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--TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1849. TWO CENTS. of the Europa’s Mails, | cosrisests nciy tro, whien will soon binse acti relal Movements of the | freedom must lament perhaps more Sealy than over | be removed to seme other country. Kossuth and the be questioned whether tho rates. ‘uma in the be Arrival by the perilecf his empire, that he is privy te the ia- | members of the Giermanio Confederation, and - | Wants nothing but the name, has that lif ASPECT OF AFFAIRS IN EUROPE, | srmatscpeme ot niuing by rufering or of kidnapping, | sally wo tote States which belong to the Prosalan | i Jet seattar al ita brocd f imperial nail pow unsia. not iy \verein, @ prop: once 80 ral and so bold, otters. upgary 00 solemuly brave, too deep: net safe in the winter season, fer which reason he must | The demand for the lat been rns Rot put —, reap gp aa ee of 9 ate, thas ie gi “ae omrie wet A hee de tion be ogee i the blood of speuertcee has beaw 100 many entertho Dardanelles. These straits, by treaties between | the most retail Sbarecter: "Part » «naan HY 7< ‘epyire pen fips ama of te mile Pate the eenslsef ealighee teen | ieee pendence, to sink | Russia and the Porte, are not to be entered by foreign ships | abroad bas gone direct to some of our principal mill- again from Austrian Government, any other countries which have raised high hopes onl; rincipal refugees (including the widowed Countess ig Of the week woul: been all its mountain tops’ It is just possible, though hard- [From the London Times, Nov. 19. to falsify them. France, rapidly as it® has soho ‘ ~4 g In og ignawe boty: matnteined: Sat ly oredible. thet the young Pies hae been soalarmed ‘The Austrian government has per the other | round pt republican: m°to 8 monerohy ind Bacthrans) re hon are mae ae ee or ean Mob took it that : ny berhood of t but Admiral Parker is satd Prices of English, on Monday, exercised little in- ardanelles, ind legitimist | to be unwilling te remain there, #s the anchorage is | fluence on the value of the finer kinds of foreign. jamitous Our Foreign Correspondence. Austrien dependency. But Gormany has ; ‘ ign po! 4 templat UL be su! t. Itis mow saidthat the | The Austrian empire, hitherto guarded by prohibitive | shown such an utter want of political tact, of Frastte Lee the anh gy Ryo ec opgnene ry vig ge: As ree, pt gereer boa Be., Bier, Bee Crar yields hia first claim to have t! delivered up, | duties and by an exclusive coumercial system, subdi- | cal progress in political science, as must convince granted by the Indeed, such permis to | mere nominal real, a1 cea obtal ey ists and bis later claim to have them driven out. but that | vided by lines of custombouses even within its own fron- | every one that she has yet much to endure The Post Office express, from Boston, with the Eu- | be requires the Turk “to give seourity for their good | tiers, proffers to Prussia and the rest of Germany acom- | can Dauster inher popular body sufi aad eoieta cee eee a ‘arrivod in this olt: ay, at 1 o’clock. bebaviour.” The Turk will refuse of course, | prekensive scheme of commercial union; it proposes the | moral strength to cope si ‘Fope’s mails, arrived in y yesterday, * | Then the Czar will pretend that negotiation 1s use- | adoption of a common tariff. and a common code of | armed tyrants ‘The express, in charge of Mr Bailey. ohief clerk in the | jess, end that | faith with infidels lexashais, comppeeciol Fegiaation, vith all toad is needed to asal ene eee half-past 1 o clock on jee le and combine the mercantile interests of t! Ty an) crushed serpent. ‘he cruel effe Boston office, left that olty at half-pes ; the tenante of a bara yard, purposely loft | whole mation; and it offers to eet the example of eacri, | of the on, aud the dreamy inexperience af teeny, | Receptions since her return to Paris Among tho poll- Carla aha ate ce ene ae Ss Cte Sunday afternoon. The detention was owing to tho | Uiorntected. Austria is nothing but executioner ii ficing the prohibitive syatem of duties which have too | Predict long years of humiliating penance, ere they | {Cl Rersoneree prerent-the lion of the evening was M_ | Oo suisse dd He’ manlieet any partionlar anxiety to ‘fog which prevented tho steamboat from getting out of | this business. and stands ready for any uot whatever | long encumbered ite industry, aad impoveriched its | cen rise to'a manly diguity, and a hopeful position | CUZ, who has recently arrived bere, Count Molo | Ered cules. | Whe velue of town manufactured flour bag Seicedaiain, dio. 44 ack ease wutll ¢.0'6loak sonten. @ lives of the irurgents. She howorer, has | trearury. Such a proposal is by tar the greatest and | amongst communitice of Tree men. Bandas and sented ithe ssehs aches Tea tuiey hook | iittle request, and has barely sald oo well as last woot 5 the needed lie on her lips for the use of the Cuar at the | most practical step which bas jot been weie towards | Ducit is with the most immediate anxiety that we nd conversed with ena other fer 0 ceasldere- | on,” Culatty of hemegrote boltne ouuuet picaen @ay morning. mement of the bloody catastrophe; that lie she will | the union of Geroeny. | If the Germanlo Dict hadiong | cast our #yes towards turkey. Che uubappy Hunger | pe thine, with much apparent oordiallty This was the | Fas yd ony moderate and prion et rote ta eaten Among other items in our papers, we find the follow- | make serviceable by any quantity of oaths. ‘There is ago given effect to the nimetoenth article of the Treaty | ian patriots still continue there in a, state of snspsuse | Perrin ard Geese Chere siee ene spoken. M- | ing qualities have rather tended upwards, -On sToa Sng in the Journal du Havre of the 22d ult.:— no fathoming God's providence; but any dreadful tate | of Confederation. aud had devoted Itself, from its firat | thatis most provckingly irritating to the spectator, and | perger and General Changarnior were also present, | 96 Yor 1 uttie was paid for a picked lot OF boo. w cag ep {the King of the Mocquitoes, bas | Which cam overtake Kossuth abd his friends, should | meeting totherstablishment of the utmost freedom of | must be inexpressibly crucl to the tufferers, Ous Bas i Teleek wae Ws. sel peoting, abtented Rikisele £0, 1hs OS ocige ea.auy sealing’ thin omnes Demis Ir. Jultani, Envoy of the e Mosquitoes. bas | Dot areute, iu America the least. au Jou throughout the contederate States, | brings ue the intelligence that Russia has concsicd ces | _‘Th& President's family continues to be a source of {vg and grinding sorts, being more interfered with by priate, velating: 1s to sald’ to the ‘Aicrate aniok nar, | are th , avios of England and Franoe, will they not | it would not have sbrnnk into the despised and impotent | question ef the Sultan's right to protect them—an- | tivoe ptm aiding tog ei Meee ae erate eit | the imparts from abroad, hate told relatively low. Noe 4 x . revent such out o—' are not re; yw! Vanished atthe first blaet of therevolution. | other thet she insists on their perpetual consiznme: * “s of bar- om on tho subject of Nicaragua between Englund | Brench tent was aplered heme nog: ago by's govern. | On the other band, Prussia had long availed herself of | toe military prlaon. One day Geta aeorsd seein thy dutien unter the hietd of his Hikuation of 6: ma» iy ab) NAR Geay metoae el prytiey abe sche United States. | The Envoy of the King of the | ment which is bound by a thousand ties to Nicholas; | the apathy of the Dist and the blindness of Austria, to | Cu#r will ocheeut to nothing but thir; the next, that he Whe neceeere else Ce the sre eubiect with | supported ; good heaty grinding sorts have not beam oaqulioes atziv vurope on @ French mer- | gnd as for the English fleet, it has crept into the Dar- | raily round herself the commercial interests of a large | will huve thom driven out ot the Sultan's territories, geo 1 eo ea eee ana from | gold below the terms of leat week ; h the ehant vessel @anelles ca pretence of self preservation only. The | portion cf Germany, which she hoped one day to con- | Now we are told that the Porte will listen to no terme | tho scene stg felt rie re ny i ve been parted The United States frigate St. Lawrence, Capt. Hiram | storms of the Levaut are davgerous to shipping, espe- | vert to the purposes of political supremacy. The ex- | but such a6 are consistent with the bighest hovor. Tositinn) Not sesizeh ot Loni 28m: tee Dalle, Note. | EST Napciscm im fe love: Aaa Rem ualin: aod eres | tomes ot Nec Wren. iateceere AGA oak eee ee: | Cee ak ee ee ee | i e 6 and her paramount dut severity and indiguity joable. s she has been cruising during the summer, for the pro- | tieude tothe autocrat. With him ft i To strengttien the connection between hereeif and er. | i crd that the Div. i dy bu: fame quarter is also reported. eek, could certainly mot have been made for Pp it parcels this morning. Inferlor foreign red France. wheat has been held at 388 to 40s, good to fine at 42s, The Princess Lieven has given the first of her wookly | £0408. and Dautzio at from 40s to 60a. per quarter. Yet there | trade and ni arin memory that Pierre Napoleon deserted them | Hghter ceseriptios after having for along time voted for them,and that | Wit2 at @ slight no quotable alteration im be exhibited @ total absence af good manners on wn | Proes bas occurred. We have had tolerably yood re- ceipts of oats eoustwise, but the prevalencs of vast lem when bo struck an old man in the Assembly | Vita bas prevunted sapplisa resotiin te trom ireloee tection of American interests; she took in afew supplies | with them a principle, many, is more than ever erential to her own seourity Having. however, hed an arrival of 35.000 quarters from At Cowes, aud sailed for Liston, where ahe will refit pre- | their. apology, to him, tong and to the peace sf the whole nation; and the great ex. | sid; the next, that Prin Pessoa be Lin Ca sian abroad. there bas been no scarcity of this grain. ‘The “ riment ¢f acommercial union, covxtensive with the | stamtinople, and is sowing jealousivs between the Aim- nad, jarge deelers bave, throughout tb vious to departing either to join the American squadron und itselt, is evidently the course which anenlighten- | bessadcrs of Kngland and France. Meantime—and all , The correspondent of the Frankfort Ober Post Amts Teerrvey under the impression that Stee fgg ee ly of observation in the Mediterranean, or to the Pacite | the same time preserve all the relations of Russia and | «d view of her own finaucial aud political interests | this time~ one siing only remains certain, that Kossuch Zei/ung. writlng from the Polish boundary, under date | cf seme of the station. England—two governments which neoesalty has joined, | would prescribe and his brave comrades continue prisoners, of the 10th inst., announces the discovery, in Kaliseh, in f@ Most extraordinary democratic conspiracy, or ra- ard nothing but the imperative will of the British It is not @ little diverting to remark the consterna- The ‘le of England should look to this, It is ph er, declined to mak neession ; and good bh ‘The Pandore hed arrived at Portsmouth, England | poopie. stimulated by the examples of France and | tlon of tho Truscian organs of public opision at tule | that theres something wroug at the bottom. With , ther an inguiry as to ite exiatenoe. The bighest autho. | Corn, whether of home er foreign yrowth, was eoarouly with $80,000 tm California gold on board ; and advices | Amerios, can put asunder. The only party to this | announcement. For upwards of a twelvemonth they | the prompt declsratien of hospitality and protection | Tiles at W bad boon informed of the discovery of | cheaper, either on or this morntug, than last from Sydney, N 8. W. thata vessel had retur: miserable Turko: Russian affair, who can eome out of it | bave been laboring at the pro! of German unity, ia | on the part of the Sul t gitation among certain young ladies, | week ; inferior 6d. to ls. per quarter chon ibe with credit, is the Sultan. every impracticable sha) But their unit, waite of the eyinpathy and rence, e tent from thenoy to establish the most | er today, Bea d peas hav: mae a Litel : . e ace, . Bel 1 exalted vor: " ‘to that place irom California, with a considerable quan- ris letter of the Americans, to thelr mintater -“f f Seale, ob gid inquiries. In consequence, the most frequented | tention, and no alterarion requiring Sides hae Saleen clude Austria, with her seven millions of German | thers sbould, ase natural result, have been as prompt b 40 | subjects, fro: ation which eo long acknowledged | @ liberation ot the prisoners, Kossuth ought, ere this, #¢#demy. conducted by the Misses Fulleborn, was vi of huma- | her imperial sway. and to substitute the ascendency of | if there were no domivation om the part ofthe Czar, no | 4 by & committee of inguiry, who examined no d, should | the house of Brandenburg, ia the dimiuished sphere of | cringing fear or treachery on the part of the Sultan. to | then forty of the pupils, pried fato their boxes, drawers, Tne Bank of Eng! place in prices of theee articles, Indian cern, or mait. tity of gold dust, after having sold her oargo there to ntlnppible, ‘ing hie mediation, put t! vantege. It was caloulated that nearly £100,000 | of Kossuth and his party om the true grou: ‘worth of California gold would be reosived in and ex- | Bi¥, which justified the greatest exertions. ir. Carr have ected up to bis powers, your country | # lesser Germany. Suddenly Austria herself. relieved | bave been in Loudon, in the midst ofa free, @ sym, &e.. but more particularly into the contwute of their toria, ported from Sydney before the end of the year. may ercape diegrace; but the rest of the so-called ef, | at lest froas Tes premare of two tronehertea ana Gree thizing. and adadring people, SmPs | ccpy-bonks; the only discoveries which resulted, how. pyr ny yg epee pdr dea eat rape Advices from Zanteand Patras mention that the last | pHited world, is dingraced If the Turk should protect | lating wars, takes up the question. But we cax well conceive that it must be a subject of | eveF, were copies of some patriotio poems and uatioual rene seceraenee i) OF a i late period let them nap pe “y, ferious dread to all the despotic powers, to Aurtria and 4 y oe " a it be Jovernme| £11,015,100 prices for currants were 16s per owt. The exportation | ty, Will take away all bia European Posen waa in tan dante Russia expecially, that Kossuth should anive ia fog. | Warded to Warsaw. The commission of inquiry incom. | “*'# itued © Othar securltleas a3 to Holland, Germany, Trieste, and Amorica, will proba- | the rpring. with the Christian consent of England “who land, ‘Tho enthusinem that would oocesearily greet pored of a colonel im the Russlen army and several po- Gold Coin aud Bui- bly be larger than last year; and as an aggregate crop | Will get her share of tho spoils It will be uo hal his arrival, tha impetus which it would give afresh to , Hee officials. ii will be 1,000 tons less than that of 1848, we a Compa gan The Czar will wot cout himself wit! the spirit of indignation againet these two barbarous . od road to the Mediterranean. will out the may loek for only a moderate supply going to E1 nd, ewer tem ai Cf BE Vali the Coy = ‘and proeperity of the whole and a good state of trade towards spring. Charters for 0 Adristic, and will assert his authority over the tall To thie language the more vul 5 gar and passionate England are as low as 30s., ten guinea fo the Morea, which is Greece, and the rest of the m acceudency turn 4 reluctaut and dtenpercent. | mother church, of which the (ar of Rusia is the | Bertivens of Fruselan ax poterre Greece, Accounts from Greece, to the Oth of November, al- " luGe to the great prevalence of heavy rains, whioh had Braycicwer Cape Prat he States in this country, sud thence throughout thy whole Civilized world, are just whet they reek to avoid, We consider that the matter is entirely im the hands he people of this country; let them speak out, and ccoasloned damage in Athens and compel their government to speak out to the Porte. Attica-Bmot dune country | rt Dead waight a ey) not to unite Ger- | THE HONGARIAM PATRIOTS OY HOARD ‘Tus Anteni- | Grand Patelazch. This Protestant and royal arrange. | (statiatied car. thelr purpose ia not to u ‘The friendship avd good will of England ai fered trom in ‘ : ment will give great pleasure t ig any, J ‘erve for Prussia the | 4 u(inclnding Ex- i CAN STEAMSHIP HERMANN. thy, “abo fos things fm thele ‘aun Hight? cetbe very j Iataer hase 1 Saencie, coer he Gerinaen Giisles. | wigutdom pragent ste cecerine segoler sommeciontinn |” $rexees,Gariaga? The propoed can have no other meaving. But to theee vague and und ngress of Exturt or Aix la-Chapelle | 0 PPOPer treatment to i vigation project. for securing regular communicetion Banks, Cony 4 The Southemptom correspondent of the London | best thing that could be don etructions to their fre between the islands of the Archipelago had been sub- stonces.”” Are at # loss to conceive om what piva the Suita mitted to and favorably accept 5 ent ‘Times, writing under date of the 18th ult., gives the | switzerland is in greater d Gagerous tarcciee the proposal of the court ot Vienss | Getata them, alter having. easerted that Mussla and | and.an ordiosuer bud been invaed, axthorising the for, following interesting information: — tions have have been radical, « adoption of such ® project would et once irapose tue | vsttla bave no sight to demand them. | iation of a company, for prosecuting the undertaking. The United States mall steamer Hermann, Captain | the pelitical refugees. Her fate a oy pete: gyro Aa Mate onal duties on the commission of | The Grecian parliamentary session was closed, i. Canbhene, Gealaed bene Seda weecting feom, Rev Senators of the United States stand with thelr fingers | the'fegeral government at Framefort. The Hungarian Refugees. i —— in their mouths at that kingly execution, too, oF | “Gur hope is that the King of Prussia and his minis- | The advicrs from Widdie, to the deh ult., inform us | Turkey. 655,008,729 en route to York, will they advise the President torends minister to tere, more far-sighted and less seldsh than mauy of | that the exiler, Koseuth among the number, have been | _,Tb¢ Smyrna letters, of the Oth inst,, report favorably The Hermann left Bromentaren on Thursday, at | that great aud ancient republic, whose praises Mr. | their own partioaus, will not reject or evade this oer. | transported to Shumla, What will be thelrultimats | Of ‘be staie of tho markets. Coffee bad advanced, and Bryent singsso well? It is yet time, om still bigher prices were looked for. Madder root was ta Y¥ Mauxer, Friday, Nov 23.—Tho oon, but in the night experienced a tremendous gale | ”'Pranco hus her mission to perfor In this rotting. | 1" #9 Furopean polut of view dieunion, with Austria ts | fute, still remains w mystery A letter from Orshova, fg %; The re 4 vf if Ve ang mi 5 it the usually lar; PO} vi duct Mf th te ot or J ot E inthe Norti Sea, during which che was obliged teheave | ripe harvest of Hurope, aud she wiildo it Shall eke | {e éreatest calamity which Pruseia bas to feac ; there | ofthe Oth ult. in the Wanderer, anys | Sit demand, ‘but the unusually large orep prevented e | duction of the rate of discount by the Bank of Lagiand, subi be vivaliy Seddies Weahe See incteee tect The old city uf Widdin, that old heap of ruinsand | Mire ‘The continued demand for America had caused | bar been the subject of general convereation in the 4 po Brea pray relly oD irr connec neglecied walls, bas uow lest that ephemeral impor ()!0M tomdvance ; valonia was ela leoking up, amd | monetary clroles ct the elty this morning: and. as usual xeached Southompton one day after ber appointed time, serted by all the world- alone’ pointe of their territorial security ‘end military fo tacee which it derived from the residence within its | “lve cll was steady, Tonnage was abundant. en all occasions of the Kind, the necessity acd ad- the first instence of irregularity in the present year, on — they must either remain united for their comma p walls of we fugitive Hungarians, The Hungarians | = ventege of the change are variously spoken of TI the part of the American steaurrs, whiod have in 1649 | Zhe Mearngue and Mosquito Questions. | tection, or be reduced vo feck a humiliatiog support im left Widdia, ueither voluntarily, mor, 1adoed. Singepores discount honses have. of course, signified a reduction itherte been exoeeding!y punotual in their times of | [From the London Times, Nov. 21 | the alitavce cf ecme foreign Stato. In such ition. Will, for every step ‘The Singapore papers of the 7th of October in their terms of interest for money on call andare all arrival and departur We have already entered, at considerable longth, | Austria has ut least reoveed to herevif the tion the srrival there of eal and o most ready to discount paper at 4 per cent, or J per ‘The Hermaun bas about thirty passengers from Bre- | upon the views takem by the British government, | the Norih but Iyusela bee liturally no alliance or | ebie,gives them more of sa/ety and liberty ttores for the coal- workings | cent. below the benk rate men to New \ ork, amongst whom are some Hungarian | or rather by Lord lalmerston, with refereace to the | support tut that of some minor German States, to fall | ferenoo of the fugitives to Shumla, docs not lok ko at Labuan. A commissioner bad gone over | The course pursucd by the bank dirsotors was fore- gelebrities. One of them is Ladies Ujbezy, ex Civil | rights of the State of Nicaragua aud the indepen- | back upon To renew the principles of the confede- | consiguing them to the Interior of the country, for k by the Albatron: to arcertain the head-mo- | feen and acted upon during tue lest day or two by the Gevernor of the fortross of Comern, who proceeds to | denee of the Mosquito eeast. But though Lord | ration if 1815, bared as they were on the then recent | Sophia aud Philiopol woMd have been more fitting for B¢Y dve cn xccount of the Sakarran dyaks, or pirates, | members ef the Stock Exchange @nd henos the ad- @ Saviour of menkind —de- to till the weather moderated, She has, therefore, | tread the wine press MARCUS the United States intending to form a iiuogarian co- | Palmerston has expressed his opinion on the sub- | experience of the fatal divisions of th the Jatier purpose, and it is now expected their stay at #'Y GecUeyed by Rajah Brocke, Zeare.ublgh teak piace la the valine of Counsie seatem- Jony. He has letcers of iutruduction to General Caylor, | jeot with great decision, and hes distinctly intimated | their consequences, avd to oement that lenges 2 Shuma will be shor, aud that the Turks will soon earners day was not only not maintained up to the close of ba- President of the Repwbiic; to the ton. Mr. Baucroft, | thet “Her Majesty's government must eapport ¢ aud popular measures for the union of the | #end them to Varna | When the news of the removal Mavsittus, pees, Bas the market is met 90 peed to-day.” Ceasue fugitives came te Widdio, Mr. Kossuthaddzesesd = The ndvices from t auritius come down to the | Dave been done at 04%, but are now 94% Lo 34 for mo- d an taterest to | them one of his famous speecher, which, this time, too, | 20d of September. An nddition of threo inoftiotal mem- | Pay and account, or % per ¢ lower than they left questionable a teid upon them as ususl. Le mentioned the glorious compricing Merers, Houghton, Cayrou & Radelie, ies al poet Parties have been ren! Vantage of a contested supremacy, Tealstance ef the Porte, the generosity of the Padichah, hed bern made to the Legislative Council; and es the | Thich teudsto check the buoyant tone of th eostume of Hungery. Letislas Ujhacy is an aged aud | glaa to learu by what Ine ccmmereial point ef view, this country would | and the ir dy! lory of Turkish horpitelity, Ac- | two fret gentlemen represented the importing aa well as | Now Three avd » Guarter per Cer hy venerable looking man, with a fowing grey beacd what reasoning, he | have no reason to view the accession of the Austrian | cording to him, the removal of the fugitives to Suumla, the exporting interest, it waa considered « falror ba. | St 27% to M4, Reduced Three per Conte moustackes, and wearing @ pingular semi-Ovieotal | which he has pledged the ho: ‘empire to the customs’ league of Germany with sus. | Was but another proof of the desire cf the Turks to lance of power wonld be attained by these selec Lane auseinens to 7-16. Exchequer Bills 474, to 508, i Bent Of this country. has so | piclon apd regret. ‘The step would bv one in the | protect him aud his friends. fle talked of the ener- | tions, Mr. Houghton, it t# stated. ta connected | PH ank Stock 11836 to 19036 Another extroardinary Hungarien on board this | often exbibited tothe worlds predilection for inacu- | right direction. it would substitute, as fer as Aus- | getic attitude of Lnglaud, and propbesicd another with Mesers. Biyth, Brothers & Co, mud Cay- ere 1s no general change in the Foreign Stock Steamer ix Mademoiselle Apolouia Jagella, who bore | rate statewents and untenable arguments, that weare | tria is concerned, a tari! moderately protective for | WAr, another serios of vi end last, not le rou is identified the French ’ commercial | M/Tet. but the buoyapoy of Spanish continusrs; the the rank of licatenant im a regiment of cavalry during | not disposed Co accept his decision, on @ point of tuls | one highly tive But 6 would & con- berty of 1 Interest, With respect to mercantile effates, it is | Tbiee per Vents beve beon done this morping at 2656 the Hungarian od Was cubsequontiy adjulant of | importance, without fuller consideration; for the infé- | siderable impulse to the productive powers of that | lently ebvered. mentioned that a considerthle ainount of business had | t? 27, Mextean at 26%, to 27, Peravian 52, Portngusse the army iv the tertress of Comorm duriag the time | rest he moy suppose us to huve in the river of San Juan de | ynat, but ill-explured, terri it would jacresse ie for Turkey, from the tact « ¢ mail. The ficoness of the | Four per Cente, smali 34. Dateb Four per Cente, 52%, oi and other men of distinotiou in America. Io isec- | sud maintain the right of the King ot Mosquito to 5 scompavied by bis two sons and two deughters. and by | the port of St. John’s,’ we have not yet arrived at feveral Llu garian ofticers, who uppeared om tac deck | the ame clear and peremptory coi — S. the we 1 be of the Fermana, dressud in the picturesque wilitary | cubject as the Foreign Minister, material interests of the whole nation, is therefore the | of th 4 to My F, al gian Four and that city held out against the Austrian | Nicaregua is immeasurably surpassed by the interest of ree | the foree and prosperity of that extensive f ta conriderable sum of money to the poorer ge quantities of sugar te town, @ Half per Cents 8539 aelle Jagella is represented to bare been present in | maiming al peace with the United States, by lending our as- | Central meth my po dg fod most pont | fugitives. Some complaints of th wasl of Sareces in apd ne the demand for rewittapces bad been brisk, merket is fiat and dull. Very weveral agementa dust the Hangarisa insur. | sistance and encouragement to the project af the canal. | Bed fewest enemies; and it would wugment those | the distribution of thie money were indeed rd, but there bed been mach animation in the market. Al- : Jone to-day, and prices are m Fection, aud to have t with much gailact, | | {t will be remembered that the case put forward by | geiaticns of foreign ae well ae interael trattic which | the complainants weresiionced by the kiad. and indoed 1eady cercoer bad been despatebed to London, Liver- | #0,01m as they were yesterday —— ‘ She proved berself a great adept in street | Mr Chatield, and adopted by Lord Palmerston as | ere the chief guarantors of the general peace. Kvea | loving persuasion off their officers, and al Lieoked pool, and the Clyde, showing « considerable advance on nts O'Crece.--Consols close rather fist. at 94%, cheerfully torward to the day of their departure. Their exports, compared with the corresponding period of | Peliers for money and buyers for the seovunt .«- exit from Widdin was thorougbly orieatal, We learn lart year. ‘The errival of the Fnglish mail had slightly | Cheauer Bille 47». ty 608 ‘ q cf eye witnesten t offered the checked prices. and at @ public sele heid eub: aly | sieateee, Ste Set. Nextt: Westerns ales 143% to ge mixture of eple: nd poverty, ® fell of 10 to 16 cents took place, the low quulities, Westerns b53¢ to 66, Midlands 47.44 to reeback, aad ver, stil! commanding proportionately better rates 4 tO 867;. Reading Galldford ‘arkish carts of than fn deeeriptions. #, and North Steffurds 025 to 05 . go om horseback; ov Manner, Now 23.—A very Halted ry. Bghting, avd boasts of having slain w fer num- | the basis of the rights of the Morquito tribe of In- | in Hungary, the experlence of ceuturive. aad the pre- dec of Austrian soldiers. im xppearauoe Madewol- | dians to the coast which bears their name, and the | sept cbrervation of our own corteapondenia, douro gelle Jegelin is far from reputetve, ber features | riveret San Juan, rested, first. ou immemorial posses. | girate that whatever industry Dearing a pleasant but determined expression, {t may | sion, and, secondly, on the sovereignty they huve ex- | penetrated ir nat kingdom. be saticfactory for the reader to know that this lady is | evetred for at least two centuries, uncer the protee- | man colouization, and have no doubt that the Inder engagewent to be married to # young Hun- udtedly true that | stream of emigrauts who are now driven from the yon arztving at New York; t Gensely peopled shores of the bibe and the Khtae. to Livenroot Cor it is of courKe prob d the | reek ahome beyond the Atlautic, might, with rigoal on | demend bes prevailed during all the present wenk : the active scenes of dome Of the coast to which our traders repaired | advantage, be dirested to the bavks of the Theiss aud | With men in Honved coats, and those, tov, rather Lhe some fears have lately been entertained hore for the | 10¥ relative value with some, aud erpectally the heavier America. her belligerent propensities will never agaia | fox the purpose of cutting ¢)ewoods and mah: ¥. | the Danobe, where they would find, under the protec. | Worrefor weer There were carriages Glled with W0- satety of the American bar quette, She left Shang. | @+reriptions of goods and yarn, bear to the cost of eat- de put in requisition, aniess an attaok from Indiaos | There r ve great umbrage to Spain, und dad, | tion of a German severeign. «soil os fertile, and are- | Mem. and the whole was rarrounded by a0 escort of bal on ihe 20th et August for this port, aod not aly | t induced the production of tho finer rather @hould cocnsiopaily happen, to vary the monotony of | indeed. at one time, contributed tofaetual war bec almost us wild 4s the solitudes of the new world Torkish horeemen. On the 20th of October, the road jaye the vessels which 1 atthe & time ac. | than the coarser fabries, and this hes occasioned « sor- ber future career, io which case no doubt Mademoiselle | the twocrowns !t cannot, however, have ¢ | ""ithes becm of late the tashicn to ér from Widdin to Shumia was crowded with curious rived but those aleo which 4 fourteen days after. | "ponding diminution In the t Jagella will, in defence of ber bome and family, ma- | Lord l’aimerston’s vetice (for the instromeat w: (alors. a rumor ng gone abroad thatthe frat wards She ported to have been ceeo not far dis. | *emed. In other ror he bh 9 to give a good account of the intruders. ressly quoted by the Nicaraguan Mixtster), that ia e the city om ft lay. The ourl- tant from this, a short time previous to the typhoon | Botwithstanding the to phe prerent party of Hungarion exiles will ba fol- | 1786a treaty was eouelm as gratified. for atroop of 400/Poles which was oxperionced here on the 13th aud Jick ic, | Talue Which cotton bears a lowed to New York by ® much er netal Bem) ridivg at The Coquette was known to be one of the Anest | maintained, and of many a ter numbder, now | ‘cof | @ppeared, with avenge in & packet » ‘ the bead of their e Little man; on the ecart. baring a moet experienced commandur | tD€ socks have net eocomulated The market iy at (Cept. Prescott), and we trust that the worst which has | Prevent Js lvenerd by the limited etook remaining here befelten ber bas been the getting blowa over to the | bY the delay which t attend any conriderable im- it colcrs. They were accom- coast of Lucoria or having lost her masts in some | Ports from the United States, and by the abundance of at Hamburgh to take ‘The Hermann will leave on ay, the 20th, wich exceedingly large freight of Gerwan’ and French mor- | ¢* hd chandise, the steamers Ataslauca, Lady de Saunaren, | feo ht twaueriine | energy shown by frince oe a | these financial embarn But, whereas tn | bie face ie covered with sears. The Po! other countries we have reen the public revenue | 1% verious costumes; their caps alone fnerenre in gipantio proportions, to be surpassed only | gvished by their pation erritory qranted Gnd South Western, specially clartered, having ar- | thoio Majesty to the huglioh, Ro by the still more cols predigality ot the | Fanied by Measarca and Count Vay. On the tollowing Quarter, whence the bas found it dificult to make this | BOPey, all being eale von idence to hold- rived fom Havre, filled wita cargo for trans-shipmont | That territory was tho settlement of Belixe, or Bri- | State, in Austria, the revenue bes never excced- Count Mout led his countrymen away from Wide port ers. The adviees recetved por Kuropa, on Monday, re- to this steamer, | tirb Honaures, ceded to this country by the Jd article | ed the mont modest ratio ot taxation In an eu- they locked more soiled and worn, but by far One of the ea liert vesrela which left this port for | prerevted the rece'pts at the ehipping ports to be of the sau thereters. that | pire wiih m® population equel to that of France, | merrier than tho Potes. ‘The Jeb men whooompoved Cajifignia in Javvvry I by extraordi lerge, but priees had jer tho foflueoee of Our London Correspondance. | the evoor y thore whohad | and an extent of teritory considerably sued | the third body, were » motioy crowa of all nations; fi rte in point of ere od her return existing advices erved hone oly | enjoyed the protectionjof kngiand, was the equivalent | Iog thet of the republic. the revenue of Austria bad ell ewbraced the Mabomeden fulth, At thelr gret to pny she brin t divmal end dirastro Lonnom, Nov. 23,1849. | obigined by Spain for the cession of Beiizs; and we | bes rewoined at sbout 16 solitons sterling, whilat rode Ferrat Pasba (Ud Stein), with bis adju- connte of the numerous rhipmenta of stores of wil kind the crop are various, bat not The Nicaragua Question—The Condition of Englant— | hope Lord Palmerston will inform the worid, bolure this | that of France has teen diisen up to €0 milituns. Phe Orondy, and Kinmsl f joveral Kmetts) with which went formerd from this to the Ine! of golden Iy larger than s previously formed, and the prices are relatively higher than are current here, Siti. in the presence of a somewhat dull state of general tl. The last body. 820 strong. lett Widdin on apien ‘The intelligence which of November. led by Kossuth. He wore @ large guartity ef gold in the conatry 1s ¥: | discursion proceeds further, m what lint he regards | charce of the public debt of Ausiria is about sevwa that treaty; for itis clear that whatever righie Syma | giiiscns; the preduce of the whole customs’ revenue | @ brings of the The Turkish Juggle--The liungerian Kefugees— aise ne and une ing vi trormly ree ston of Frence. had om that const bave passed to ihe Central Aroericea | sbvut ore million and ® bav. Daring the whole | bet with # white feather, He was surrounded by factory in the extreme One fact is highly indiwative— | tae. end with only s iimited demand for mannfae- ‘The American peop’s will bave no war with Eogland | republics, aud that our traditional pro'eciorate, if eriod of the semtimdependence of Hungary, that | Mesere Eeressy, Balegn, aed others, and followed by “t from Ban Franeisce te China: tures. the prices of eotten have not been maintained, he Nicer qncstie For this there a h once relinquished, bas not been renewed, Oa this id net contrib; ¢ than te Uioas | the Countand Countess Karstmir Satthyani, Colonel gold or gold dv andthe a etiedall. The declared purp the Nicorequs questi« . Niearaguen questiou, therefore, the Minister is boand | revenue of the empize. with» popula. | Arbett, ana Councilior Francis Haman The people e are happy to ray. has continued per- | 0! orglend.to reduce her of discount rand rearous; but the capital one is the w to produce far more cogent evideuce thaa he williens, and exte ultivated | Of Wiedin were rorry to see them g ay. The lower hroughout the summer. tendsonly cc increa ¢ the prev’ the midst of apparent strength, of the present form of | has yet adduced for the neorerity and justi 2 whole aren ct England and Wales, Houle, looked upon the magn dt ih snd hae hitherto bad no sen miveren) Glstes “ ot Lis intezierence; and whatever i) vel f the foreign of Austria, in: | that feeling of reepect and awe “ | © total rales of the we Seeainsats Seite te enteereal Getanee eatending place cn the qualities of bluster aed awur- | eluding her Germam trade, bas probably not es | great misfortune oiways commatde from men of #tro The derived fe toot sees at the Capo *v is a limited ettendanee o: from Ireland, and taking porrrssion of the vitale of | gooe, tho-w ere weapons ia fn it ty not easy to 12 millions steriicg, Itin evideut that this state of | Tligious feelings of Good Hope, om the 10th of Septe , was the signal | (hdzone b sand the England. Her wanufscturiog sad agricultural indus- pars such autagouists as the politictans of the Uaited | things ie inds not of ealeustion, but of ne: | Ancther acoount reys:— for a very ohtong ‘aunaitvetation’ of Gincontent bytane | Stebeue,reerious rates, Aw try, both are in @ drendful state. The operatives und Sascbgbe Wr porpuciin raed Aap Bavemnicr fe wre ng Bote Me geey sah | The refogees bave been trenrported to Shumla The eclenists who suspect t jt Of from 4d bo 4 por Id ha geuersliy t ° ! t tio 8 i tintnae, cease, thee Ge aan in akan 2 } | fret party conel-ting of 400 Poles, aud headed by Ma ettempt, by delay end meacuvring, to effect landing | tea to the auchorine) quetatrene 1 ahorers are Wtesally asking fur stervation wagss, end | We foresse, sherefute, that the tone in wi | faebs (Bem), set out on thewth, Messarosand Count of the ecnvicts, ‘The governcr, in accordance with the | {<0 wy.) Abtboriaed quotations of ~faix America in the markets | Henry Uulwer wil enter upoa bis duties and this no- . Bil A eyatonr Of | Vay joined there, who Were followed on the next day ferlingsof the celonists and hisown pledg ained as at present, | yy idu Irelians, commanded by Count Monti Om the ill-fated veerel to rem arco. might be | it, the dd crops, comsiating of 165 renegades, alin fact til. in cbe dence to who bave embraced the Mussulman religion, with the Offce, he could dikpove of the convicts M the rivalry of France w wer wil enter poe Lis duties | e- cating, gotinticn ju Warklogton, will mot be the saae ©f the world bes become exerutiating. Ther ts | gotinticn Iu Me eslington, wilt ett ican a slzo aniverrel dislike, among tducated and decent | yerpweut; and alter baving advan th extraya | extended over e tat nat anchor in Si rther advices from the Colonial white, y men, of the broad farce of the government policy, at gaut eagero tala propositions, which rest, at | w real boom tothe consumer. ‘Lhe adoption of @ more | o¢crtion ot Bem and Balogn, set oat under the com- the combined eolonists threaten to starve ali pertias 4 abroed. The Irish case is beginaing to be | Wert, cu debsteabie authority, Lord Peimerstoa will | } beral cemmeretal polley by the Austrian goveroment | Keastts, whore impileated in the supposed juggle. into obedience to Same end Coees.. Sno Ee : probably reconsider the question. It would be to the | jx not necesarily contngect on the concltrlon of aight up tbe reat. thelr dr rill. Soppiies of ail kinds will Cn ee understood. The Canada case is well understood, 404 | just deyree abourd and dingraceful, if the injudictous | @ debuitive union with the existing Zollverein, & to 320 men, with — be refu: yu of the vesvel is changed. 0 Wevahom terribly dreaded, The foreign doings im India and | procesaings of a few wrong-besded individuals could | the p nifle copsiderat | comes ienolotea cap sobs Rawat. . 7 bgp . ate th atch ® verlour quarrel Out sf a matter in which the | ing + nterests, mig Eastern Europe, are subjects of reprobation im the | iit it, of Engiand, of tbe United States, and cf all | fully contribute to sutmount the reprgy tainds of the thinkers and actors, whoas very lin ©4 | the world, are identically the same. If the oa uence. under the prerent system, ” Sememmenat 5 ee ‘the Ananctal reform agt's- © | At ble tide red: Casimir Batthyant, both the Ferezels, and the Pole Prajemeky. The Countess Bat Ubyani travelled in a ceparate carriage About } o soctenpoated the colama, in varto ia trade in the British nd seme even on foot, Hermann sat indeart, merkete has not, for a considerable time past, bx The Times eortespondent, writing from Temesrar, eh as to hold cut encouragement to copsiga to this speaks of the refugees in the style which will be gra- country, we have nevertheless, continued to receive | | the lovers of despotic rule:—"1 need not follow ©” ple evpplies of foreign grown grain; and the notion ©* ‘ar foros to Widden. for althongh the Bavat ie ¢utertained by m ‘het the low range to which free fo me erer thet place thea any other the trade had reduced prices would work ite own eure, by Austrian empire, all our information on tbat rubjectis cheeking imports, has mot hitherto pr derived through Peeth and Vienna Last Scuday.the founded. ‘Phat the vaive ef corn may be re: 4th, and the day before yesterday, arrived the misera- point at which the foreigner may crate to reud his o94 of pro- | of | tected interests and rival gevernments The project | iadlisbed. so much the better for all | bas, therefore, our good wirbes; we regard itasan | mptete and perpetual ation of the earnest and enlightened spirit ot ty acs ought to be placed trian cabinet lo the prosecution of the gre eyond the t purpose the they have taken im hand; wa believe it to be ioe of communication ought to be fa the bands. not of id Daria om which slone the » genre about Irish repeal becom bi Beat de lligeseot powers, but of aemall State, whose las | intvresteof Germany cap be united; per | the genius ef Joho Mitebell, betore h t Gependence and prosperity sh be inseperably | sunded that the removal of barriers and restrictions | th. were s union with the reformers of Engiend, for uyited to the frecaom of this eommunteation, as gua- | between the several portions of a great empite and an te ctis | industrious nation eanvot fail & ribute to t the rights of man-—thove right so well and so long ranieed and respected by ail powers. The known fm America, but for the assertion of which, tos cdmile of no just settioment but by arce-onabie | advancement of the commerce and civilization of the 0 bags; same time, o m has beaowe the pomonaneey Teform agitation of Joba Grigat—and _ iberevy drives fA shadow from the field. c ith Now. 1848, 1.497.110 total rales to the loth Nov, 1919, 2.069,470 bage. ivenroon, Friday, Nov 23.— American Provistoms — The sales of the week are 600 to Some salen fret beauds brieg ohartists were, in 1848, imprisoned transporte pacific arrangement, and i well be credit 0 Sir | world bi produce into the English markets, must, of course. be , | bie rempante of thie foree here, wud were quartered fa P 6 Fee tconkantaegio of wich D Teoqecyil pe State of the Continent=The Reign of Deo | te Kabrikand Jorepbstadt. | went out to see them, fit evident: Lut quotations will Rave to be reduoel sy | BOs. te ; pa HP = 5 Ruste. on! P nn of thre penanel Gnteee> Dut thovgb th | ov tr and a more deplorable speetacte could ecarcely be pre- low before this occars, ae to enta'l abrolute rain on the | prime mers browebt 268 to S88, coop 4%s. to Bis , first the elily tool, has ap Gees by and conscirmticur etaten e are ‘ » end t N 4 diseased, with rags thele bome preducer. Since the elose of last week, upwards | bande eCs. to 64 Tame are without foquiry. ties of the sanding enemy of F Weil aware that ruch questions as theee are wont to be [From the London Standard of Freedom, No ut of their shoes, they Of 58.000 quarters of wheat, barley, and onte have ar- | Shouiders- A pareel of qood in boxes, brought 19s, 64 te very little to console the mourner m the different views Continent — by the same kind of agvvcy from but and Landedowne—the correspondents on revolution— now on their knews, to betray f zn countetes. We! to 20% Cherse of good qnality being @ little more plentifal, previous rates were with aiMeulty realized; some paresis of extre fine brought 445 to 48s . good Bsa. ‘ + O40 turned, to the United States, to ether purposes, and to rned by different motives, To revive the declin- | recent fate of liberal movemen polarity Of a cabinet or a party by an appeal to | Of What i* going forward on the & atobed sel. ived et thie port alone from fi ‘of an om. edwit that thie rupply isan neoumulation collar.theie Scverte winds keeping back the verse o@ eurteut, minus the bo triumph. ‘The other conepirooy, to embrotl Am ot the militar; lous of the people; vo ae. the spectacle of the trials and oon- * of thoes & Jar wotity is not likely to be ngat to 406.. fele S18 fe. Li li of « to f0d France, also failed most hap ply for Us—siseraby | ywame'an aisitude of menses, oF bowlity tewatde tue | demnation cf revelutigniets, as it the present. govern: | Poa oie cinead iorming any pelitioal cola | the seme malted space of titve, Dut hee aay Bde bd. for good barrels; lower deveription for its cotriy Fs. nen, the people of England, like the | greatest powers cf Europ a pap ey hn en Rept fon and were amept hither ot thither on the erests of been experiepeed in the interval’ Whilst shipments ehandiery purpores, are inquired for, bs ge ghawds Senne Gh etlegianee I seieeoes potas - Nasal tebembiocte ene tena, pupprese. | Willowsover whieh they haduo control As theirmarch from the Noth have be pt beok by woaterly win’ Livsrroot. Prices Conner. for the week ending Pri- was perfurmedon foct om Oreova your intelligence We bave been fully suppiled from other quarters; and 4.5 November 28, 1849- Arranged by » committee of from Widdin must be much frvher than avy itis too certain that, except Im the depth of winter, | pr irre™ Svgsr—The h bay bean chiefly to they browpht bere, Conversing with the oMcers, they pte w boo by ote Jee wedcor ene contort tne | amount tof be off soe them to embrace Ie rtexpect. ns long as tation ¢ adial » Pride thet the cere LO lee uee vicbed them to form , Of duty to be beaten Ie their own markets, by foreign | 28¢,1100 bags Bladr Mr. Momroe's extra the care of liberty t @ since the government mlowed with renewed emphar: ay & politics! van of the non interference of buropean Sta’ in @ Catholic country, Signi 57 | the American Contivent, whilst the Amerie ‘Dut yesterday. the Royal Artiiiery Regiment of Lowden | sone of this country etlll extend from Vancouver's BP; 7.008 bags at a slight deeline up Foreign 100 bbls. good yellow Par w . | the feet of the great hypocrite o Prursin itself, the solewa farce of tho trisis of rev ‘ Mnaslews were very presetog | ‘As #0 suspected. that, at the jostance of Prines Vibert, | fi, ifn. prace the evast in # cli tiomisteis acting. at ooce melancholy wud diegurting | '*2" ; competition. The wheat trade has, slace our last m ‘ / : More significant. 1 will go further into these mat- edients of unscrupulous pelicle | letm nearly eight months im prison, on the charge of | ie gig nee like the Danube, with two chiffliketoeach ¢f the kingd iy le per qaar. | sieding Cuba Murcovado. sold at 188; Berbadoes at 179; ters, War te ti thy of the rulers of » powerful ree | the most reditious designe and practices, hes been pnt ly flatehed, and omsible, Up to to-day, there fe no re- liable news from Fastern ’ The intamous jungle on tbe Vanube ie going ov © the {nine cheer, but of the force of 3,640 iungartanr, $00 Poles, ter ; end 106 I'nlians. oply 240 embraced Islamlem. saostly t hot mack out-of door work to claim | Kussian Poles. who preferred anything to Siveria, One i while, @ time fs approach. | poor devil, to whom the Rnowt was pm ing at which the outieys of sllengaged in agrioultural | thao the terrers of Mupker acd Nekur, e day pereuite ere bes Cbristmee reate, and other et. from the quay aud to arrive, at 168; and De- merara a lb¢. Gd perewt 200 bags Para cooon sold at nd 100 bege Gusyaquil at 260, 6d pereowt. Bleck pepper brought Sid per Ib. and Malabar ginger 21s, rewt. ice Divcolored Bengal sold at 9s, sande emptible etwit mt States. armali though as- | vpon his trial, and such a tiseue of eo | brought inet bim as proves that the gover | Ie roanatous ta trump ap s charge sgainet him, ge into every ta- | it bas exposed iteelf to the tidtouie of the whole p e tan de form te ne the gov . yb: pen re m0 joo * Seven’ aan ye pething’ for come | OOP con the wh de af Oreguay tap subeestbne ben | fuente wtenen a heap of pretended plots nnd evi. | Unoubsclously eating s piece cf Belugia sausage iT y metsbeen teicoe ent ‘conveatieg pom bay Af | tmall lot of te ef BR oe ed to the profound disimuistien of ail the pardes | cerca in ireland, they appiaud every convalsion im | @estiy forged letterr, ro rhementading and absurd a. p dent 4 him of bis new forth, Kos. | We may, coneequently, ealoniate on rather liberal ¢ from ny Pa. te ts, tod. per Ibs except the poor Sultan and the victims Lem per- | Tc. they are ready to aflrout and defy ell the | tbat uo man in his scntes could have listened to them 4 from the growers wp to thy of the ‘i i nt ot 2 pears, had shaved cif bis lerg a liverte reely recognizable I. -* and Silled time with cards, which. after fo activ ) e, burg heavy inn pinee like Widdin a pm 1 neal, ell faults, went at Je. dd. to uslog the Inverval | 54 gd. per Ib; and 500 bags pearl ango at 188. dd. to 2te. t im | per owt. Saltpetre sold at Y6s to ule Od. percwt. Ni- trate of coda—40@ tons, on the spot, at Lie. 04 to Lae. at fanit; bot I fear that the latter will @lvo be de | 5, : nd the last but one of the saae civth with | Powers cf the the © titled conspirators ngntagt the hawan race | Pas, on dignity end tho-é eternal prine'ples of Jnsties which team it they are not the peopie of | tericusly for ® moment, bad there not been a keeu = thet ‘wenkes are pot en eet desire to find some cause e the Greaded patriot ‘and stability to the Union; their | The very enemies of the Mberal patty are ashamed of ffair, and the public predicts th 20 en, purchasers continae for once M. +f | Polley did not relive General Taylor and his triends ‘The war i# enced, but it will be long before the Rawat tiem. deeming it neediess to keep up large stock éd, Common American ronin setd at Se. 2d. to 3e. SA. e been dren by the concert of kings out | ta power. It te trae, thet under the, ne pe oy by he hgh Mo. recovers iisell in consequence of the belium in dello of | ¥e Ore likely to experience @ doll pertod till att 4 fine quality at ba. @4 to lle perewt. Aboat 4d | a joletre’ 6 two las id oa is brimstone sold at £4 bs per ton , or trodden in the duct. r realized 138, Od, and Tyrolere 72 taee against race, in addition to that of the large ar- | turn ef the year. How prices may role after wards will th on teverni villages, @ wile eade mile | ins great measure. depend on the weather Should b. wirh every hones and farm yard » winter i1d and open, there would be littie | - iohabitents have chance of arF: but revere frost, by losing the Daltie ; . oe ae a ete fe the mother of im: | 806 other aer‘hers improving the ccadiion of | ‘Bledeiphie o 54, te Tis 6 per 5 oll realized 208, and rape 499. Cd to 44s. perewt; 20 me Sew heat ereasing coneumption. sly tons British epirite of \arpentine are reported ‘at 208, to priows Che transactions | oq. qo SOs; and 8 (ons of Amoriean at Sle. per owt. have been unimportant thronghout the | Sig eit pod wt Col to Lal 10s, per tom, ‘Tallow veld On Mondsy the show (f wheat, by iand-car- STs Gd, to B8s. per owt plee from the velghbouring countics, was T . sivh the lnvitatl “4 Cid ruceed Fe the boa into pad nad ~ | omen to re ~ i leper nod aggrer o—the sesare © exes an cmiosar of General Hay nau to give themselves a.wete | tne in aeten 08 Bienien, They may again enoveed im Mi. Fully, @ the Nie wend be marohod shout the et inetant, prisoners to the tov of | Cverpowering the found Maxims on which Washington | Deble-winde: ‘ount Batthyant, # ura with re. bs ge the hounds ine of A astel ey | ecw e char. be by tis b es yond ft ju jail, oF contngd ica. jent letter to De. Bach, the Austrian Mintste like criminals OF old fesbion- | toovom, how exactly Avstria te now where Engle nourred tho dixplensare of thett | eka t te prevent Clemens onder the most bigotted an ay ft o Oar ot 4 on derable difientty w h v | Tielteg tates are noe direetsy luterseteds ona sonal | dome, Such inthe effect of the policy of Metternion | |" phd = 5 Sapiens by | ; Onty the bert’ ary quelities fealioegae ort shoapped, hong UP OT | leave Lord Palmerston to support his recorded opinion the Jesuits, that Austria is more than acentary | C*P* Ot ermecive. In sp! 4 Dow Belt. | terms current that day ee night, wil other desoriptions rust ior life into the nays Siberten mines. ft ls | oe the limite end righte of the Mosquitinn coast, by | © behind the rest of Rnrope im etviltsation benefit of the | being freely offered at @ deoiine of le. to 2s. per quar. yghiy prebable that the hardships ef the mere (mprl- | such menus as he may have at his comme ‘The land ef soft pleasure, the walls of whore capital ter, withont Ine ari arance of the Kent stam oie nt will attain the great onject of all th. rozal ate generally covered with placards cf every porsibie it ti tbat deeyat boon toseived at | The few pereels the the duyers. and ee rtles te the tragic-comedy of Co tin ple - the Baden, bee proved iteelt the land of the most | ott eee Renonncieg tb tthe kenperot of Itas: bern pleord without any further abatement ig | operations. A very limited business is doing both im ratruct on of the frail life of the great Popa tens Ut te sald that the Grand Duce of Baten intends to | Sut! ana bloody epirit, at once the Monto lae eee ee eee eee ty the ee keeping of the Han. beemeubmitted to; but ao languid was the inquiry, | coeds a nd parse Some fagat is prevalent, but it Is “Tebel Aer” Leake Kesraih, whe Bes kindled US | sacicete in hover of his sesend sen, Cree Cesmoay abd Avcirie the friends of rational | i*tien ava Polish refogees by the Porte until they gam bei on shustmornieg, tant Wt may | sce to averted the tneinatone pred wiong with branches of trees, rematne of agricul. tural imp ements, and straw, to cometroet roots As | fr windows, they are not to be thougbt of; but how