalry and jewlousy enough, as there ever must be when diversity of tastes con- spires with an opposition of interests, and when perso- nal considerations are allied with the mysteries of the beautiful and sublime. But these inevitable tumults of feeling are confined to green rooms, to coterivs, and ax much as possible to the bosoms, be they manly or fair, of the rivals inthis keen though graceful eompe- tition. Mr. Forrest has mistaken not so much Mr, Ma- cready as the dramatic and literary society of this country. when he imagines an organized attempt to depreciate his merits emanating from any man high in British estimation. Mr Forrest has no reason whatever to suppose either that Americans in general lie under a prejudice in this country, or that his own reception was not such ax his credit at home entitled him to expect, or that our na- tive actors enjoy special favor and protection. Jn the principal cities of the United States, Mr, Forrest often lays Macbeth and Lear to half-filled benches; and the ouse only overflows when he appears asa champion of the masses, in the characters of Cade, Spartacus or Me- tamora. He has become the “ pet of the Bowery boy in consequence of the agrarian spirit which breathes through his prize representations; but “ his Shakspear- ian characters,” says a Boston writer. “are not those with which he is identified in the public opinion.” It has been precisely the same in this country, Mr. Forrest was admired in Metamera. and if the an- miration was not quite so rapturous or 80 pro- ductive as on the soil of the suvage hero, that is not to be wondered at. He was not admired in hia Shakspearian characters, But Mr. Forrest ought to know that many others than he have tried this high walk. and tried it in vain, Toa Macr or a Kean, there are twenty who have made @ desperate push for that rawk. and immediately sunk into the crowd, under bitter ridicule or chilling indifference, Our theatrical annals sufSciently answer the imputation that we are jealous of American merit, as we showed last Thurs- day, by a reference to the success of Messrs, Hackett and Hill, Mrs. Mowatt, and Miss Cushman, who. tri umphed the same evening that Mr. Forrest suffered his alleged “defeat.” But where is the prejudice in favor of native talent? Two great London theatres are lost to the drama for want of encouragement. At the prerent moment we have two Italian operas, @ German opera, and a French theatre ; and it is only by the greatest exertions that a few small theatres can be kept open for native talent and the vernacu- lar tongue. If Mr. Macready possessed the spell ot popularity, he would rescue Drury-lane or Covent Garden from horsemanship, German operas, concerts, bazaars, and miscellaneous performances. And as for Shakspeare, it is only now and then that has @ run of public favor, Last year the Queen gave hima fresh start by attending in state Mr. Macready’s farewell representation of Cardinal Wolsey; Shakspeare’s plays have since been all the fashion from the Haymarket toSadler’s Wells, But the taste of the metropolis dovs not often range so high as the “legitimate drama,” and, as we have already observed, il is not everybody—not more than two or three in an age —that we care to see in the almost impossible char- actors of Hamlet or Othello, Lear or Macbeth. But other causes have contributed to the catastrophe than Mr. Forrest's ridicntous quarrel—causes which the journulsof New York appear rather back- ward to recognize, fortunately, there is @ class question in the affair ; said nowhere are class questions s0 terrible as in republics “In New York,” says the writer we have qusted abore— “more than in most other large cities, there are two distinct elasses of people, whose opinions, tastes, and manner of life are almost diametrically opposite. ‘The clars known ax the Bowery boys, although not without their good traits of character, are naturally the Sppo- if the higher or mote weulthy classes who reside in the vicinity of Waverly place, and ,who pay high prices for pews in fashionable churches, and sustain with their presence the Italian opera.” The Bowery boys have @ natural dislike and enmity to the fre- quenters of the Opera House. ‘I'he very fact that no person was adm tted within it unless in full dress and with white kids, was enough to arouse the passions of those men who nightly fill the pits of the Bewery and the Chatham, to witness the performance of bighly wrought melodramas, im their red shirts, ‘and with their pockts fliled with pea nuts and pigtail.”’ The Opera Houre, with its evening dress, and no ad- mission under a dollar, always Sapogaier, was an addi- tional crime in Mr. Macready. He had just retarned from & successful engagement at Baltimore, Boston, New Orleans, and@ven at Philadelphia, since the be- ing of this quarrel, he had not yet eneounter- b element in such fearful force and antago- he « ‘were such as ‘orrest we and his When we read of » heavy piece of wood and four chairs being hurled on the stage on the previous py ors are forced to suspect something more than a theatrical squabble. On the fatal night the mob was proeceding tothe actual destruction of the theaty, Thisywas the work of a “social? democracy pulling down | everything to its own level. ‘The result is lamentable indeed, for the woued canot but rankle, It is, however, comeeaniory to reflect that no blame appears to rest either on the authorities or on Mr Macrvady, or on his friends, After the violence of the previous Monday, when he was, infact, dviven from the theatre, he wish- ed to conclude his engagement, but his friends, among whom is the illustrious name of Washington Irving, drew up an address, urging him, for the credit of the | city and nation, not to give way. He yielded to theirad- | vice. As for the measures taken by the authorities, | though they present a striking contrast to the details of the Montreal riot, and though they mantfest a de. cision and an effect beyond what we have lately been accustomed to witness on the part of standing armies, emperors, and kings, they do not appear to have ex- ceeded the necessity of the crisis. Order was to be re- | stored; liberty, life und property seeured; and the good | name of the Union established. When tl were | menaced by a desperate mob. force was to be encoun. | tered with force. ‘The troops could not throw paving stones, go they returned the volley with bullets, The consequences of a dendly collision are inevitable, and attach to those who proveke it. W not, however, regard the catastrophe without some apprehonsio: Already wicked attempts have been ¢ by inoundi- ary placards to link the “aristoera: t New York and England; and represent Mr. Ma ing a British tyranny in the United is too gross even for the * Bowery boys, citement, supplied as it is with 80 much anti-British material, is too likely to be renewed, unless all the good sense of the Union is exercised to extinguish it, The Insurrection in Baden, The Frankfurter Zeitung states that the Badish in- surgents have been forced to evacuate the city of Worms. They were attacked by the Hessiaa troops under Colonel Waitershausen, and though they forti- fied their barricades by placing the captive wives of several officers upon them, the troops advansed with great determination, and eventually dislodged the in- surgents, ‘The revolutionary Committee of the Palatinate bas commanded all smiths to make seythes and present them to the patriotic champions of liberty, ‘The Prussian army which is now coneentrating in the vicinity of Kreuznach for the purpose of operating | upon Fr rt and Baden, consists of 27 battalions of foot, one battalion of rifles, 16 battalions of horse, four batteries of six-pounders, one battery of 12-pounders, nd one horse battery, y have intercepted a transport of 70 ewt. of gunoowder, which was being sent to the insurgents in Baden, Russian Movements. The Gazette del’ Aliemagne Occidentale, dated Cracow, May 20, contains an account of a grand couneil of war having been held in St. Petersburgh, at which a pro- test was made against Russian interference in the af- fairs of Europe, The imperor was much irritated, and received this advice with a bad grace, even insultin, some of the senators, ‘The President of the Council, Jermoloff, rose and told the Emperor that Napoleon by his obstinacy ruined himself, and his Majesty might meet the same fate; and then the general quitted the chamber, The same journal eontains intelligence that several lots against the Emperor have been discovered at St. Fitecntiny Many officers, and even generals, were arrested, and instead of being sent to Siberia, were at once hu: It would appear that the army fs discon- tentid, and that is the reason of the guards haying been sent from St. Petersburg. A letter from St. Petersburg, of the 18th inat,, in the Kolner Zeitung, states that the Neva ix now free from ice, and that a Russian fleet of sixty sail is preparing to proceed tothe Baltic and the Sound, The rumors of an armed Russian interference between Germany and Denmark have of late been frequent in the Ger- man papel ‘The Kolner 24th ult., peice inig of Russia's plans, w: have pronounced rather publi Zeitung has a letter from Warsaw ot the to give a sketch of the Emperor ich that potentate is asserted to ely to the Prussian en- foreign news—the rumors of Russian interference im the Danish question being contradicted—an adyanee tcok place, which was partly maintained up tothe ter- mination of business, The first quotation of consola for money was 912g to 3g, aud atter having reached 0134. they cloned at 9134 to %. The next account is fixed for the 17th ot July. and for that period they left off at 912. Bank Stock closed at 19334 to 15; Re- duced. 90 to 3; ‘Three-and-#-Quarter per Cents, 007% tol; Long Annuities, 8%; India Stock, 249 to 252; India Bonds, 67s. to 70s ; and Exchequer-bills, June, 43s, to 468.; March, 45s, to 488 premium. The opera- tions in foreign stocks this afternoon were extremely limited, but prices showed steadiness, The aetual bargains comprised ; Brazilian, 78 and 773g; the new, T7\3 the new, 1843, 7144 ex div:; Chilian, 91 and 92; the Three per Cents. 63; Grana Deferred, 3'4; Mexi- can, ex coupon, for the account, 277%; Russian, 103; Spanich Five per Cents, 16}¢.and 17 for money, and Vili and 17 for the account; the Three per Cents, 83 #; Austrian, 70; and Dutch Four peg Cent Certificates, 76 and 7644 BANK OF ENGLAND. An account, pursuant to the Act 7th and 8th Victoria, cap. 32, for the week ending on Saturday, the 26th day of May, 1849, ISSUE DEPARTMENT, Notes issued.,,. 27,000,135 Government Debt. £11,015,100 Quer securities. 986,900 icy 13,176,566 Silver Bullion . 33,569, £2, 80,135 £27 00,155 BANKING DEPARTMENT. Government Seeu~ £14.568,000 rities, (including $151,002 dead ‘weight an= nuity)... 614,175,807 Other Soouritivs, .. 9.537.316 Gane 9,000,985 Na ‘Goin, 807,031 tional Debt, and Dividend A ee Other Deposits... 9, Seven day and : other Bills,.., L110, £38,940,739° The above return gives the following results, when compared with the previous week:— Public deposit £5,270.855 Increase, « £558,710 Other deposits, 5.00 Decrense + 230,529 Rost..... 0. 151,602 Des coves 5,708 On the other side of the account:— Government secu- Incroase .., £90,428 40,529 225,050 60,200, re 6 unemploy Increase. he amount of my being a decrease of £245,600; and the stock of bullion, in both departments, is £14.497.166, showing an in- crease of £46,713, when compared with the preceding return, Panis Bourse, Thursday, May 31—3 o’clock,—The funds opened considerably below yesterday's prices, but they ‘gradually improved. and’ closed ultimately about ‘4 per cent below the closing prices of that day. hange on London (30 days), 26 45; ditto (00 days), BE Livenreo. Corton Manxer, June 1.—The receipts of cotton at the ports of the United States keep up, giving further assurance that the estimates of the total erop, as given in our circular of Friday last, may be realised, but no reasonable probability of that quantity being exceeded. As to the injury done to the growing crop by the bad weather in the middle of A and the delay caused by the re-sowing of a considerable part of the cotton land, and how tar it may throw the cro) late, and therefore place it more precariously, 1s all matter for speculation; it may amount to something, or it may possibly all be remedied and come to nothing. . @ne thing, however, is certain, that the vast rate of consumption now going on in Europe and America, cannot be supported without a large crop. The trans- actions in our market thia week show no change im prices. Upon the whole, we have been rather duil and flat, and perhaps, in some instances, at the beginning of the week, 1-16d, of advantage may have been ob- tained by the buyers, but yesterday and on Wednesday the demand rather increased upon us. joiged by some business for export, and we close the week with the voy, and some general officers of that country. ‘The Emperor raid:, “ Poland wou! way there was asingle Pole alive, but %, hatooun- try mi ight be brought to be an honest and enthusiastic friend to its benefactors. Poland must be made an independent: country—a plan to which neither she King of Prussia nor the Emperor of Austria had any serious objection, To restore orderin essary to do away with the petty, weal y must merge into rus af gentle means could not induce them force would. As for Russia, she looked for indemitica~ tion from Tur! since after all, the breach between the Forteand the Petersburg cabinet had now become irrepara- le, A letter from Berlin of the 25th ult.,in the Deutshe Zeitung, states that the Russian fleet has sailed from Cronstadt. Miscellaneous. Jenny Lind’s marriage to Mr. Harris fa, it is rumor- cd. broken off. The fair Swede has left this country, and is now on her way to Stockholm, her native eity: Rumor has it, that Mr Harris demanded too large an amount of allowance; and Jenny considering the sum asked exorbitant, instantly declared off, leaving Mr Harris to console himself with the reflection that the ourse of true love (?) never does run smooth, Onrrvany—On the 27th, at Paris, Lord Wallscourt. Gn the 23d, at hie residence, at Cove, after a brief illness, William Murphy, Erq., United States Consul. On the 23d, at Bersted Lodge, Sussex, the Earl of Mayo, in the 84th year of his mye. On the 24th, at Mersham Hatch, Kent, the Right Hon. Sir E. Knatchbull, in his 68th year. On the 26th, at bis residence, Piccadilly, William Aubrey de Vere, ninth Duke of St. Alban’s. On the 28th, Lady Duff, relict of the late General Sir James Duff. On the 29th, in London, Lieut. Colonel J. R. Wood- house, ofthe H. E. I. Company's service, On the Ist, at Breda, Lieut. General Baron de the gallant defender of the citadel of Antwerp against the French in the year 1832, The Corn Trade of Europe, Frm the London Mercantile Gazette, June 1.) ‘hough the supplies of grain, &c., from abroad have fallen off more or jess of late, still the arrivals at out- ports and into London have been on a sufficiently libe- ralscale to have a depressing influence on prices; and, notwithstanding a decided decrease in the deliveries from the growers, and the consequent impression that the stocks remaining in farmers’ bends are unusually small, the value of agricultural produee has continued to tend downwards. The weather has been very fayor- able for vegetation, and the reports from all parts of | the kingdom speak well of the prospects for next har- | vet, Under thexe ctreumstances there does not appear | to be much probability of any rally occurring in prices; but at this season of the year the grain trade is alwa: liable to fluctuations, the range of quotations boing in | & great measure regulated by the weather. The stocks on hand are certainly not large. and in oase of any- thing occurring to retard or to do injury to the crops on the ground, a material rally might take place; bat 0 long #8 noUncasiners is felt on that subject, prices are more likely to recede than to improve. During the four months ending Sth May, the latest date to which the official account is made up, upwards of two millions of quarters of wheat and flour of foreign growth have been entered in the United Kingdom for home eon- sumption, vis :— Wheat, Flour. Cwts. During month ending 5th Feb'y... 442.389 478,815 “ Sth March... 405,685 85.462 | he! 6th April... 559.002 356,308 er Gth May... ,. 383,306 243,154 idee ine OhO7L 1,433,700 | And on the 5th May there remaine We bobd.csevisteyecqabe «170.781 242,804 Of these enormous importations considerably more than half has been consumed, it being estimated that | the stocks of wheat and flour together in the kingdom, | tree and in bond, do not exceed 700,000 qrs, to 800,000 | qrs. There is, however, reason to believe that the sup- plies from abroad will be liberal throughout the sam. | mer, and whilst the crops progress favorably a very small excess of supply over demand will suffice to keep down prices. Asu proof of the direct influence now | exercised by the weather on the market, it {6 only ne- cessary to state that the rain which fell on Monday in this neighborhood, though allowed to be beneficial to spring corn und grass, wae viewed as likely to do mis. chief to heavy crops t; hence holders of English raised their pretensions, and. in partial eases, an ad- tations exactly as before, the committee of brol ing fair Uplands and Mobile 42¢d.,and fair Orleans at4%d. Sales by auction this day, of 2500 Sea Island including ubout 200 stained, 700 Egyptian, and 350 Went India, are engaging some attention. 760 Ameri- can have been taken on speculation, and4,330 American and 150 Surat for export. The demand this morning is just ,fair, the si amounting to about 6.000 bales. Sales of the week, 36,790 —GEO. HOLT & CO. Livenroo. Manners, June 1.—Ashes—The businessim pot and pearl is too trifling to be reported, and no-salea ure therefore returned. bark—A smali lot of Philadel- phia sold at 9s." 6d. per cwt. Brimstone continues to be in moderate demand. and 150 tous soldat £5 12s, 6d. to £6 per ton. Coal—Since ‘our last we have bad fair demand for export, and prices steady. 'T' article rules low at present, and the proprictors look anxiously fora little improvement. ‘ides—The mar- ket continues dull, and tho sales are only to a limited extent. Iron—The trade continues flat. In South Wales and Staffordshire arrangements are boing made to reduce the make; this,in the present stuce of the trade, appears to be the only legitimate mode of maintaining prices. In Scotland the make has not been diminished, and the reul demand is below the average, but prices are, notwithstanding, nomi- nally higher. ‘The market ia Glasgow is to a consi able extent under the influence of speculations an moneyed interest, who are in the habit of making ad- vances on stock, and maker's engagements to delivel Present prices in Liverpool:—Merchaat Bar, £5 108.5 best bar, £7 68.; hoop. £7 15s8.; sheet, £8 5x.; Scotch pig (net cash), £2138. Lard —There i quiry; abot 250 tons have been sold du and the market closes at an advance of 6d. to 1s. per ewt. Naval Stores—No sales reported in tar or tur- pentine, nor any alteration in price. Of American rosin, 600 to 700 barrels common sold at 2s, 7d, to 2s. 9d., and 70 barrely transparent white, at 15s, per ewt. Oils— Olive has been more inquired for, and as the holders have accepted rather lower prices, about 200 tuns have found buyers; the quotations are alter- | ed accordingly. A inoderate business has been done in fish at former rates; cod is now held for higher rices. Small rales of linseed have been made at 168. to 268. 6d.; and rape, at4@s. per cwt. For palm the market 18 rather firmer; 140 tons are reported at £20 to £80, and 300 tons for arrival at £28 to £29 per ton. Rice—Carolina is again rather dearer, 600 tierces have been sold at 17s. to 18s.,and in East [ndia7,000 bags at $s. 3d. for broken, and 9s to 10s. 6d. per ewt. for mid- dling to fine white, Salt—There 1s little change to notice in the transactions. and prices remain as last quoted. Spirits of turpentine continue in limited de- mand; American is selling at 31s,, and British at ra- ther lower rates, ‘Tallow is very dull of sale, and little business bas been done, prices being without alterme tion. Wool—We have been more busy during the past week, having had agood many buyers down, and also several expert buyers at the public sales on the 20th and 0th ult. Wool did not sell so briskly as at the former sales, but there is not much change in prices, and a fair business has been done since by pri- yate contract, The Latest Market Report. Liverroor, June 2, 1849-38 P.M. Indian corn is in steady demand for the north of Ireland, at yesterday’s prices; but the southern letters “look rebellion.” Flour very inactive; so are all other breadstuifs, A large business doing in cotton ‘We have only four months left for the consumption of an oyerwheiming stock of bacon—20.000 cases. Pork is a mystery—the arrivals tremendous, and sales ‘The Latest Cotton Report, Livenroo:, June 2, 18493 P.M. Tho sales of cotton to day are estimated at 7,000 bales. consist of the following descriptions;—6,700 American, 3%c. a 534c; 800 Surat, 3c. @ 34¢, Taken for export to-day. 1,000 bales. There has been 's firmer feeling manifested in our market to-day, with a fair demand, wes THD VERY LATHST NEWS. Liverroot, Saturday Afternoon—June 2. Annexed is the latest news:— The French Republic. Our advices from Paris are of yesterday. as \bse- quently cleared up, and Wednesday being very fine, | business became dull, and this morning, with scarcely | @ sample of home grown wheat at market, the tendency | of prices was downward. The arr wheat, without being particularly h than equal to the requirement on Monday sales were made with difficulty at previous rates; the slight improvements in the value of Engilsh failing to produce any influ- ence, On Wednerday the attendance of country buyers was unurually thin, and the town millers were exceedingly cautious in their operations; bold- ers were, however, unwilling to accept lees money, and the trifling business done was at former terms, ‘To-day a clight concession was, in some cases, made, without inducing purebasers to take more than needed for immediate ure, The sale for flour has been very slow throughout the week, and secondary qualities have hardly maintained their previous value. Barley, of heme growth, bas come to hand sparingly, but having had good foreign arrivals, former rates bave barely been supported, In malting and distilling, sorts have been wholly neglected, and grinding parcels have been taken | cuutiously at about lust week's rates, which continved to be asked for sweet sound qualitics this morning. The supplies of opts coastwise have been very «mall; from Ireland none have eome forward, nearly the whol of the arrivals having consisted of foreign. On Mon- day great difficulty was experienced in effecting sales, but prices were not generally quoted lower to-day; the turn was. however, in favor of the buyer. Plentiful receipts cf beans from Alexandria have had rather # | depreesing influence on the value of those of home | rowth; still the latter have pot been offered cheaper. | Pease of ali kinds bave been difficult to quit, but were | not lower this morning than in the inning of the | week, A continned demand for floating cargoes of In- dian corn on Irish account has enabled sellers to realize very full prices, Marketa, Loxpos Mowry Manner, Friday Evening; June 1.— @ English funds opened steadily this morning at the cloning priees of yesterday, and owing to a disposi- tion on the part of the public to effect money purchases, juenes of whieh wee Bet sounteracted by aay The ministerial arrangements are still unconcluded. The Fresident of the republic persists in retaining M. de Falloux. but his unreasonable ideas regurdiag the Pope's restoration, at once prevents the co-operation of MM. Dufaure, Passy and O, Barrot. Beguad and Du- been to the Palace Elysee, and asked by the | President te form @ ministry. ‘Tho jatter at once de- | clined, Last night the general opinion was, that after ail a new cabinet will be formed of MM. Begaud, Fal- loux Benoit, Piscatory Mathiue de la Redourte, and some new men, There was sold, on Thursday, s pretended message of the President of the Republic to the Legislative As- sembly, followed by # pretended list of the new minis- try. The suthoriti @ ordered the prosecution of this invention, A Paris paper, the Pairie, states that the mossage of President will not be communicated to the Assembly after the definitive constitution of the bureaux. For the present, M, Drougu de Lhuys is like- ly to remain at the foreign affairs, as it is found mo one will release bim of the Italian affair, The French Repubiie, Count Hatzfell, ambassador from the King of Prussia tothe Republic of France, has artived in Paris and presented his credentials, ‘The new awbassador from the Austrian court has also arrived in London. Another telegraphic report bas just reached us, (half- past 2) stating that in the French Assembly yesterday, Dupin was elected President, and Lamoriciere and Rollin Me on This news affected the English funds favor- a Ny. " Affairs in Italy. Later intelligence from Kome was reeelyod im Paria yesterday. ‘The Freach euvoy bad left the city and proceeded to Ger Oudinot’s camp, but his retarn. ‘was expected forthwith. It wa said that a deputation of the republic had been sent to Gaeta, with » proposal to the Pope of restoration to a very limited tom power, and a stipulation for the total exclusion of the cardinals from political power place, From the continuance of the hostile forces before the city, f luxury were becoming scarce, but bread ‘wore in supply, The dis- jk paper hyd NS wo Ly an in 7 ver, which i¢ an improve. ment of about 15 percent, as compared with the dis count rates of ten or twevie days ago. Later from Italy informs us that the situation of end ordinary articl