The New York Herald Newspaper, February 27, 1850, Page 3

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from Switzeriaad, @he Great Inundatilon the Rnenish Pro- Insurrection in Wallachia. mot There alist entertain of i Miscelianceus, copesequeace of the ¢ 2) vinses, from tinople, dated the 12th Jan., it, that fon r~4 Geua vores Opprraen We have Tecens Austria to masch into Switserland, im ‘Two German now non-ar- Pm areas in arms | bi beg the , and of . without | ly > by Mr. Walle, of the firm of Popwe- Telugees no! jtumists, | nval is to be to the of all Ssuder Roslin, bat Gas, chase aguisst Austnans. 1 ith ‘most ‘welcome | well & Walls, of Lime street, with the ofa remonatrances made to be Ciekanlentvon ta cueapaiined et tht arent inten The wi Transylvania was said to be on the re), and with of gratitude I ac- | remarkable specimen of old from California, ply separ the other atart Senrend ig = 2 pare ete — ee ~~ Insurzaction. Konsvth pele Tefugees faowledge x. Fhe people of the States are, per- | Which hee, Kean ; segethes with ether jew passed rope. igium |. Two-thu expect ssa jollowing week. world, most industrious, emailer average sized to those to England, and ihe pte ‘We must, for our own part, confers | “ex. | the cit) are under water. A letter from jeneral Guyon, who, in September, 1849, had and scientific, but, above all, they - eer, by Mr Cross, of Va! iso, tnto wheas F refugees will withdraw from Switzer- | tremes produce extremes,” 90 fanaticism of faction | Liége of ihe 4th inst., says:— to Lord Ponsonby respecting his | from the extreme south to the most northern point, eame direct from that auriferous re- ‘land either through Germany or France. om the one side ws sure to seperate fh aly ‘ aight tholnuadatlenehave ssamed children. ond had never received any an- | an immense tract of land stretches, varied in cli- | gion. ‘The weight of the principal specimen (6ib, The Débats has the following on the Swiss ques- ultra fanaticisin on the o~, fore signifi- —_—_ te ‘of the olty are fo paw i gree ct or indirect, from his lordship, has at | mate and 1 opposite in mapy points, yet they are uni- . and }), ite close approximation to ab- \t0n:— cant event occurred, — ad been, to those who bs od, eam Lig wae neeen Sigihed with vo length received intelligence respecting them trom | ted, and all sink minor ditierences for the honor of jute ity, its peculiar form and fantastic ap- “Tt appears to us rmportant te point out clearly | !ooked narrowly at the pol aa of | fearful an low, It surpasses the great inunde. | © ¢ Foreign Office. ae star-spangled banner (loud and continued cheer- | pearance, jusuly us in pronouncing it to be the the terms and the limuts in which the question of | Ft society, other, though more obscure, indi- | tion of 1740, The waters of the Meuse, swollen by hose Prince Schwertzenberg, he is. informed, had I wish my countrymen learned a lesson from | most intereoung and striking specimen which has the re! in Switzerland should be laid down, | Calions of the spread of “communist” or ‘social. | of the Embléve, the Ourthe.and the Veedre, rose above | Written two letters, stating in one that Countess | this, and sinking, for the benefit of their common | as yet ‘urope. Indeed, ‘it 1 confidently ‘The which Prussia, Austria, Piedmont, | '* feelings amongst the worki: the watermarks of 1816. The churches are full of wa- | Guyon and herchildren had beentaken to Presburg, | country, differences which have hitherto created a | asserted to be the mass of the precious \France, and, in a word, ull the States contiguoua to | Ve smongst the troops. ni ident, for | ter axd divine service fr eno Ln: ply in the | where the government provided for their subsis- | chasm of separation, now endeavor to span that | meta! which has as yet discovered by the ad- Switzerland, have to'demand from the federal | Some time, that the party of General Gavaignac | stnecta te tare, Feeouriue, Inve the eppesrance of a | (euce and the education of her children, as she | chasm with a perviousroad, end unitefor the honor | Venturers im the diggings; and we have reason te tthe removal of the retugees who con- | Wi! Teen OSS a York Weekly | vi Scing torrent. Plage of alstress and igual gens are | 22 'otally destitute. ‘ , and happiness of old Ireland (repeated cheering). | believe that it was purchased by Mr, Cross ue against the repose and the security classes as “rational republicans” —feeling contisnally heard, and the moss tercible dlsastere are | , Not only the estates of Guyon and of his lady | In that country you have few milfionair ij | at a cost ef nearly double its instrinsie va- the coun county puede ae BY | exien,conthaung the weil whim ih hme | neiah Senet ekg ane hata | my, bt ag ened a her fd eeaoseed,|einsncercc ng of eanesd ee la ealaty tp Siemens i . 7 . t ul men ve ‘4 jet ally,t ea! disparity weaith an verty. m account of its un; ty at 18 not, we the fe ican considers to be, without their in! - | beats bad not them from the roof of the build. | and after this Prince wartzenberg boasts of her | you cannot find in juxtaposition the palace, with With the causes which have ope! te pad ewer fomeniy nated wey eae rican editor pg ‘ one ; ncry at meaee Perished ip rade ‘Soh sal ire ben ‘pH a owe poverty. iP! purity “ , 2 . g- A Marechal de Logis, with five men, endeavored | being supported by the liberality of government ; | ‘iis luxuries which realize the fable of the Arabian | retard its presentation to that illustrious lady, we and even this, on his own evidence, turns out to | tales, and the hovel of the starveling, such as you | fe not acquainted ; but we feel confident be a falsehood, as in a second letter he admits that | find ‘here. No. Wealth there has an cquitable | 1t would form an invaluable and almost, he does not know where Countess Guyon and her | distribution, and the people who enjoy it feel that | «ddition to the stores already amassed in the mi- children are, but must write to Haynau to ascer- | they are men, and under this feeling exercise the | neralogical department of the British Museum. At 2 attnbutes of men. (Loud cheers.) Farther, my | present, we believe that the fate of this “illustrious Prusala friends, the Me nib tuarecteal. 5 i none cienger! in waremnes 1, but Fad tape ee a ominati i 7 staying at the hospitable use the v. r. oubt thal ove who feel an interest in such mat epee wy ctery tp teeny i noe [se speeey <_ oo nape bd i tied nag Conway, whe resides about sixteen miles outside | ters may, inthe mean time, gratify their curiosity Soon” neat rans! righ | Set race et ey inte end geal Theyre four in number, ot, one fr every 100000 | Sheet? "wan shown Ks alan the werk of iis | fice, while thee whe have’ hesitated to ret ! oes = ey ri ; J ; ait is to teat character, we think, it should be | YP°2 aoe sone allies to 4 Da hoe — ame ie the My gee irletsy te ae first, M. Von ced sy Read own hand, and, | can assure you, the delineation | the stories from the diggings, jot fail to be ‘confined. question is for the powers to in- | tome of oe aD. mont -¥5 Obtare for their | t¥©. incbes ‘ tary of State, was elected by 128 votes; in the se- | W88 #8 perfect as if iseued from the Irish ordaagce orp eoneanens, by the testimony taeaponss eres ferfere im aflare which concern them and which | }'Versted countrys cheep and practically free go. | ‘WeBty-seven feet ten inches. The water is five and cond, Count Brandenburgh was chosen by 122 | fice. (Hear, hear.) Perhaps you recollect my He te heyy ong ong elet Nemes ae jafleet the relations of the confederation with the | ¥ rat, under which, ff there be inequalitiesrof | 1%, {eet deep im some of the street. At noom the | votes; in the third, M. Von Manteuffel was nomi- | T*bellious letter, dated trom New Orleans. Thad | banks in| the Californian lottery, and however States. But that wall. As to what onditi ent, re peayin eq) of waters were twenty-nine feet inches. Onthe | nated by 182 against M. Von Gagern, who only | & object, and, I trust, a legitimate one, in writing | *tartling the adveniures in that region, there cer- maternal affaire of Switzerland, the | Codition, there need not be any extremes of want | 24, the bridge at Emmerich was received the slender support of 3; and in the fourth | #4 but, ag T have alluded to it, I must mention the | tainly 2re some prizes well worth the risk of seek- of the government which any Sertonlar on the one hand, or of m y on, the ether. A privaie letter says :— district, M. Von Bodelechwingh was elected by | Dames of those of the Catholic church, dignitaries | 1ng.—London Times, Jan. 30. ages ton may choose to give iteclt, the which |, it1# quite cies, shek eames a ioe hunday last the most, alarming reports were tn | 159 voice, ‘The election of the last is the more | Of that church, and some of its brightest oma | Aannican Ivrotetance —Last week, in, Liver- feets, produced 7 pceived | y be made in any particular constitution—in a » a An Ratt Seieiue danoend Varsaan wine over | remarkable, as he was under what has been hi- | ™¢Pts, From these I receiv reonally every | pool, « man, named Stofort, was plaeed at the bar, ‘what may concern the use which the Swiss eine The teen lensing aly cone Fyn gee pads yo gtemnd bog pe Hida ©. well | therto a kind of proseription—he was a Minister | C°sideration (hear, bear), ands in aid of my | onthe complaint of Mr. Parkinson, a publican, may think proper to make of its sovereignty, rniclous: and that, in return, the royalists are | #2 ee¥eral smaller ones. On examination, this proved | “ before the of March.” It is yet uncertain miveion, every assistance which they could afford. | who suid that on Sunday evening there were a does not concern us, and we have no right to | 2°! wd a lee’ thesis etahet 16 pis f to be incorrec’, the land arches only of gall bridge whether he accept the nomination. Bulow, | (Cheers) With deep gratitude 1 allude to lus | number of captains and mates of Ameriean vessels into the affairs of an independent and sovereign a ma grag og tae a ievetae. though wot | St CRénce having been destroyed. The rdfway Bes, | Mantevffel, and eaedeahourgh ave already dome grace the Archbishop of Saint Louis, ‘A lion of | in his house. In @ back room there was a black \people, any more than they have to look into ours.” impulse seottnatiin eee pt oa aoe however, eusiained great damage for s considerable | 50, Jt is most probable that some or all of the | "te fold of Judah,” and to his exemplary brother, | mun sitting quietly with his friends. The prisoner » aeighbora— it, amongst the most d ies of verament of Switzerland. The States owe re- eee liberty. In this ‘mode o viowing the toatter, al respect to the eommon rights of all. We which is universally the mode Bae ane Pe nee es ang ae i i i eB in, “ nlf. x ex lofection. ge coun France, forced on by the iafluence of this fermmear- do it, 1t is incontestible that the powers whose | "8 political hot bed which France now is; but we cannot wonder at it; and our only hope is, that jecourly recy wi — Cd je General Cavaignac and his friends, many of whom Y m v @istance, is ie still under water. The communication i, ‘ the Right Rev. Dr. Kendrick, Bishop of Phila | intimated to some of the mates and others around [From the London Times, Feb. 1.] munists.” This is as evident as the sun at noon. | by traineis interrupted, and will remain so for some | Berlin representatives have been also elected in | get nie maa’ : ‘The Swiss Confederation had about three years | The revolution of February, 1843, was really | daye. Passengers, baggage, and light goods are, how. | ‘be provinces. pative of the actrees wap cena gee ee See Same ek eee ee ee unenviable distinction ot taking the lead | caused by the extravagance and open corruption of | ev convesed by the common road to Verviers, be- | _ {t was officially announced in both Chambers that pious Sad chortle. Bishi Several pee (Americans) went into the room, yo the railway is in perfect order. The dis- | the King would take the oath to the constitution ; re, M e in paareletionsry To egm | A yaett an ines jaqete Phila dnesh bos sy A i rcemure, ae gad vege pate lly Ms poy Satay. 12 ox. | du the Ov 08 Webeunty.* ‘Thi communication’ wes Hight Rev. De. OCounor. ‘rou oneese) The | The landlord advised him to Go» 20 thathe salghs jecwe na i mp doctand Ot | given for labor’ ond the absence of noor lnvecin | Petienced. ‘Transit goods wilt ieee tansel is ° | made by Count Braodenburgh, the Preadent of | Right Kev. Dre. Loras and Wallet paid me every | receive no personal violence. A general fight 1 igre tong. again pane The Pye otto oo ey tate pipers pena xe | fame manner. The letters arrive regularly. The au- | the Ministry; he stated that since the vote of the Sinton, and, if I Bay be, allowed to address | «quabble then took place, and quae and jugs reed me faa pe te Pre ety # Aart min ik gall carant sven tha poe rns So apiece Seeczve the highest eres a maremil- Chambers on the royal arti the King had em- ia = valued friends, 1 thank them, and you | were thrown about. One of the : iden, Lombardy and Venice. which have ended in | the so-called “republicans” been of what the The town of Li wang ni Sberhood have oulere4 powered him to read the following message:— pill thenk them, for they are the friends and | “fired” at Mr, Parkineon, end wounded him ie ‘the defeat and exile of the revolutionary leaders, | American editors call the rational” sort. Had immensely the waters of eee having oteal ined a | “We, Frederick William, by the grace of God, King Trace Can arog esiryioae, (Lae | the teed. Bee Mate seer aaa ‘has naturally been to drive these formidable fugi- | they eschewed all the monstrous chimeras of grcater height than they have been known to do since | of Prusals, &e., have perceived with eatiefuation, from sheers.) TRISEA, One 96 (Be. leet, aot oes 1a | name was Brown, and that he made hus ving by “ae - Ci . , : ap eli, 5 . tives into Lodi ad aor. san = canary of eee can eeair cen mee rie accounts from the other cities of the Rhe- that thearees so Fcpthce bere oneetee’ won =e Rev. Dr. Dollard, Bishop ot St. John, | the disturbance “argos from the prepeaine Pe plied en py ames el aoe andnes cles theevils of ve peed ainich nish provinces are of a simular deecription. pro} for the revision of tho constitution. With | N. B. you should have seen this good bishop in | tained in the United States against blacks. Rn peat o tr means f The fede a had th try Fespeot to the propositicn relating to entails, we regret | 1817, when the tide of immigration set in 80 much | conduet could not be tolerated in England. Fimed con ions m0 phon: ak re oo ces re - 3 iathla caerens ie ae Ss Quen. set Hae: Turkey. thet such an by ar car Bh Ee el 4 ‘owmde thas halen’ and Runesedey pe sa, but | £5, or 42 days imprisonment.— Laver; y ject in fe dence of’ the ; had they In- | In consequence of the preseat peaceable aspect | the draught of the conetitucion, preserve the vested | its chore” Vou thould have geen thie of Pittsburg, the | and the man was ejected with some violence. | ir country, have shown conside- | reduced them to a manageable A nc ’ J ould have seen thi bisho; Brey Shipley & Ce’s Circular, anxiety to comp!: ith the of i. i moderate of Orientel politics, the Turkish Sultan is reported | rights of the parties interested, as well as t the te fai ond etaan f oe oomaihl Pe} yw, vy ‘. iedaal aelanbertag powers, paocmpes pet oe fs ero rece th ub Fone shea to have disbanded a considerable number of his | pr consonant with the future Rion of | #hd his tuithful clergy reuceriog in every possivle | Livknroor, Feb 8, 1860. h 4 " way succor and comfort to three ve and | Ovr cottom market exhibited no material cha: federation of its unscrupulous guests. But if the | have gone on well. Unfortunately, those most | ‘ops. 4 be ey oO dedwadsi 6 as Bed emigrants. You should have sere fim | during the week eucceediiy the ’ leral government deserves to be respected for its | active, overlooked everything practical; and phan- | Count Sturmer, the Austrian Interauncio, bas | sityttow issued on the bth cf December 1848, ae now | at (his good work, in order fully to value the cha- | ®tamer, but the arrival of the Cau and ton, those qualities ure but little | tagies the most pernicious, or what the present | demanded that. the refugees should bo placed completed, having carried into cffeot the additions aud racter of the man. (Hear, hear) Gentlemen, one | of the éth en een " Caeape ‘amongst the radical governments of the | President drolly calls * ‘gandes pensees” were | under the surveillance of the Austrian Consul and | giterations agreed on in common by both chambers, | name more, the Rt. Rev. Dr. Walsh. (Cheers.) | % ea Tig Mabe Ape eM prado eral cantons years eprung into existence | at once the order of the day. There was | Turkish authorities at Kutaia, whether they should | and bave ordered them to be pubiished in the celleo’ | Why, by that hearty cheer you seem intuilively to}, a ort) r bout Jd. pox lb, The demand ba of the Seaderbund and the | to be a community in land; the poor were | all re which demand the Porte formally re- | tion of the laws. know this most excellent Prelate. His virtues and | settiged nk. fet} line became apparent, munation of the civil war. ope rich b: fending each other paper money; cied. The Count also wishes the surveillance to | “Acoording tothe last artiole of the constitution, we | hig good acts, I am glad to f id, have rade ‘his pe exp tg! verer, the market aectag heavily et and the words “egahté” and “ fratermteé’ for life; the Porte, however, thinks five years oe otc omega llwed name conspicuous, and in this remote district ihe | { our last ciroular, say. fatr 0: most important Swiss towns are be- | were to stand in the place of bread, beef, and | sufficient. The result 1s, that the Count hi eat seats of powerful foreign associations; | clothes, which the por really wanted, but which, to his government for further ‘instructions. houses Wee tiie eeietin oot the secret societies which ad | “Communiem” will never give them, because, Zei len ith Ljona-on the one aide, end with Soutnern | though + nian” se really 0 flow riahing theory The Breslaver Zeitwng has letters trom Vienna | (th of February, and hereby ot iife, 1s and Mobiies, jddting 65 nexpected, and to many unsocountabie, cotton on receipt of agcounts from Ame ening to holders, been @ source of Jearned, pious, and charitable Bishop is known y many—at least hie good works are Kuown, and bis amon the Chambers to | name is honored (hear, bear). Honor and glory of the 18th, announcing the decease of Gen. Bem, | meet for that purpose,et our Palace at Berlin, at eleven | to him—(loud cheers)—and while God leaves me crive the oaths of eur Ministzy and the de La} i we believe, abundant evidence that the that i ; becoming more many on the other, owe the strength which | for eupplying to all the common comforts st} who fought im 1348 in Vienna, and in 1849 in Hun- | °’elock tn the morning. life I will not cease to pray for the Bishop of Ha- | ayparent that thie deplecsten mace be oatetyaatenetes Hbay tare saa gy ie Sesnneneets tion of | 4, Me manne. Xt takes, 0 tauch at war with th ry. Tteppears from letters from Systow, of the |» cerctt J “FREDERICK WILLIAM. | hifax (repeated cheers). I have said so much, yet tite erent soduetion tn the, soumuaphaa aapend by reer Le: gg internal politics of Switzer- , of nature and of God, that it must at once instant, that General Bem died suddenly, and, arlottenburg, January 31.’ . not more than what I conscientiously believe to | enbenerd prices, aud the wevifested determination om nd used to d, until the late civil war, | fail in its end. Such wae the case here The | }; ig asserted, from poison. This news, of course, The document iscountersigned by ull the Minis- | be true of Amenca, that you will probably be sur- | the part of epinners to confine their purchases to their with less interest they. deserve; but it can | very echo of the Socialist doctrines, held by the | requires conti:mation; for amce Gen. Bem is | ters. The clese of the firet great stage of the | priced to hear me say that ] am decidedly opposed | immediate requirements. Sales for the woo ist eecape even a superficial observer, that her | man whe had demolished the corrupt system of | known to have protested that he was doomed to | Prussian constitutional struggle is now near at | to emigraion. Well, lum. You. will say this ig | Meteut, 23820 bales, of which speculators ‘3 ecmbaiend s and beat & form, | Louis Philippe and his utterly hap ose ministers | die in the year Bo. nothing 18 more likely but | hand. q A ’ strange; you will usk why the Irish, eo wretched | *"d lien waar eS ee give to tzer! @ very important natural in- | Guizot, alarmed all France. In that country the | that some of the Sclavonian newsmukers have at- Since the arrival of M. de Persigny, as Minister | and nuserable, should not improve their social and | ey on speculation, and 1,790 uence over the adjacent coumtries; and the neu- | land is too much divided, perhans, ; | tempted to emuse the world with a fictitious report ofthe French republic, there have been various peoenler position by emigrating to such a fruitful | American desoriptions rold this trality of her terntory, which is one of the funda- | There are three miltions of persons ull owners of | of his death. The detaile of the alleged death of | Temors in circulation of a supposed scheme of an | Jand, end living among such & presperous people. | et 6% @ 744; 19200 Orleans at 63 menial conditions of peace and security in Europe, | property in France, mostly having wives andwhil- | General Bem are, that the Porte, having entered | Ofiensive and defensive treaty between France and | My fnends, let me tell you, the sil, comparat | avd Alabama at 64¢ 27; and 420 Soa becomes a word of derision and reproach when | dren, or relatives. France cannot be eaid to be a iot@ an engagement not to employ him in military | Prussia, by which they are to be bound to render | epeaking, is not fruitful. The agricultural ald perlb. The total atock of cotton , | |this citadel of freedom and indepe is used | commercial country. The influence of these three | ¢-. ice, found it too onerous to pay the General a | each other mutual countenance and support in the | ducts of the § ite of Maseachusetts would aot pid ep beret romp agra gre year. by anest of fugitives to direct their attacks aod millions iw he og coonints they ho! ; ~ large salary which they hed promised him, and | political projects they are supposed to entertain. support its population for one mouth. The people | Th! (of Americas te ee a ) against [my en ge on an ———— be tc! pe we fu x e = bi were. he oh that the Sultan’s misters thought proper to re- er of that State know it, and how under such cit- | “"7),< corm market continues in the same dull state, v mn for ages at amity wi confede- | posed to join those who would have fou ® | move the burden by despatching the annuitant. Th 4 jerdinin. ise cumstances do they ucit Why, they turn to ma- | gut without much change in prices, Indiae corm is ta ae cheup and free government, taking as a model the | ‘The Hunganan and Polish refugees were to be e Piedmontese Senate has passed a law au | pufaciures; and Lowell, as a manufacturiag loca | quoted at 28a. 023 Od. per quarter of 480 lbs , for Under these circumstances, Austria and Prussia | general government of the American United i i thorising foreigners to purchase landed property im | |jty, stand -eminently forward, and if it has | wized amd yellow. and She, fo mite “In- yr mad pdeoneny to the tederal government their tes; but to all chance of this ‘‘ Socialism” tran sported to Asia oa the 12th instant. the dominions. not already’ thrown. the most “bouted mechs ot dian ‘mosh, 14s. pet ba old "Wastten qumnt flow, \formal demand for theexpulsion of the revol put anend. Three mulions ot landowners, with = Englend into the shade, it will soon do so (hear, ore, $44.; Ohi New Hungary. lary refugees, who continue to agitate on all sid their relatives, will never submit to a confiscation The difficulties of Auatta mcregsé on ¢ side. a _ India, — hear). I wish to correct an error which, through jof them; and this demand is accompanied with a | of Property under any theory, however well! The last news brings notice of serious distur-| Im India, the Rajah of Sikkim has released Drs. | 9 misreport of my speech at Castietown-roche, Sis oa ger beret Wheak.ie 44 er 10 tba. clear intimation that these powers are prepared to | meant consequence was, seeing that the | bancee in Dalmatia. In Cattaro and the neighbor- | Compbell and Hooker. In the Eusofzee country, | the newspepers fell into. 1 was reported to have | 724,00 hrs ba Turpentine since the 25th ies a support it by all the means required to obtain that | reelly high-minded and retional General Cavaignac | hood, the inhabitants have refused to pay the new- | @ mountainous district forming a part of Afighan- | spoken of Louisville, as u district celebrated for its | 9.099 barrels at Te 6d. per owt , with little remataing in mall minority, they | ly imposed taxes, and 6,000 men, with several | istan, a British force, commanded by Colonel | manufactures. Ilad! said this, I would have ex- | fret ben prompt and complete satisfacuon which they | was et that moment in few retail sales of rosim hare bee je that their own security requires. We have | joined the royalist factions, voted for the nephew | rocket batteries, have been sent to persuade them | Bradshaw, has been engaged in a conflict with | hibited nn ignorance which might weil be scoffi-d | at 59.44. 0 aa piling ‘ vi os uae C reavon to believe, from various authentic sources | of the Emperor Napoleon as President of a free | to obey. “On the Ith (says the Gazetta dt Zara) | about 2,000 natives, who had refused to pay their | or laughed at, but which, from my experience as a —— of information, that the German powers re jely republic, and returned a royalist Chamber ot Re-| the war steamboate, Custozza and Curatone ar- | annualtributc. After defeating them, the troops | wanderer in thet counuy, | could not have fallen Marsets. Prepared to through this policy; and, indeed, prepentanives to help him to carry on the work of | rived at Zare, with a battalion of the Hess regi- | were to some villages belongiag to ano- | into—(hear, hear.) But to the subject of emigra- joe wr pe aed a the enormous and increasing magnitude of the | freedom end amelioration of the people's condi- | ment of foot on board, and after having taken from | ther refractory tribe, where various acts of burning | tion end my reason for opposing it. Gentlemen, | market hes uniformly exh! forces they have now under urme, raises a strong tuon! here a second battalion of Vagers, sailed for Cat- ction were performed after the enemy | those who some 6 or 7 years ago emigrated, pos- | }y;'}8 ‘aniiy done ond prices ef off deoksipitonn, f —- probability that the partisans of the fevolution wi Nothing could come out of euch a compound of | taro, where a fictilla of severe! ships of war end | had been defeated. Is this the progress of civili- | sessed of some resources, are now, | am happy to tion cf Surate, wbich are heavy of sale Y Rs not be left to reguia their former strength in this, | monstrosities but that which we now sorrowfully | two steamers will be atationed. General Mamula | zation? And will avy correct account of these | eay, somewhat comfortable, and probably in the quotations, have been firmly suppoiteds ir lawt continental reweat. The federal govern- | contemplate. Instead of a reduction of taxes, the | is in command of the expedition.” In Vukovar a | proceedings be furnished to Parliament? course of time will be independent, Bat the emi- ay and to dey, it bas been dificult todo ment, alarmed by these requisitions, and unable | burthens ot France are now heavier than under | disturbance took place on the 10th between the | |The attempt to improve the state of the law at | pration of the last few years has been character- | quite ss well in Ameriosn descriptions as in tbe earig either to deny the existense of the evil, er to re- | the corrupt, and at last reckless, Lous Philippe. | soldiers and people, during which the latter were | Calcutta, by rendering all Europeans amenable to | ized by fearful and deplorable disasters. The ma- | Part of the The sales amount to bates move it—unwilling to resist and powerless to obey | Instead of being reduced, the debt at first aed | fired on. The eivil chief, Stoichevich, has tound | the criminal courts of the Enst India Company, has | jority of the ermgrants were penniless, and sogreat | Cf which 11570 American 200 reroams. —hasaddressed iwelf wo the French cabinet, to | ov France by foreigners es a punishment, and aug- | jt necessary to send for additional military force resulted in an canaries ainet the Frooost by | was the multitude that crowded the seaboard, that | £0" 8y 970 Surat have been teken kuow what course Louie Napoleon would be dis- | mnted by Bourbons in succession, have | from Esseg. The Sild-Slavische Zeutwng, an anu- | many of the inhabitants. Madras is sutlering from | scenes most painful and distressing occurred.— Re posed to adopt, ju the event of an invamon of the | still further increased. In consequence, ‘opo | Magyar paper, writes from Esseg: “ Although | dreught, and Bombay has been visited by an earth- | Last winter, I have known myself one thousand | warket bas been 4 | rights or the territory of the confederation. On the | sals for poor laws in France are shelved; and their | there is no truth in the reports of conspiracies, or | quake. females, Irish girls, whore services could be ob- | baie, 2000 to 3000 cf which are for apecuistion. . other side, the German goveraments, anxious to | finances are in itretrievable confusion. France is | that an army of 80,000 men are in arms againat — tained for the most trifling remuneration, and thia 5 . 403 1849, 415,600 baie | identify the policy of the French President with | powerless a road, and distressed at home, in spite | the government, it is impossible to deny the great An Isish Priest's Opinion of the United | very circumstance exhibits a phase in emigration 7 their own, and to divest their intended course of | of one of the finest harvests on record; and s0- | discontent that is prevalent among the people.” ates which supports me. Inshwomen in America have | . 4 js [Prom the Cork Reporter, Feb. 1.) ji i H t 4 who are thorou, ft ite 7 5 * 5 shen 5 But fort ‘ "sa.s 10m o are distractin i lest year such bas been the superabundant supp! * tes ; - and the pevernment arbitrary and mean. Letters Fes y pe PP'V> | Osea. 84; 120 West Indies, 54d. OM 4.; 3,050 Saray pessiog Goroegh the post office are opened, pried Faby C gpnn e ee maares Ny that the fact isas I bave represented. The emi- | 41.4 540 nto, end sealed again, us usual, on plea of reasons | erg decked from every quarter, to greet theit wor- Sec tit ot end diss Cheah ae Comranariva Pes | under the notice of the head of the Freach republic | their country; by the absurdities | no a Fern ones 18, wre tee Se yp fs Oe et re the petty yey me St. Thiers | most \deheate end imtneate which he has yet and the ‘Or! an isis;”” au y the stupid bigotries tate—the ordinary anok elere for anv ty e to determine. The neutrality and tadope jence of of “Lemtinusts, ” who want to sot se the ee y= oo eee. Ls. be ore for ang Ay Flaedtaes, deen # werner pron ml ca labor, n ust frequently wadergo a change et a5 Ghee Switzerlan oe ee a jelence oo no | night of kings to govern wrong ia the nine! hex complained to the government on the subject. a public re ae aad a p mane on heats: of bam } ime, rom 1k to in hye age ils | State is more eg toe t ma ng 9 and no aan omer. Seanbhe quisstese Went Gis taintien state Wit The reign of terror and deepotism still continues | was announced for Sunday night. u ery ee pane iq oy wi ile ia Foes more boun oe Louis Napoicon. 0] ve ase St ae te of | in ‘Avs ‘The celebrated poet, Saphir, attempted, The severend geatiemens tuscicn to Americe, 5‘ the Be cn ave = sul ect ¥ ¥ e evil of | most the ae Cane, when a treatiereet the con- Tong Gs get our high spirited | 4 few dayn ngo, to deliver a comic lecture, but was | whither he had been depwred in the autumn of | CPS Gress mies, ia th warenest I have expe- federation were — jostle armies, he him- i nn Nad ‘will ug! a, oo Ay u prohibited from not only giving any writtea lecture | 1447, by the Right Rev, Dr. I:gan, to collect funds eg ed the ™ jem — the cliume (hear, hear.)— self wre Be fugitive at 4 ne whose N. w ae ag rh she tm pepe ore that had not previously undergone a supervision | towards forwarding the ‘completion of the moat ut, my frien ie, my re and omy rs | ar a seerBel pa Cccosading, tod when Toes petasiote ot | prove talent than. hhaafed to him, he eould | {rom General Welden, but from speaking a single | splendid building which man, in this country, has | strength of ireland, jhe bold peasantry of Iretand icesdeaes wes we wed pa flag. gtd hardl y form © tolerable tout of the | Sentence extemporaneously. Such is the freedom | ag yet dedicated to Catholic worehip—the Riliar- | Sense nd to Laine Heed piosere.) bus dicaned'tpeee eb aan inde pendence was menaced in his person, the peo- a Porcine hte ger die aaa a t prea | of speech enjoyed by the subjects, or rather vassals, | ney Cathedral—has been singularly successful. Pre hey ni + irene Clow di atone J ef am fie Te veatso ainda oa connection with Switzerland, and bis personal at | nation of French political elements must take Servia, r re banettadie ote en heer MS whom God loveth he chasteneth,” and we ave Se a oe tachment to General Dufaur, must tead materially | place, and that, if the republican leaders can agree | Matters have come to that pass in Servia, that aol Coutts aun the ont o> ite he | been ehastened eorely with famine and pest: er tog gh. to merease the reluctance of Louis Napoleoa to | upon sny common ground of actioa, they must ul- | drumhead court martial (standreckt) has been pro- | OY ty oo ee pilgrim traveller also visit’ | but euch is my confidence in God, that ere long ‘he = assume an appearnace of hostility towards that | timately govern the country. To do this, they | claimed. The difference between standrecht and | f° Ju mont nortier regio mn sun of our prosperity willrise, and the clond of af- | berely’ ccmmard an advance of Sa. per Ib, Tale country. But, on the other nand, the radical party | must, however, have the holders of real property | x» iegarecht is, that the former dispenses even with | Syn “und wherever i wan likely tc realne a ahi, | Uiction which now darkens like an Egyptian | suddrn and anomalous change im the tone of the mar- in the cantous hus carried to the last excesses that | en their ride, and practical ameliorations must su- | the little ceremony observed in martial law, as | f7P» 4Mé new g mp Bef od) plegue our land, from one quarter tothe other, will | ket p due confidence deing given to tbe \weri- power which it seized by the fore:ble and arbitrary | persede fantastical theories. the common duration of a trial by sandrecht is | Pd. Be penetrated, appealing to the gemerous #1 give way to a bright and cheering light—(applause sccounte in Ma uesday, and bast- measures of 1547. Of all the neighboring couatries The Kiecetrt Telegraph In Paris, three minutes, anda corporal 1s made master of en Cent geen henge raed none ure more actively menserd thao France, and The Journal des Débats contains the followi life and death, death sentences being executed in- i treme \. r ‘ a. rt sponded to, but more so from the naturalized I jn extremely rai tha wit be Rvodied ta Fp mgr ed = Reg I bed pone 4 _ fie Rap oe (iom those who sought ‘and found & home in | —< Ge meee | ae at See. pT ncn og TR Lg from Temesvar shows that great excitement ex- | Metpitable country. | which cach hy inte: som could a ba ay | amen 8 orton one es, the of winch he ea. lg § yom pn ky, hed fom tm (hear, heer,) but I recollected « timated at ~ The committee appointed to | PY 4 f the Rev. Mr. O'C ved thie me: ° fied, is ecarcely distinguishable from U n which | examine the project vn addition tothe | General Mayerhofier, the governor of the Woy- Sitagueatned ie jon Se tac ccalahe tela te who managed this meeting laid the expedition to Rome was undertak: i ; wed has just pot an end to the existence of the | [" litical topics were to be exeinded. * * * * * rm France is here infinitely nearer and abave line, the esta at of tour otnenavis. sion goverement 2 8 somewhat summary | Celie orator of your religion, who roamed tar dis- | * from Chalons-eur-Marn, Nevers, Chateauroux, and | Baton tant end 1 * * Well, my friends, I wes at no time ree danger r ‘3 ne! land, tor i) b greater. If ee ea hatel, irk. ster came manner, notwithstanding that it was recognized at | '#2' 4nd encountered the jerils of sea and land, maikeble for on exhibition of pr : She gw, crmcliy, odo her ony | nh tag beeen tmandcranding | Pinae ead had pried. assacsve | tgheens funn, oat tote ors | cece fviade and my aaron wn across iH ie, into orthera cantons, ng imate: come , on: ‘unetions during the whole of the Hungarian war. ong cael iJ people wou allow it; yet, if I had any, it was ane pon oy i —4 & Ay Me bere, “ Slonce, that » om of eat wend sulle ior He summoned before him the members of the go- an him toheupel thes dopo 9 cto, aad the oy be YT of wr a — usperdencele one Md beco . a i ven i i ; eer, bear: * Oy ‘ou th j prnire | confederation, it | the construction of the seven new lines. The re= ~ their president and patriarch, and jn return rece only his, but his fervent bless | gm w volly vid of it * he, yt ohet Lees | for ® day or two pe 1860, 604 470; 1800, all but impossible for France to - to quit thi rt Video remain inactive, difficult for her to act with the =. savestiee, cansed the reselt of his opleer hours “The Secretary of the ing. (Loud cheers.) le returns from America, | Jearned in America, look upon my noble lord only | 40*,1#¢ bales, The importe for the week ere 28 #56 from Conacseorpere d by the uneasy feeling attached to the with Greece, the demand for eotton slece bas daily very moderate, and . Ia American desoriptionsy, as the quotations of this day “sptien, he ed while | spoke ot effects to exp! The Cuarmman, on rising to propose the health e genl it down that po- Vienm allies, dangerous, in the highest degree, to act ; , ‘ ued t inga. grevtude in bis heart, and praise on his tongue, in; and only im the ight, and he | ¢ f 1 Egyptian; 14 Wort < inst them. : pate Ny histor ! sketch < prnem of C7 er et ae ee and have we not, my iriends, a nght—are we not caine way, the humblest of imy parishioners appears. | Selelistenes tir tra. Tipo lbonsa, 044.746 the interest of all parties ia the Swiss Confe- > sisee trans cog oh iin vy vv | fox the ‘Transyivania, beund to participate in his sentiments Not only “A wan 's aman for a’ that,’ | . 1.000 Marashae, deration, and of the general various systems and apparatus adopted for The news from Trepapivenis becomes, every | Of this occasion hae America benetited this coun- | Worth and merit are the distinguishing characte- | hope that the present state of affairs in that electrical telegraph. The committee having desired | 4,¥, more and more distressing. Klausenburg, | UY- (Cheers.) When famine sta try will not be thought to justify « vielelion of ite te escertain the sepldi with wpieh a cortenpen | pene the country round it, bork up to the tender | through the land, and slew thousands | Why dol epenk thus? To show you, my friends, ey ang inpepennencs, but that means will | Uyeriments to be made in A ee _ mercies of Colonel Urban, whose only idea of | ‘housends of our unfortunate countrymen, America eay ot i= should be so unfortunate as to think be by Swue ne to remove those greatect specd which was attained under their in- or ine has ‘mg obs = plentiful a by the tease ren r rit ded tare “Ss a Gouma to oe in the langue justly suspicions " , t it. epecti mtribu 5 ' try, ST comelinas of their neighbors. The condition yey te was 87 paras eee, but the reading | o¢ Sonal Gan are able lawyer, (a of this country, “ quality,” will enve you from the in 1547 | rstics of nobility m that country, (hear, hear)! RReSPOWDINe Leal ~ jately condemned to be ud cheers.) impendi in, it will Imitate the Ameri- | of Swi since the triumph of radical ascen- | {2¢™ became diffic tly evenimposel- | fogged in the market , for hi concealed | ‘The Rev. B. O'Connor rose, and as soon as the side all pride, K id dane? atly deplorabie without the admix- a boy a) ne Secon Lay eis ber Soe Jaw, who had served ry ‘an Ciloer in the Soe applause—applause often repeated, 5 eotengation. i have kno’ mer- ture element of foreign discord. More | jetiors Me tae oy 4 at is rete, Hupgarien army. As the poor womem was led | %"d Te-echoed by the crowd outmde—as soon as t a were over £2,000 yearly, wise than ther: per _ committee is convinced | fort), the took dowa the portrait of Kossuth from 8 applause subsided, spoke as follows:—Mr. home his evening dinner; | Soe! Jooterdag’s full pri 44. Ky: the well, ed it to her heart, and thus map, before I allude to the very kind and went on with the fitmness and dignity of “rq te | a j domestics would pay more sum which some of your aristecra- cop baer bed. ss eee Se wakes cy pay the irs Peete hear). Om your patience and | gprival of the 4 bere gone mane on your time I have trespassed (no, no). I am | rieily bigher The very advices fe a a Bot do permit me to vay one word of my ‘Bpen with she was eent to hard labor, in the common prison. in America (loud cheers). Wherever | Ling off #4 We leave our readers to guess the impression this | | bad much by land and sea to encounter in my whether im the crowded city, in the | Right, we will ge wp at coos oro scene must have made on a popul among | Peegtinations, and rejoicing in having escaped | open p the scarcely inhabited Tihlerness, | 2,800,000 beies, wit ee Oot oe, oe ern oe whom there ot a family, from the wealthiest | heee perils, he looked on me as “a Conquering | they showed’ themeelves [rishmen, by vo means relinquished. da | noble to the poorest burgher, where similar Hero. laughter.) 1 know no other reason | inrience, to the utmost of their mea contributed —o to suffer for the cause of her country. Fortan’ the regimental surgeon interfered, and d her too weak to bear the punishment, on which i ¢ Aer if crimes they are, have not been committed. why be thouid have liked that stirring air when | to che object of my mission. ‘They did not, in any } id ‘ Speiee i lowing | MY Name was toasted. H. takes, if he fancies | ings 1 Ae Pp ne RS a ye that Lever put on the red nckety Clangnter)—ihe | SSS Pe Ie git Hye A taxes j i use i we ace will, " tai r year, by a mejority of y votes. In conse. OTD Gey os be meapon Of peace a @ (tear, At tt o'clock, the Chairman and many of the | in the week from Fran areeee. poy a dispute in the, between M. | of extradition or tion: — od cheers.) Mr. Chairman, { was Sasde' os in A 3 a ‘owd sa eee eden nog. fugue thet, be ay =} fough sa iekioh Goasales "Brave wee phd ie Brake dowee ner! Contione it would be diMeult to ray. It ie understood z Lf b, and, the “The Brave Americans,” “ Father O' ceepted the mediation of Fremes Jou expect, vie ‘eima php bs Chairmen and Sir William.” ene witb Grecee | ame ce thie litte moster a8 be or ve it of tl jnence. x giand (« ®) But eure poseers t at which found | 45 pccownt, haem gy natin eed eh Vi ap. u the United States to be more acceptable—com- | “Ty for the week cutive ou Bacurday, the? ay of Fabeesey, scemesaaes Ener | ver em with fein which ‘vorda Will not ade. | Net tenes ately convey, return 5 . peat and esteemed fi l. eaeen bil, Rome. At Rome, Cernuechi, an advocate who acted a conspicuous part in the insurrection at Milan, in 1848, and who subsequently, as a deputy of the Roman Assembly, greatly, stimulated the people 19 o ermal City sauin the French, has been put upon his trial, a sulting the F: troops on their entrance it *, for the manne H Serna a naman Rs Se PS inet te } . \ for in you , 5 yetitie ont sate to quit the sountry, oe Deel Bee — — people of Gets ose 4. to a ger erkal outural. 04. pat remainder of the Spanish troops continue im tm to these dest ir nde titel Cnet oe ta chews re trom ot, Bartcy i ! rie’ around, who, oa a 64. cheaper, orders: inne, wo "3 hae been ment’s notice, essembled at this festive to and pene weather for two or three days wen te Sous oe fis Ss oun el seed ate Shae os ay ky ay Beigtam. fame received when introduced by the Chairman ‘value of any article to day, and the general texe The Belgian Chamber has just passed (loud cheers). Of course, you expect to hear from bef My a oe bet enck . pty . a ingen the ieoration Ghategs Gellinn oaet [tare 6 susoeen of pe i= Sa euee Sew. Tiers won noderate darnend Fl, comes inte operation on ernerally my reception was most Hattering (hear, | Datias paid tor home consmmpucn at Liverpost, tom

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