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[=THE- W YORK HERALD. ‘ » - NO. 5756. -- , ee Ae ARRIVAL OF THE CANADA. | D7 ise "ower to choese the hourot the battle they (ny On Souci. ne SurOPeR” | Keun propred. They are’ carting in every foray ot | Foatstasnnd Desieh plenagotentiaribe ce waloh srepty | inn Oras. Zhe ‘will set fire to the mine half-loaded, and if Europe is ‘The foreign news is singularly deflolent of interest. , that neither nor promise induce | was pant the propositions of Denmer! : details taken comechet, fen Pihis ees T UROP ws blown up by the explosion, their conquest will be in- In France there ts s perfect calm, and political ex- | them to abste an lote of their rights. And then, with | of which may be shortly expected. fore, but prices have not improve- HE E EAN NEWS. | siting. ine greatest hops ofthe soolalits and red re- | ltement has been superseded by sativity beth intra Sudsoity, they make the present’ heats italy. Mert. Malt bes been held with Tnareased firmness. Dobiisans i in Germany. |The majority are for thelr | and commerce are in partial opera | the oscossion of reviving claims which they have 100g | The Genoa Geseie of the lth states, from Florence, | The arrivals of oats have been Vory stall, oaly 3,600 ‘OUR FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE, | Seusis sex, wi rand Duchy of Ba. | tion for the forthcoming elections; ru ago tacitly relia They are actually pressing | thet 4000 new Austrian troope are shortly toenter | aM. Inclusive of 600 ars. from abroad, having come . » » Wurtemburg, Bohemia, andthe Rhenish Paris that another change in the ministry is contem- & law to compel the more extradi- | Tuscan; to hand from Saturday up to last night. The dealer: pitvinces. They have meny partisens in Bavaria, | plated; and discussions oooupy the attention of negroes who may take refuge on free soll. This | Th, Bis ione of Turin, of the 15th, states that the | have throvghout the 2 th &e., dics, ae. randebourg, andSilesds. In Hungary, the inhabitants | portion of the population, as to the mode in which the | surprising turn of the controversy appears, for a time, | Fre continue to fortify Civite Weed een the | neither on Monday net oo are waiting but the least signal to retake their arms, cannvenenty Sf @ republic shall be celebrated. These | to have paralyzed the Northern Maaferity, The mem- | side. to exceed previous prices. of home growth have ‘The steamship Cansds, Cept. Lang, arrived at this The imsurreotion will propagate from Dantzic to Tri form the {topics of public interest; and they are | bers from the tree States feel, probably, that they are "The! Nazionale of Florence states that on the 9th the | *0ld on much the eame terms as previous; tans ‘port, con, from Liverpoal and Halifax, | 0m Cologne to Dresden, as Games raging in the wild | all of eo harmless s character, that it would be wall for | sill divided into whlgs and deocents, wt tho tame | Cony aanls of Viceunee states thet on the oth the | Dove hung veryjeeavily ou hand’ Te pate ation of i the 234 prairies of the west of your country. There is no fear | France if nothing more serious, of a itieal nature, | time that they see such distinctions ig daily away | persons, crying F’iva la Republica ! (thee day being the | Much interest has occurred, ‘and quotations hater ee- @be sailed from the former port on Saturday about the forees of the amall States of Germany. To | ever ocoupied her attention. The ident of the Re- | from the ranks of « phalanx united incommon fear and | gnnj. the proclamation of the Roman repub- | ™sined unchanged. We heard of no sales of floating walt., and the latter port on Saturday, the 9th inst. Fo) against the demo-socialist party, there are but | public is to be playing his part with great | common hate. section seems afraid to move, lest | ic), and that, before the police and military force | ©4tg°ce of Indian corn. ‘The the Iatest quotations of American large armies of Prussia and A The frontiers xterity; giving sanction and ent to levees | its domestic rivals should take the opportunity of de- | cou), them, \denly een Lado gta hg a Grn Tromembngs | srtng theca ana sings etion ata | Sad some. When the nghecame, tan Con beng uti || ™h* Cones, of, Rropety. achaneee jogna, an jer rt 'V.; and, in the midst of all ob- w ® century might not hay ' muna, Feb. 15, 1850. Interent,| Redeemable , Prise, | mo, and very likely, f'the Fronch troops abandon the | sequions attention’ £0. the. babeste of the Caer; whose | ‘Tins South has managed to turround its catao,for the | led, with oltivens, soldiers and, sbirri: trioolored Ben | Amsterdam, . .2 months 88.02% stivers for 2p. is Age 2 | States of ee 3 may rely, also, upon Rome | minion he has unquestionably become. It is still » | time, with the indicia of popularity and strength; and | Stop the seditious fires, but the people prevented them. Paris.........3 “ 186% cents for 1 p. Apes: ioe | and ite legations. ples have invaded Pied- | problem, difficult of solution by the political philoso- | this,'n0 doubt, is the secret of the favor shown to | Some Irenoh oilisers ‘wore heerd to tay, “the Romans | London “ — yg.1os¢ } mares and shillings 4 mont ; and d would very Ulkely, in the event, | phers of the day, whether republicanism is to be estab- | Southern interests in Mr Clay's resolutions. ccbbeaan dine cambcamary of thane sapelite, * ' BY? % |e ncnco for 2 rg iss '96*= ‘gh | give help to the Sicilians, fished in France, or the empire is to be restored under | But although the comparative quiescence of the | °tlebrate the an Toscana publishes the foliowing letter | C%2°% “ 1.90 cents for 1 p. 1868-60 %- In France have, for;a central depot, the city of the dominion of Nicholas, Lng mw ary certainly attributable tm | from Rome, of the 10th instant :— Leghor = 2.25 Hire for 300 mares bameo. 1865 108 = L ‘nd with it the departments of the A¢th milite- | | From Italy, the Intelligence is more stirring. Aus | pagt to derations of party and political alliano Yesterday, at about a quarter to five, towards the end of | Y2 Panis, Feb. 21. t65-79 ¥ division, as well as several departments of thecentre, | tris is about to force her troops into Tusca: * the Pope | {t fs allowable to suppose that caloulations more pa- | the Corso, whici 4 nosezay of | Amseterdam..3 months 210 cents for 1 florim. 1386 7. 8 12 :—Le Cher, La Niévre, L’ A! and L’Alsace, and | is still unable to ascend throne ; are ex- | triotic, im a certain sense, have aided in cooling down | white camelias, as thrown | Hamburg, 4 18434 cents for 1 p, banco. }855 =—« 37 = 18S | lest, not least, Paris, where the socialists and their | pressed as to the conelusion of the long-talked-of loan; | their free-soil fervour of last autumn. There seem to | into the carrisg son of the | Londen, “ 2.3234 frs. and cts. for £1 et. 1863 10434- 105 | adherents have, for the movement, twelve thousand | an attempt has been made to murder the Prince Mu- | be some of them who now for the first time appreciate | Frince of Canino, orgemne the Vaisee Hevmal tne | Genes. “ 9834 cents for 1 lire nuova. 1870 44 45 | men of the ecoret societies; and this redoubtable pha: | signano, son of the Prince of Canino, ina public pro- | the magnitude of the sacrifice which is required of the | Pus teciue him in the carriage, bat who was fortunately eu | “@shorm - 83%; cents for 1 lire, 186 %- — | lenx—this et of the revolution—would soon | cession at Rome; and murderjof @ French soldier | South. One of many reasons for inferring that the in throwing. flowers to the porsous ocoupied tho Amarenvam, Feb. 19 1-70 a: 2 be angment d with the gang of those people, without | hes called forth proclamation from Ge present tactios of the slave interest have been dictated | falcony of the Palace Bernini; the refore waited | Paris... ...2 months 665-16 grotes for 3 franos. 1863 65- o | any @ fed by vice and idleness on | d’Hilliers. prohibiting the carrying of yy prudence rather than Ry ae by passion, is the | till she was done his hand wit! gay on histhich, | Hamburg. pod '% do. forl 1858-9-66 70- 72 | the paveme As you see, they will have | niards at Rome, on pain of beingdanot The eminent clearness with which its or, in the | When sudtenly t) burst. The prinoo was severcly | London.... 1) 1934 fis. and stivers for £1 etg. 1354 85 - 8 | plemty of means and as much strength as possible, | Vesuveus is another event which is attri inevitable consequences of adopting the abolitionist | porated in shumb and Paes ot | Genoa... 45% cents of fis. for 1 lira nuova, 1857-73 95- 96 | when strikes the bell of that new St Bartholomew's | attention. policy. Such demonstrations aro in themselves the | treetrated erdeep? Fae iets. | Leghorn... “ — 39 do, for 1 lire. ee 188 - 9H | night. Such is thestatement of the forees of theene- | Some curious details aro given as to the suspected | strongest appesls to the good feeling and pudlio spirit | Wis sister was al i Lownon, Feb. 22 Wiorida. .. 6 - Rateter | of the North, and, indeed, a speech of one of the mem- | into Amsterdam. .2 mos. & \ (firs. and stivers foe tase my, in the very position they will occupy this spring. | treachery of M.Duohesk, the late Finance M| The following ts the distribution of the American On’ the first “ade, the battalions ef @ faithful army, | of Hungary. It is now discovered that he wasformerly | bers for North Carolina, which sets forth, in plain and | Rotterdam... “ 22a 3 5 £1 Bt, vmaval forces in the Mediterranean at the latest dates:— | baving commanders, and ready to fight, te conquer or | in the service of Metternich; and there are reports | simple language, the fate of the slave States in case . 26.7 i Antwerp. franes and ets. for French.semy, who happened to ke on the spot, immedi- ine 4 ® 1smares & ull bent, ister into the Palace Bernini, where th to die; on the other side, the misguided people, among | abroad that he is about to re-enter the Anstrian ser- | the Wilmot proviso should be adopted, is universal, i engence frigate, bearing the flax of Com- | whom the yeast of socialism is datly fermenting. | vice Should the published statements regarding thie | deemed to America to have materially altered. the Er’ cctseuahes ct tke cecelnahinns ab Siihiet o | PAFH-. “ $6.675¢ franos and cente L do. Jes. St, Lawrence, Captain Paulding: Mississippl, And, to tell you the whole of the position, the man be true, the disoomfture of the Hungarian people | chances of the controversy. Tho speaker is @ Mr. | French officer, who had ineulted a lady, Gen. Baraguay | isbon......00ds. — penoe stg. for 1 milroa. te, Captain hey a] for Spe: strength of these men, and the possibility of their | may be easily accounted for. Clingman. and we cite a few of his sentenous for the q’Hilliers bas issued the following notiacation:— Genca. Smoe.26.86 296 { lire ne. and cents for At Genoa.—Constivution friga tain Conover. triumph, are principally fa their devotedness to their Tn @ oormmunication from Moldavia it is stated that | purpose of showing how exactly the view of the claar- | © Inhabitants of Rome—The commander-in-chief, wishing to dite 1 ste rit noe ls el alg Captain 8. Mercer. cause—they sacrifice everything to it. This fact has | sli doubts as to the pacific solution of the question | headed Southern politicians coincides with the conclu- | put an end to tho aesassinations which imporil the livesof | Leghorn... “ 9060 6 lire £1 stg ina.— Cumber! Li been noticed in all instances. The workmen, though | respecting the Hungarian refugees must now cease, the | sion ich we ourselves, with all the advantages of | the officers and privates of the deotees that the carry- BULLION Pen Ounce, The Swiss government has been compelled te remove | making very little from labor, and gai freedom from bias, arrived in our disous- /¥< of Bnives, poniards, or any other dangerous instrument, ng smallsa- matter baving bev lefinitely settled. It it affirmed | coolve toa distance of twelve leagues into the interlor M. | laries, if they are under the flag of socialism, are de- | that the recent conspiracy discovered in Ri sion of the subject last autuma is prohibited in Rome or ic# environs. Whoover shall bo ducting the most necessary things for their food and | contributed mainly to the adjustment of this event, the | ‘Should we «i 3 to be the re | S25nd caesying about thers suck wenn TELLER | Silver, do. . “Boichot, at presenta resident in that country, and for- | comfort, in order to augment the budget of the forth. | Czar. perhaps, finding piggy PS sult? | California, Ore ‘and Minne- | S¢aly,thot sy, GEN. BARAQUAY D'MILLIERS, | Oth American ofthat | own empire are of so dangerous a character as to re | fhi*NYrth‘s clear majorit: rarer “rs giving | ‘Phe Prince Orsino has been replaced in the Miaistry | Unit quire the whole of his attentio: om Was tices of the on “3 wm votee in the So- | of War by the Swiss, Kalberanatten, lately colonel of Tee oreriabd mail has bronahd adivioes fieus India th’ Siti stat reiee ees cares nro te ee ante | che meies. ; Z pp the 17th January. but the utterly devold of ine we comtrolling majori ti At Naples, on the 8th ult.,the Marshal Nunziante | Bogota and Mex. merly a member of the French National Assembly, 2 | coming*revolution. | T' ny parte refuse @ part a, @omsequence of a pamphlet published by him at Ge. | copper with which the: iy thelr bread, ir mevs, and which has been seized by the French author phleirfpteed ta pyran ale fh cla «d States «1 ities. of their party. Wii terest. © mee, by actof Congress, abolish sl 5 Ci ‘We learn from the French papers, that s complain; | the socialists are keeping, paying, eee the exporter the deracen boring seureur tee bee pe ae wie eee eae jae ay, oatcolied “Rorthera peryors - all the province of Calabria Citerior in a state | Popayan P army of femissarier, agents, orators, and soldiers, the demand. hich pe + 4q Duke of Parma, by a decree dated the 9th ult., | An Account, ‘Tas been addressed to the Minister of Commerce by | “pe certain that | donot write without having oon- | An attempt had been made by the Chinese authori. | 21 ‘2¢.coustitution willed, uber certain circumstances. would aay ordered @ levy of 1.200 men of the class of 1556, 1u | ~ %2, for the week cnding on Satuxday, vie ¥th day Of Fel d studied | ties to increase the tax upon tea, with a view to get wer, a8 , 1800 -— the merchants engaged in the North American trade, | sulted the best reference on th that Mr. Meredith, the Secretary of the Treasury of be Sewsiw re See Rina hd ahh ered gh an ugh my exert: € the United States, has imposed s tax of two dollars on | hea with men of all parties, by the documents | have | Hong-Kong as a serious violation of the treaty be the inspection of every case of French merchandise. | in my possession, | am induced to believe that I send | England and China, and the circumstance was occ ubject, have been at work, | back the ransom money paid to Great Britain. Tats | tures, whe: se complete sway, to nullity ty have | attempt was looked upon by the British authorities in | #10n of the constitution for the provection of fagiti Baye not prominent North reatest ipiluence, Whore m order to bring up the troops to the fall number. they have doue in their State legisla writes, on the 12th.— A correspondent at Napl | At this moment, the royal palaco is between twe flees About s fortuight ego, ® shook of an earthquake was folc during a crest storm, and 9 few days sinoo the store of oonls (250,000 quintals) became ignited. They were depowited Notes lesued..... £0, £11,015,100 2,984, 908 sitio: nown to al! gontiemen on this tloor, already 16,848,906 ‘M. Lacoste, the lately appointed French Consul in | you the most accurate report of the present position of | pying the attention of Dr. Bowring, the consul,and the | there is nothing in the constitution of = STTT ‘New York, is censured for not baviug remonstrated | Europe, and principally of France. Ehatem Chamber of Commeres, when the accomnte left, | which ohatreates ox eughh te checrest, the ot Peieem Seeens frome Se seeendl fr mee peace of tae ——— against a measure which is regarded as illegal. What will Louis Napoleon do in the presence ofsuch | In Prussia, an extraordinary credit of eighteen mil- | very, by Congress, in th ‘es? Supposing, however, this course, all the inmates immediately decamped; and the az es £135 ‘The Spanish Chambers, it is expected, will be pro- | # redoubtable y?—what course will he follow? No | lions of thalers, asked by the war department, has re. | should not occur, 'y is to be kopt where it mow is; and pe re are at wor ving cleverly run up 8 wall "dorama Sean rouged till after the sccoachment ‘cf the Queen, when | ome can tell. ‘The President of France is not like the | vived rumors of warlike intentions in different quar- Pare Sista tietgetuvcien cf aves bes alse arteeseraes creat . ities, (including they are to be dissolved. President of the United State, accessible to all, ready | ters. It is, however, @ mere precautionary measure, | {rts their borders. Of course, the whole negro. population 1s tine hy! en a ane Galtedinis Massigest. sdves-the tiie outons | listen to the first who will talk politics with him, | arising from the unsettled aspeot of various questions, | to be heroafter confined to the territory of the present fiftesn ows iu & north-easterty direction, ov £14,296 554 Led py al ied ing and therefore itis very dificult to form an idea of his | external and internal, Great precautions are adopted | slave States. The population in tweaty-t 4 will | Prince Ottieno, doing great damage. The carnival gayotica id ae ee er roe eT ik Garicrahe, Brentano, the | Political system, of bis point de vue of present affairs, | in connection with all popular diseussions on politics; | Amount to seven or eight millions, and in llty years to fifteen from the Toledo to the saloons. Bome W,704 010 en ‘of the provisional government of Baden, was pelted aswell as of his prospects for the future. No t | no one being allowed to become a member of a political mS a een _ of the reigns of Louis XLV. doners TET ‘with stones, by the Germans, on arriving at New York, and | that he, or his adherents, are dreaming of that reno | club unless he is 25 years of age; no two clubs being Sn Secveamtaatene | nena jas toe conrenece ke Margeise | Sonal, Debt, ond ccouped with his life; owing to the intervention of some | coup d'etat which {s“all the talk” for the moment.— | permitted to correspond'with each other; and publish: tory. ‘The condition of the South would | brilliant parties loved the festive season, while the thunders | @Dividend Ao'te). 6.372.030 Americans, 1 soa political refugees from Baden were alsecom- | But I am persuaded that if such a thing were under. | ers of freth newspapers being required fo find a caution | bo chat of ireland. Tepe that Me, | ° ¥etuviua shook every window in : a oe would bot succ: io his “mock’’ | money of four thousand tl 8. is the general opinion of Ame: Mr. | 5 Go do wish them. lared that be would have nothing fursher | jatation of the great man of whom heweate the name. | ‘The milltery convention between Brunswick and | Cisy's terolations will be rejected more, howeret, | (From the Ovestand togtater, Dee: 20:) stad - Sane a ‘The Parisian press is very hostile to the President | Prussia bas been fully concluded. through the dissatisfaction # the South than from | png past month has not been marked by any event £35,435,139 £35 A190 ee eee cee ree vebeomy 11,1860, | Caaaea aetna ee et ee. tha tat renkeate | without couse $0 any 6 Naan eer ioe ites Chet mone but auuthers | of importance a BO a (or Metre, Barings’ Circular, and other foreign ARIS, . . 1» » Mr. # % @ Chinese government still retai 6 hea markets, receive the Canada, see the last a : Emilie de Girardin, the proprietor and publisher of La | Sent state of the country t tenators had spoken inthe debate, and all or them had | pauuot the Covernor Amaral, and, as they metend piseenite _— page | The last Emewtein Paris--Preparations for the Oelebra- | Presse, What can be the cause of these attacks no | | The Prussian press: law, tion of the Twenty-fourth of February—Alarm—Military | one can tell but himself. It is certain that the jour- | tary committees, contains been upwards of four months fa their possession, it is ss ship Ch. but too probable that, even Arrival of th: team iP erokes, with pe arg the compromise. Mr. Cliogman, who is evidently among the most temperate of hi t; rovision compelling the ultimately recovered, all | One Quarter of a Million of Gold Dust, Organizations—Socialist Designs—-Eurepean States— | nalist has the greatest desire to become “somebody” in | Bewspaper proprietors to bali to the amount of | states that the South will acquiesce in no traces of the identity will have long since disappeared one ministry, and ‘easil; from 500 to 4000 dollars,and a clause empowering | ment which does not leave open to slave im: a | a pos hin Cl 4 ; France and Napoleen— Girardin, of “ La Presse— <7 ae, snaene oe met ves actly 57 eetiog | Judiolal euthorities to stop the ctreulation ot foreign all the territory east of the Rocky Mountali Dd |, ‘The last eteamer brought a0 Cane an The steamship ( herokee, C ‘apt. Windle, arrived The Ministry—Greece — Switzerland—The Pope—At- | knows a system by which France could be saved from | Bewspepers. , south of the Missouri line, or the line of 35 deg. 30 | r ; while the Breach oud yesterday morning from Chagres, having left that tempt to Assessinate Prince Musignane—M. Poussin— | the dangers by which itis threatened, A very piquant | A letter from Frankfort, of the 13th ult..says:—‘ All | min | The majority of hig oolleagues decline even to s continue to afford it the passive pro- | port on the 28th ult , and Kingston, Ja., on the 4th . of my soquaintance, who is o1 | Germany resembles a camp. The National Assembly | admit California as # free State, On the whole, assum- — tecticn of their presence. lomans Fuente 0s Pe. with M'me de Girardin; called om | of Frankfort had decreed that the governments should | ing—what may fairly be doubted—that the question . stot the month, | uant: : The gold dust on board of the Cherokee us con- admits cf compromive at ail, It does not appear that | _,A,eport was spread. jn the oa ‘The émeute is over, and if there was any o j ; Chaillot, osrry the armed Germanic force up to 900,000 m ” 'y conspiracy, | at the mansion of the journalist, (Rue de Chaillot, 104) ¢ | Mr. Cley bes lighted upou the preper solution. What ernm: 1 ‘The princes who had refused to obey the resoluti “Olther on the side of the government or that of the | sndafter # long conversation on the precarious position | 0° Daas’ wit Tht outed this with great zeal. ‘The | this solution may be, we cannot say, nor, agelu.are we rouger, the occasion was not considered fevorable | Uissrain, printiog to the velling, (or easherto heaven) | couseuence is, that {t is not Austria alone which has | bold enough to predict the resulta which are destined to otorious pirate chi pg-teal, was again | “py tas we could | signed as follows:— mor beyond hearsay, and as itis | Howland & Aspinwall. . y ita own iikelthood, we ate not inclined Samuel Austin, of Bont: © $138,568 50 25,008 00 enough to give any importanee to it. Buta very ourious | told the lady:— | ig forces under arms, but ali other countries of | follow the rejection of Mr Clay's soheme. We will Minot & Hooper, of do. . 11,848 80 'y } to place any © upon it. act to be notioed fs, that st the same time theriot was | | “You are right, my dear madam; Franceis in a very | Sa) ceperlaliy ‘Frese ‘Sup Devas; Have the | ae Stiene thet (nn eager ae, ak caneeay t Canton, all continues quict. Peter Edes. tee ives | od + Ld asta: . 5 Deginning in Paris, about the “Tres of Liberty,” ais- | terrible position, and it is true that noone eau save us | * se 4, ene peritm correspondent of the Inde. | beldin the ball of Congres touhing «the cheapest, | <eoein odin maaiter et ay, (00 turbances were made also in several other places. “] fectly agree with you,’’ answered the lady, who | ase 1 Leen gn — CL d sd bee the = practical, aud most stable’’ of earthly constitu- ~ ‘4 | ry from ordeat \ a. the Al shi | a 1p government does not now in| coneludi a; lons. | ry pence seveived igem, Destess, Tulle, and | ee ee ee ee eentY | peace with Denmark, but 1s only anxious to establish « Engiana, | _ Advices bave been received from Bombay of thel7th | | 10,000 6. er laxge towns of France, are mentioning facts which | j,.ntor; seeing her about leaving, added in a very sim- | Provisional government in the Duchies which shall be | The annual accounts rei totrade and navigation January, Calcutta tothe 7th January, aod Chins to - 21 Vigas018s 8} are to be considered as of a very curious kind, relative | ple mauner:—“Why do you go’ Our Saviour will be | More eatisfactory than that which now existe. have just been issued, and we rejoice to see that the | to the 20th Dec. The Gevold oftnterest. | srne following 18 0 list of the passengers in the to the Fevolutionary activity which ls now a Uerdre de | down presently, and he would be very glad to seo you" | , The German Varilament is to mest at Exfurt on the | commercial state of the eountry wears an aapeot of |, Hater. Hooke suid Ot, cempcreereceen eames | cu ceeen ' _ Jour among the different parties o to the govern. | Emile de Girardin presente himself as ® candidate for | 2050 of March. | ontinues unsettled; for thongh | have beencue and aquarter milion of quarters more | eltcuinstances conussted ir capture, it would |G. W. P. Bissell, U. 8. Consul at Teplo; Manuel Fer- appear that the conduct of the native authorities vo- | mandes, lady amd two children; Messrs, Henry Dorn ent of the Elyace National, ‘Shall we have any sequel | oe er ee eee riciae? ‘This gentlemen ise men | there is au sBclination on the part of Denmark to pro- | than they wars in 1648, whilst four ands half, miillo of immense talent, and it cannot long the ermistice, yet suspicions were entertained of | of quarters were entered for consumption. There ia, Wards them was of & most unprovoked and wanton | Chas.Schomer, E. V. Fargis, David Perry, Joseph Ham- is cue ofthe boat writnen ef Pests the intentions of Prussia to prolong the settlement of | however, deorease in the import of live stock, but, on obsracter, a p deg 4 ois cu hon Of che 18th of February com, | the dispute, in order to wear out the power pa- | the other hand, this is counterbalanced by an increase | Our correspondent says: ~The Punjaub ts almost | M: Macwithey. J. I’. Horbach, H. Fremont. Franote teins sb article in which the mew American tarkif 1a | tlence ef Denmark, end thus nictiy ‘absorb the duchy | on salt provisions, of which there were 507419 owts, Deweless; tidings of the capture of Shel Mabaraj Sing, | Stewart, A. Stewart, C. C. De Graff, L Dodd, J. w. aaa é eechicewig. Meauwhile the Bebleswig Holstein army | Imported im 1848, whilst in 1849 there were #94300 the Gooreo, being almost the ouly intelligence of in- | Foster, Capt. Thompson, Charlee ‘Thompson, | Mr. ‘There was, a few days ‘a rumor which fouad its | is kept up; the confusion of affairs, a | cwts. In obeese there is a decrease from 441,635 terest from that quarter during the fortnight bi Kingston, (Jam ,) Miss Brower, Mesars. oe - 5.2 ‘change in the minis. | deputation from the inhabitants of Schleswig has ar- | cwts. to 879,045 owts.; and butter also shows a slight | _ ‘Tho time of the Governor (ieneral’s proposed visit to | D. Sarfarty, Thomas Carter. 7 ee ee eee eon te uamsed Misister of | Hived at Berlin to complain of the administration of | deorvase. 10 the article coffee, there have beon six Bombay ls now papldly approaching, and great prepa- | On the 9th inst., in latitude 38 17, longitude 73 Pension { M. Léon Faucher, of Interior; Mr. | the commissioners appointed by the three powers, | millions of pounds more im, than in the preced- rations are, making with » view to do his lordship ade- | 48, the Cherokee fell in with the brig Reuben Darn, of Public Works; and M. Magnan, of War, in | England, Prussia and Denmark. ‘al. the place of General d’Hautpoul, who will be sent as | these proceedings with Anterest. rr Commander General to Algiers. ‘But the Monewr, of | .,1Be nen from AUttie Ue here' been asked their | our colonies’ but in the ‘consumption of thie article ‘wery near. ‘morni dent formal! ought e aul re as by trem Ny hk Ly F ee ae co ae oa ber uly cay, thet there a ad | re concerning the cauenaaiee: of some part of | there bas been a slight decrease; whilst the duty u; ginning to tell on prices, and the supply being tu ox- + ~! aa ey, Y, | without fre and thet every politician is persuaded North Hungary to Gallici. Dismemberment of na- | It in 1848 produced £4.515.517, and in 1540 it reached | Ces cf the demand, we have advices of ‘lat markets atts 1 7 Re ne. | thonalities, and mingling ef populations, appear to be ‘aw material, for manufactures, nd reduced rates, At Bombay the numerous arrivals denied t of F : i rks po! Russia must wated year, aud this increase has been almost altogether quate honor on hi 5 Jarver, (of Vinalhaven.) She had bee ocke frou cut ows colonies, which have seat forty mil: |. The commer frets India te not so entio. aes aise bene ends. By night of the min ee ee a, i ern eee. oe — ene ot and was obliged to cut away her mainmast an > eat = soe wien inva, | foretopmast, to righther. Supplied her with a cask of water and a spare topmast. She was 6 days hence lor Georgetown, 5S. C. ; The schr. Bore: Japt. Thompson, (of Wil- r | the recipes of the Austrian government political imports increased; cotton, from 6,366,025 of vessels, with large quantities of goods, had made socialiam, the guillotine, are to take the pended wise | The news from Greece is of the most serious kind | Siscontent. owte, 106.145.2609 cwts, and wool, from British colonies, buyers very indiilerent about entering Into contracts. | mington, Del.) lost’ at Chagres, with her cargo, po and in order to be one eftheircan- | Dates from Athens (Sth inet.) contain the most out- | “Phe Jk question remains, of course, unsettled; ‘ere was also very little demand from the up-country = were insured. The vesse| had been sold for 960 See ae a ne ar cls’ suogulsary porpose, | TRECCUE deta ot yO eee ncreg | Dut Admiral Parker has relaxed, It le said, the severity markets, and holders bad consequently been obliged to | ‘The steamship Philadelphia was at Simon Bay, yy. : | pacific country, There that the policy of | of the bicekade. = oa eermmacnt before the ond of Fobtabrs, | coaling, and expected to sail for New York on or i i the majority of the population | Great Britain is to excite » re Italia affairs bave not uw: je Sayed an improvement before the end of bers of ted,andthese brought | about the 7th inst. . mae ct arnt veuce hand there wore lange | The bark Mount Washington, 22 days henoe, At Rome the carnival bas been 8 failure. opposed to — principles, are a triumph is far from bet: > At the National Pana Ry 4-53 .8-— vintthen, stocks of some kinds, which ruled low. Metals, aswell | with coal, for Howland & Aspinwall, had just | a Ee on the 1oth of January yar & pte ‘suthoritics inter: | we recognize Feoufident and healthy tone of aa most kinds of other goods, were very dail of sale, | arrived in Simon's Bay. ay = is 4 have been discussed for the | : fere—the change must come. feeling, which ng the past year, been per. The banks had raised their rates of discount, but money The brgs Susan Waltord, with coal, and Last for —the first, about “sublic Fran a jemtiful in the Bazaar, and ecarcity was notan- — (Occeol hols, had 4d. Ti + It is rey that the political refugees are to leave the community; and it Osceola. ich just arrived. he O. was Gea,” © very capital sebjest: which to not. yot | Switzerland, Im addition to the ment with the Chancellor of th wee very limited ing bad); rudder irons broken ; she | ended; the second, on the last decree issued by | other powers on this subject, the Hi blio to ls. Usd. | ear 8 ay ihe President, by Which France bas been divided | gng thelr intervention was no more OR | Seoe Resets hen resake sonteinon’ tee ‘The Corn Trade of Europe. | ASO. web b aoboener fall of b Guto military governm You will eee, in the | the eame day the Admiral of the English feet (| arker) N hatel, which is © Beles canter ing the reduotion Mercantile Gaxette, Fob. 22. } . Saw a schooner full of passengers, ound papers, that the three Generais—Gastellanne, | had an interview with the Greek Miniteer Londos, pears ’ to Chagres, on the evening of the 27th of Feb.; é dependence of Prussia. latter power, ost equalled that of ad ing the last fort- and Gémean—heve been mamed commanders | ‘ordered’ him to give ee enswer to the | seem, has been endeavoring to draw Switzerla: ‘ 1 tone, we are un- could not see her name. Sr airtdoan cnt ive, Vasochar, ob tee bond of Shacty: | tne sh ey a to the Greek go- | Ao acknowledgment of Pr ‘exhibition of the industry of all nations is #x- t Material improvement inthe gon- | ba Neither the Tennessee nor the Sarah Sands had a and {it the head of thirty. | vernment by the ex-minister of England Sit | whole canton, which have been resisted, citing wnlversal interest. Preparations for Indien eral tone usiness. ‘That our mer- arrived at Panama; they were daily expected there. sight departments. With the division placed under | Edward Lyon. On the 17th instant he sent his isston is reported to have presented ® note to the Soulipnaiooeans coven begun st Bombay. Themost chavts and millers feel very little confidence in | ne Sho cokers of ere now tfty | ultimatum, and om the 18th he took possession of the | sonst cocating thet sil armed intervention | remarkable manufactures in Western India are silks the stability of the slight advanoe | Theatrical and Musical, Prussian . ia in Swiss affairs would be « violation of international | and damasks; black-wood furnitare and open carved abundantly evident from the extreme caution they General pengentee, there of -#lx, which are comprised in | navy of King Otho. It was therefore certain that Sir although the relation of the canton of Neuf- | work; inlaid work of ivory, colored woods,and metal; continue to display in their operations. The be- . Gen, Casteliane will have under | stratford had plotted with Admiral Parker, in order to TunatRe.—Two socessful pieces were given this betor his command, sixteen departments which are situated Highte ’ weet reside ordea chatel to Prussia was ® peculiar (uestion. ngey york, especially in agates, jaspars, and cor- lief that prices will, under the influence of free rg yy By a } 7 j allver work; ome bows and arrows, swords, trade, be fat further reduced in the ensaing sum- ‘the South of the cou aod ‘The Engiteh View of the Slavery Question shields, and matchiocks; and « display of these, or mer, appears to be almost universally entertained Seal daiest Loe ol in an —She Dissolution of the Union, , May be expected to occupy ® place in the exbi- by men of business; hence mo disposition is which are on freatier of France. al (From the London Chrontele, Feb. 21.) bition. Many questions have been eaked as tethe shown to purchase more then is wanted to provide for Bvitecriand, and Pledmont. at the seat of A number of resolutions have been introduced into | nature of the articles to be exhibited, whether th: immediate ure Short, therefore. as bave been the deli- the republic. Thus, as you will see, Louls Napoleon the Senate of the United States, having for their de- | all to be manufactured, or whether veries of grain from the , considerable diMoulty enia ee tha storm, has taken the reselotion te protest clared object the amicable of the greet | natural , articles of hes been experienced In establishing any advance Bimeelf >; the govern yment of the sword, and the South. As| oF only of utility; wh factarers Of In some of the markets in the districts, French ro bas inaugurated the of the ‘obscure by | wholesale houses are to be each class exhibitors, or where no stocks are held, and where the supplies have Ee et a EY polities, we | whether manufacturers alone are to have | barely kept pace with the local consumptive demand, | ereate im France. first republic of '93, tried, will legislation to | whether the building to be erected will be y prices have rallied Is, e2e per quarter from the ex- aamaiia te aces Varnes teh, on4 caly essen accepted, they | cepectous for heme and colonial and foreign exhibitios iat of depression; but, at the large consuming pany plaudits and scclamations. Mr. Blake has to form in ite cirowit toumenes barrack. filed with It is pro- | Most of these questions have been satisfactorily an- the improvement has hardly been #0 great. At fy ob nS & ay ae “4 soldiers. The republic of 1848, will probably obtain 4 adumit Call. | swered by Si James Dukeand Mr. M.Forster,and Liverpool, ope of the most Important markets in the pa AS a Bare Deo sania, a ‘the same rerult. Bi ff the division of France ti 4 without | by the honorary secretaries. Parties are about to be kingdom, the value of wheat has not varied this week, to © ‘Dent week. ooecdings will be found jet, hes the power to wae the p> The reso- | appointed, to canvass and authorise the sub-committee and flour has rather tended downward In price, owing ced im another colume, and wiil animate the friends of Jeage muliiteny Gopetensate. thd I equivocally | to apply from time to time tothe royal commission for to good receipts of that ‘Ventieman to come furward ins phalana on the occasion. minds of thore who feared the consequences of @ re- | |; hat th j 7 “ slavery may ined upen, so that the (United States, Weare Bunron's Tusaran --We called in last ov a4 usual, publican dente de boudiers it is, to my mind. the strong. ot evidence of the awful strength of the disease How | liberty ens! wid arty fy fo Wincee, to tender Indlapensable Tor the safety. ct the at ecvere 5 orekeetes performed vows boastful the intro- qeountry, ameasure by which sixteen departments ere & * te Seis sas eetiee pros test aaoe, ey , Se nan wee senate ed for “Hoot! At Soe Se Tears mae, ie ge Mexico. jodern times have elicited tion of Mrs. Rossel. The house was crowded to excess. | Th: y tia Y~ ‘ Texas, ‘ength yielded to the feeling of j and thoug! jens ily” will be repeated again thir me. of authority can teil. before six months. it of the for prosecuting the capplies im the firet i oo, the Coubt, the howre will presenta array of visiiers equal to will ot be peceseary, om Soecunt of 2 sem folly of the & -4 eee artis on, Wie Sp ces milters, on the a Fee ee catama _ ‘neattein the clty. oem: state of slege? ‘Well ae 4 mary claims | in the last few days one of the most active, able, and and winter, are eure to come forward. Hitherts Prices haat in ie Mawsqoes Sunsve pay J 4 because it te % S politi- | em! officers in the British navy bas been ap- have been well supported abroad, & considerable fomitle torus to gets ecae, with th Our country is very patient, ‘very strong, sequintions to the direction of this expedition, which fs to amount of jation baving been carried on at #e- {twas suc: fF the teost eee therefore of | be condueted ona scale of liberality commensurate the privoipal Baltic ports; but matters must | which Me. Chantrou played b Deeiment merely. ‘ in, Go tntbowe of | with the stake at issue, and apparentiy with « if nothing should | whole ceneluded with the com Lan haem B opted pear ee wee columbia | renee of the mational bilhty. Four vessel coeur to give rise to footings in regard to hich wag received with om “thet te present agmesion 4 ‘ put im requisition, two of them steamers, and If od the ee. some bill ls 2s who are now in oS ee, SS fe certain feoms to animate every breast their new dedi} Bianchi. Agitation in Tos cltieo agitation tn the country, agite- ranklin and his companions consort of Sixnorina Valen See Be Se ooresnone, egteation, Credit ¢ will be aanisted by. and oe A by agitation, com- meroe must : Bot com There the Presi- congress recommends the ej uip- i f : the sources of production and lsbor are exhausted the are always ready to be blinded of search; b gt Zyithove whe show them the factartioa, leartea of the eit governme’ ph G ars. ‘The mot d'erdre has been given through peated bt Oe een Fine statermen socialiem have weil understood that The Danish Question. The Berlin correspondent of the London Chronicle heat, the 16th:— ‘want of supplies, an@ this morning the display le, which have announced s prospect of the samples ow in small. Buyers seemed, howe’ ith Den ark being rene for six months, ot for to be less inclined to purchase than earlier in Period whatever beyond the six weeks required | week, and the advance then freely, was OF who may seck to porvunde that the negotiations are im progress been led into error, been, nor will be ae~ é F offers the mevement burst it will begin simultancously | *" with the France, Germany. and Italy. wish- Mitta the Auateris or the, Waterion of olvilise- ‘wean tehth, “thon. may be the hesitation of the revole- hincranes hg oto Rlchord f—- Ag im battle, which will be alto- te 4 a, th the i Proctct @, the CO gh yt " ‘Pris, 8 veer ettrnctive tail, and no dowdt, crowd Pe in Frames, The Tremendous rising ye oa Patwows Museen, Perapesemca.—This 2 LA over | well