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THE NEW YORK H ERALD. "ae ee NO. 8884. MORNING EDITION----THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1860. TWO CENTS TIPTE Qi ma, under @ promise from them that would Kentuck ' a regien it from Louiaien: f 17 this and da tral Idiers retres cag es hiv DOUBLE SHEET. deal Jenien: diy” with the straggling — | battalion fom! an geet one Caine pod ier Se eed cnt teehee May 4 pn rr ehon Roane, vet red ints on mie * Mgt gre phen ne ——— eft behind, and who could not then be found. | company from the same State. The two | they had successively entrenched themselves, were | then made their way to a third house, en which | qantity of men, which our pilot denied, ‘The Spanioh A EVENT j They Jad six killed and eight wounded. While | schooners which had belonged to the expedition | burnt, when they fell into the hands of the enemy af- | were several ladies and others collected. The Tse and of. T HE CUB + off here thie morning, the U. 8. Coast Sur- | were sent towards New Orleans, and the steam- | ter having expended their last cartridge. When this | roof of this house, which was @ low one, gave ine A. M., Sssotersh coming | vey schooner Potrel, Lieutenant Ine. Rodgers ship, started dire et fe, the | tomn of Cardenas, Mantaking place he popalatin inludlag he wonven way and fell in, but no one was erioualy. rt. | o jhe reef, and 4 a are AIR, commanding, rded Pizarro, an on the northern coast uba. commander | and children, abandoned the town, t ifest- | In ‘thi iti i ith eras THE END OF THE AFF Fpaniah commander earnestly urged Captain | of the e: ition, Gen. Narciso Lopez, ood ing oan unequivocal manner the oe prep nrd their iecle. ce oe ‘alte “Ve r of being es, under Ges tetas ahh eae Ler card } ry °s to give hima ioe ae he might veces bo that city orien surprises hand (alien i eo prior oe which ange eee by ny pevedae wore up by Sake - Sariridees, = aeoiee seam DAD-of war wee. algo seem comisy iy ceed teks fe, at the same @ morning cars Bei tal e forei - alf-past 6, they we: tt "i i or. and SKETCH OF THE ATTACK ON CARDENAS, , Creole, which went then’ close in shore, in five | the whole of our army landed in Matanzas the iced diy meacdtiaineatreet lace twenty heal ‘hang. ont at the widow ie point of «| te the whatt of TA. Reowney’ ‘and ‘belore the bout weer fathoms water, and running for this harbor. Capt. | same srenig by the railroad. The General also | lancers, and more than thirty peasants, mostly | beyonet. In the absence of anything else to aerve | COU! be made fast, the armed mon were seon jum Phe Number of American Prisoners at Havana, em very properly of red hima pilot to bring | thought that little resistance would be made at | natives of Biscay, who, under command of D. Leoa | the of a fing, one of the young ladies pre- | Shore, to tho great surprian of The wharf 0 him to pert, but fi to permit his pilot to. ai Car nee—that the large p number of emigrants Fortun, military Commander of Guamacaro, arrived | sent selina offered an article of her under gar- | Whjeh they landed, exhibited from a flag staff the 8pa- “a ioe the capture of an American steamer, mat ere from ited States wor in the li m the surrounding country, and put them te U8, purpose. " : ‘Whe Hxciting Chase of the Creole yey in American walers, scckiag K4 tating stendaid, as would the Cuban population, shameful flight, thet to re:duubash peach WTus plesetetetakes Gen Le who had thus | toate Me the trate mee, rele Se oe hod into Key West. American port. The Spaniard now charges him | and perhaps the h garrizon. But these ex- | pitately, leaving many dead on the field, and carry- | fer been unable to get speech of the inhabitants, k, and at civenpeiaall RN _| with all the responeibility of his failure, and de- | pectations of this brave, honest, and patriotic vete- Hr ‘away their oe the so-called Colonel | which he was anxious to do, in order to save blood- morning last OUR CORRESPONDSNOE. clares that he will make a formal complaint tothe | ren, were entirely disappointed, and the expedition | White end 40 of his followers. The steamer | shed, explained that the expedition came to the Cardenas, Cubs, and atver AARARN government upon the subject. in consequence, has utterly failed in secomnplishing which brought them was the Creole, and the | island to offer liberty to the inhabitants, not with | tained and took possession of tho city for some sixteen ight of the 18th, | leader of the Hirasess_ D. Narciso Lopez. In | the purpose of plunder. He ise tthe same | hours, imprisoned the Governor, Lieut. Governor, and The Americans paid for every article thi tin | its object. At iwo o’elock on the ni SUCIDESTS OF Ree Bae eee eeR: Cardenas. The Sie coerpala well disposed to | the steamer succeeded in landing within a few | the precipitancy. flight, they allowed to | time, strict orders that no property should be taken | Secretary, burnt the Governor's house, and from the &e., die., them, and the soldiers who joined General Lopez | yards of the wharf, and after some delay, a single | escape, at Cayo Piedra, at the outlet of the harbor, without being paid for, aed py other necessary or ph i && —tagh Pinay ag pe ~ O@R HAVANA CORRRErONDENCE exhibit their backe, pricked by the swords of thetr | plank was connected with the shore, over which | Sener Cerute, Senor Segua, Captain in the infantry | orders. The effect of these measurea was, that | jntoreement as eta arrived m Matansas po | Havana, Ma: 22, 1350. officers, to compel them to fight. the troops by single files were disembarked. The | of Leon, and sub-Lieutenant of the same corps, | the Spanieh soldiers put on red shirts and cockad other ports, and fighting recommenced. The ineur- Nay e y 2 . The entered Cardenas three hours after | sentinel on the w! had early discoverd us, and | who had been made oners. Our attention has | like the invaders, and distributed themsel: ete lort. in killed and wounded, some 30 mon, but The Capture of Some of te Patriots. the Creole left it. General Lopez's baggage was | informed the garrison and the city of our approach, | been called more particularly to this cireumstauce, | through the town, with, at least, the ostensible ob- | the inhabitants, it is estimated, lot from 90 to 150. Admiral Amero returned to this port on the 19th, | stolen from him when embarking at New Orleans, | so that they were well pre} to give us a hoe- | that the soldiers of the garrison, whom the inva- | ject of conciliating the people in favor of their new They continued their ght in retreat until they re~ trom Wi y it _ and he landed at this port with a shirt on which he | tile reception. At leest an hour was spent in the | ders had set at liberty, subsequently turned their | Visiters. It does not appear, however, that much im- | &*ined their steamer. Got under weigh and ran—dis 7m Woman’s Island, with two vessels, as prizes, 4 » 2 9 5 , . Age A che board Vusdeed ona had borrowed from his gentlemanly prisoner, the | disembarkation. By the previous order of the | arms against them, and gave undoubted proof, that | pression was made this way, andit is certain that the | Cv¢red 4 Spanish man-of-war efter them. 2 ving on one hum twenty prison- | Governor of Cardenas. Six you jads, | commanding General, the troops were landed as | even so great a boon, as being the gift of pirates, nish officers all remained faithful to their flag, ex- | vival ofthe steamer, sho bas been seized ander th -4r8; also, letters, correspondence, plans, &e., of slaves, stowed themsclves away on boatd the Cre | follows:—the Kentucky regiment frst; the Loui: | was odious to them. The editor ‘of the ‘Gaceca | hibiting a courage worthy of thedays of eld Castle, | 224zeneez Lav She ia now in ehargo of Lig Htogers the ringleaders in the United States. The whole | ole, and came here in her. General Lopez at once | siana regiment second, and the Mississippi bat- | further states that the steamer Pizarro, which went | The loss on the side ef the invaders was some four | Many of the sibs Wotinded, have Maman ent of the expedition is now im the hands - offered to deliver them to the Spanish steamer or | talion third. They all got into action, however, | in pursuit, captured two vessels, with a hundred | killed and perhape ten wounded, while it is fortable mong Our citizens, and at the U. errenigen to the Spanish Consul. Our local authorities, how- | within a few minutes of each other.’ Half the | prisoners, including fourteen inferior officers, and | eumed that the defenders of the place met a Joss | § liarracks, which were. on application, delivered te of the government. ever, airested them, andthe District Judge has | Kentucky regiment were detac! their | the correspondence of the invading Canaille. He | of some twenty. General Lopez is of opinion that | them. A Lieut. Jones. of Alabama, Is now recover OUR CARDENAS CORRESPONDENCE. caused them to be delivered up. jeutenunt-Colonel to the right of the town, | leads ua to believe that Havana is all enthusi- | there were not probably more than 100 regular aol- | having r-ccivod « ball through his right side, Hele Carpenas, May 21, 1850. General Gonzales, Adjutant to General Lopez, | to attack any force that might be found there, and | eem and ehining bayonets. Martial law has | diers of the line in Cardenas, at the time of the at- | comfortable quarters, at a private boarding house. Ae As, May 21, i nf f ‘ j 5 mer still re her st it ts presume@ The Attack of the Invaders—The Loyalty of the | was wounded in the leg, but is doing well; Gen. | to prevent egress if possible, from the placa But | been proclaimed. The» const is strictly block- | tack; but during all these transactions, news had pee) pore does not seem at all to despond. The iade- | the latter duty was impracticable. Company (A) | aded, and the mst stringent measures adopted. | been sent to Coliseo, a post ten miles distant, and 18 Peasants. endence of Cuba is, with him, a fixed fact, and if | of the Mississippi battalion wae sent to capture an Havana, May 22, 1850. | to Matanzas, tor reinforcements, and large reinforce- fine Wrst an 2a ee Lieut. Fortun, with twenty men, and the pea- | he lives he will accomplish it. ~ a hold poseession of the railroad Pn engin- | The Cuban revolution has begun and ended. On ments were approaching the ‘city, ner 300 men an Bee a at tertntier Sree ae sants (guajiros), armed with hatchets, and accom- m i oars you the names of the officers and fea Cn uy &c. whom, we had seamed, the sone - the bee instant, shores 3 poe the | having arrived before nightfall. ring the any potriete and govecame nt tongs: Theo. gertieuteny 4 Cardi bs Y y o chod to ¢ manied by their mastiffs, attacked the invaders, chiefs of this movement, for obvious reasons. would leave for Matanzas at six o’clock, A. M. Af- | steamer Creole ran lenas bay and Narciso | too, some of the invading force had become a little | were obtaine og aren & jpater. atpnal pay mes The collector of the customs here, will await in- | ter a sharp contest, this company succeeded in | Lopez landed with 500 men. He took possession | disorganized by drinking, and a portion of thein had | v#ding force, structions to proceed against the Creole. No | taking possession ofthe pay eee pon ‘and incaptur- | of the town with little opposition, and issued a rey- | been detailed to place fhe wounded and a quan- | teuding to the wounded . + means have yet been devised tor getting the men | ing twice its own number of armed troops, and re- | olutionary proclamation. The Governor, with a | tity of coal om board the Creole, in order toen- | ACKOUNT OF THE BAPRDITION AGAINST CUBA: Governor Ceruti defended hiseslf well, but hie | SW2Y om here. taining them as prisoners. ‘The action inthe eity | few troops, entrenched themselves in his house, to | able her to return at once for reinforcements, In- | OP the 24 May. 1860, the brig Susan Loud left the a eruti imeelf well, but | he people and soldiers of Cardenas thought, | soon became general. The garrison was concen- | which the invaders set fire, and he then surren- | fluenced by these and other strong considerations, | 17, UN Sts the command of Col White, and after assailants having set fire to his house, he capitu- | unti! daylight informed them otherwise, that the | trated under the Governor in the Citadel. In the | dered. During the day the invaders held undis- | Gen. Lopez determined to re-embark his comman cruising in the gulf for about seven d met the lated. His force consisted of twenty-five men. attack was the result of a servile insurrection. efforts of our men to storm this plage, the Colonel | turbed possession—no property was destroyed or | on board the Creole, which was done soon after | stexmer Creole, which bad on board 175 The invaders ied off $2,500 from the custom The brig Serah Loud, and the bark Georgiana, | of the Kentucky regiment was shot in the leg, while | taken away. The men paid for all they took. | nightfall of the eame day on which they landed, | the command of Col, Bunch and Gen Lopex and staft b d th — “ ilroad which cleared for Chagres with these people, and | gallantly fighting al the head of hismen. S af- | About evening they began to re-embark, and when | (19th inet.) On their way to the bout, they were | The men en board the brig embarked in the steamer, jouse, and the treasury of the Cardenas railroad. | after putting them on board the Creole, were | ter, the colonel of the Louisiana troops was wound- | most of the troops had got on board the steamer, a | attacked by a force of twenty-two lancera and | which steered for the Isle of Mugere, where wo took im The guasircs, or peasants, conducted themselves | making their way back to New Orleans, are cap- | ed in the shoulder, while leading his regiment | party of lancers arrived and attacked them. Sev- | forty-five intemtyy. These troops fought the inva- | Water. We remained there two days, and — ‘with such heroism that they were nearly all killed. | tured and in Havana, and will be proceeded against | against the same Citadel, and ulmostaimultaneous- | eal were killed on each side, and at 8 P. M., the | ders with desperate courage, charging up to the | got under welgh ecgper nade Beng ‘Dut the latter not being armed, were all annihi- ated. Of tho twenty soldiers, eight were killed. 7 as pirates. C. | ly the Adjutant General of the army was shot in | steamer sailed, leaving five or six drunken men on | bayonets. The lancers were killed, almost to a | Mubited | Bares saliee Gant, “Ween 5, Facing Po ch gt sees | Seals Pa Mar 22-10 Ray soe P. the leg. Boon after the Colonets of these regiments shore. _ Loves took with Aim the Governor sand man. One of them, 2. eornmon ireldier, returned Shae cae cteen ene baie yb tr Coulee ATAN 5 , . rt a mi isputch Schooner— were wounded, the three divisions, respectively, | (wo cers, whom afterward put on a | twice alone, searching like the French officer at | amounting to some 600 men, including oMcers, we got The Effect of the News in Matanzas—March of %, rture of the War Steamer. under their Major and Lieut. Colonels, made schooner outside the harbor, on condition that the | Waterloo, fer some point where he might pierce | under cm 4 and arrived at the port of ardenas (Cubay, Troops to Cardenas.§ A Spanish emack“came over from Havana, to- | combined attack upon the Citadel. While this at- | lives ofthe men left behind should be spared. Col. | the line. (n leaving the harbor of Cardenas, the | on Sunday morning.May 19, at xbout 1 A. M., and imme- The solemn silence which has reigned in this day, sent by the Captain General, with despatches | tack was being made, the guard ef soldiers at the | White was wounded in the shoulder. The Gover- | courte of the vessel was laid ina N.W. direction, in | dintely land forces. At half p 9 took the last di i to the war steamer here; and this evening, at half- ison at the corner of the great square of the town, | ner says they were gentlemen, and he could not | order to avoid the risk of mecting Spanish men-of- Some of march to the Govervor's an ons ity during twenty days, in consequence | past six, the steamer went out with the emeck in | fired into the Mississippi battalion from the win- | have been better treated. war. As soon as the land faded from view, Gen. | of the Masa. and when bute short distasce from tf of the ravages of the prevailing epidemic, was yes- | tow, and stood to sea. What her movements are | dows. The Lieutenant Cotonel commanding, im- NAMES OF THE PATRIOTS AT SAVANNA. ow ag gave orders to stand westward, his intention | PAn#0n, Pr creat ee eran residence, whem we ‘terday morning broken by the arrival of an express | to be, has not transpired; but, I presume, she re- | mediately ordered two of its companies (B. and C.) [From the Savannah Repnblican, May 25.) bein, yy 4 g to muke another landing at the town of | yire welenined by aahower of bull haere ‘ai a's turns to the Cuba coast, to look out for other ad- | to about face and fire into the buildiag. Theorder | Thi i it fe Mantua, in “ Vuelta de Abajo.” The district 80 icularly fr fh trem Cardenas, bringing the intelligence that the | venturere, She has four companies of grenadiers | was obeyed with such promptness and effect as to Sobek seer aebtog tod aesd Wer santts called is all that part of the Island of Cuba west- | Bilch"wouaded Cole O'lare aud White, sad many long-talked-of expedition had at length arrived at | on beard. [oy compel ite immediate abandonment. Under the or- | and passengers on Soard the J. fe. She left | Wardfrom Havana. A large purt of the command | men, none mortally. We then commenced to show. that place. At 12 o’clock, noen, the Governor of wi he ders of the lieutenat Colonel they then battered | Havana on the 22d instant. Among the passengers | bad, however, become discouraged by the warm | them that we were on hand and read Matanzas issued a proclamation, of which the fol- ATROPN TE ESE I RARER, down the doors and took possession of this tmport- | is Gen. Lopes, commander of the ‘expedition, one fo sant there 4 by thes pabeeh es, Gheke petitgnees, At Hom woes the lak Wetag on wenden Hisvaxt, Bu May 2,100, | Muizeiion, Having purdin thie bling, | of Neate cup Seno, Sancben Vege | ar ese we epee wen en | ene het the tiene yan Sofi ‘ . ; H te overnor'a residence, which a Matanras Avzons Karma, Sindsy, 10th of May, 1850, eng aa EN Citadel, and materially assisted the Louisiana and | these gentlemen are now in this city. cil was called, and some three-fourths of the force | for se cer tee watting a aultable, tine, te at 12 o'clock. noon. Sta rook Kentucky troops, who were still engaged in storm- determined to land at Key West, placing a guard | jear’ from them, they recommenced firing, dam Inbabitants of Matanzas:—Three hundred adventur- Pay ay Bee n\ ne Uo i pm roe Wp 4 ing that ace, with great loss, and with unsurpassed 5 ae co al er oo ag THE ATTACK ON | over the boat's compass to insure it. The officers | gerously wounding Licatenant BL. ‘Jones, of yes am sat aspen ad mn te me had heard of the vandalic invasion of our territory— allantry. In the meantime, company (D) of the [From the Savannah Kepublican, May 25.) generally were willing to follow he Me oc and pany K. Louisias nd slightly wor Rarbor of Cardenas and landed to sack the town, By | scarcely had the voice of the higher authority been | Miseiseippi battalion had batiered dowa the doors of | One of the aids of Gen. Lopez, Gen. Gonzales, | c,,)he Creole ran aground in leaving the harbor of | some 16 men. Th realéance wea then brody the shortert route, I go to attack him, leariug in com- | heard by its proclamation—when we have ‘the un- | the corner house opposite the Citadel, and op- | jays here badly, but supposed not dangerously, t Deine oveduaeiod venela! She | and staff tosurrender. He was, together with bis stadt mand of tho place, during my absines, Brig. Gen, | utterable pleasure of being able to announce a vic- | Pesite “the prison house, and with their rifles | wounded. Col? O'Hare of Kentucky, is also | ton of being over aa tt nine one 4 troops, in all 100. placed under guard in thelr bare “Antonio G, Ova, s most worthy ebiet, whom you sl: | to , did deadly execution on’ the Spanish garrison. | wounded, but not dangerously. Capt. , of | Wes ouly got off after throwing overboard a large | veka Weilberated about 150prisoners whom we fund ready know. Confide in his energy, os I confide in Tie arrival of the Pizarro, which entered the | 42 independent company from Mississippi, having | Kentueky, died of his wounds, and his ly was quantity of ammunition and provision—only 80,000 | TOS. Ail arms. ammunition, horses eo. were collected your loyalty, Signed, VALOVERA. | ort to-day, having on board (lens, Armero and Pe- | 80 place assigned them in the battle, eonnected it- | thrown overboard the day ufter they left Carde- | Tounds of ammunition remained. The Orcole, in | trom the eitizenator onr use, We remained in qitint pose Matanzas, 19th May, 1850, haranda, Commander-in-Chief of the District, has | £¢!f with the four companies of the rifle battalion | pas, Among those killed, was an ‘Eplecopal parson | S0ing to Key i he the South par » While | sion of the city until dusk of the even! ich At halt-past 4 P. M., the Governor, Falguera, | pon ohe in the important news adaooctannaleele from that State, and fought with it until the Lieat. | from the West, whose name I have not learned. | 'h¢ Pizarro tock the North passage. Thus they | (imethe entire foree, exerpt ‘ion. Lo ‘ogether with 400 troops of the line, left town, in a . “ Colonel, observing General Lopez, without a body- | The Ameri i from the | Missed eech other while outside. Had they come | commend of 25 men under Capt. Loge spate train, for Cardenas. » ; J | shiva Leleneee yt bere oo! ~ ie, Oak ere eee var hartenly a himselt > dodo poopie, aed she ae m © eee oeolaue ew in contact, a blood: struggle would doubilese have | Regiment. had returned on board o Lopez's party landed on Sunday morning, the | it went to Contoy where there was a'vessel anda | the Citadel, detached this independent company to | stationed near Cardenes, were on the march to at- | Deon te 19th, at 2 o'clock, surprised and took A part of the merchant schooner. On board of these veescls | that duty. They gallantly performed it, aud had | tack them, took to their boat at night and put to 1 ? -umstance, and one well worthy | Degen defended his position until reinforced from the , pursuing the rust to the Governor's house, | there were about a hundred men, of various nations, | 2 officer killed in joining the General. About | sea for Key West. ‘The next morning the steamer ecient nang rae . 4 TOY | steamer. The engagement lasted nbout three-quarters where some three or four were killed in defending | }.°°1)"Ciothed and equipped, who had come from | *¥Orite, a torch wus lighted by General Lopez's | Pizarro was discovered astem, in chase. They | Of Mention, that the cholera disappeared in Havane | Cy Sy hour. Our loss in Killed and wounded, amounted it. As econ as resistance ceased, the Governor, | 10l¥, © tek. Conta uni Saimens adjoining | WH hands, against one of the doors of the Citedel, | kept head all that dav, and at night changed their | ‘ie moment that the news of the landing of the ex- | 16.42 including Capt. L., who was mortally wounled,and who was in the house, was called upon to surrender | Viicatan, the place laa the pirates. and econ the building below way jy flim. | cahise io northeast, and made the reef Key Va- pedition was received, This circumstance is well | gjeden board the steamer, The enemy lost all except result. The Pizzaro had on board four | when, to our surprise, tho comma y 8 of Grenadiers—(probably 200 men.) 160 to 200 lancers and cavalry, all mou Capa himee! isoner. is refi the house N hel the Spe" re J sustained by the experience of all disciplined ar- During th two k Af, and, with 0 ee Coe longing be the ‘of Don Narcisso Loper, heal of | 224 Prepetied roof above. It was not until it | terday morning, having arrived in the night, She | fick list diminishes rapidly. ‘The excitiment in | meet), Oat te 8 steomer in the harbor, belonging 0 the’! the expedition, which twodays before Ni" carceu io expedition, which, in a few hours afte: preame monifest that the building would soo ; gemanded a lot Of sews, mogers, who Iny Civ | the north, and which, by tius time, no doubt, Move up, that the Governor of the ity, officers and | there in the Petrel, the United. States schooner ents | S24 CF thie day alice, the ar-| ed nt erp BS Fis'is all the information we are i jon | f= i our eoldiers, and rrison, came down and surrendered. They | peged in the coast survey. ‘The purpose for which |“; s\n of Ege iy tn chase of am, ; is all Ree e Fe, a pensation équeuelite eiebt tra’ 48 fol death, ght With a gallantry unsurpassed by any troops. | they waited « pilot was, a8 they avowed, to chase | Dlanation er we wuck of car Key Wes 2, pilingon bbe of up to this hour, 5 P. M., 20th of May. | This capture ‘may be conside some impor- The , authori Hes now surrendered .t he City the the Creole. Mr. Rogers replied that they could re nel Be mene of the in 1. and of 2lit. saw @ e on were removed, and the wounde: i i 1 ¥ cipal a) ons ndera! a: | steamer t it d. Ln, lot off the GPR SEY WHET COMRINPORDEROE. | The Pizarro has brought with her fourteen of the a h bivouncked in the Great Square. General Lopez | threatened to inform the government of his refusal | 3* ¢ Jeera trom officers of the expedition now in | shout 1 P.M. and landed, being chased up to that Key Wesr, May 21, 1850. | prisoners. Their Se number was above one hun was now busy im organizing those who seemed | to fumish him a pilot, on which Mr. Rogers sent | {his city, wes spon Matanzas, which place. they | time 2 Senta Wary Exciting Scene at Key We—The Chase of | dred. They are of different nations, and betray the | (Owdras Matanzan that evenings TAC two orclocke Raa cadhettn chert tiaiere pice heorded <r wete evened hom teeta ty “Tris tooniorion | Keutocky topless, sith cove 60 tnvm, was detailed te *, , ‘ Ve Tost eX phi ardice an ear. is ascer- = - od a pe } C1 i rel y e Je h the Steamer Credle by the Spanish War Steamer tered hy the Pizarro that thie whole invading foree | be ofdered two of the remaining three eompanics | Pizarro from a piloting schooner, and brought her | Of General Lopez in Matanzas and the djacent | Cctlumtention with Mateneas, and avd not retuea une Pizarro—Escape of the Crecle—The Attack on | doeg noi exceed five hundred men, and that their | Of the Mississippi buttalion (one being at the rail- | through the ship chennel. Iu the meantiue, the # represented to be almost unbounded. | tii'inte in the evening, but in ample time to participate Cardenas—Incudents of the Expedition, §2.. §¢. | plan wes to diserabark in the neighborhood of Ma- | Feed depot) to march to the steamship, and place | Creole was rranain down inside the reef, with all | further | gaetgerny be wohl he ¢ agement. at which time a command of Our usually quiet town is at this moment the | tanzas, and to march to Havana—yes, to Havana— | *!! the ammunition and stores of the expedition on | the steam Sheoonld tues. Gherounded the Light- mig Ae hector po a y : acity which, in less then twelve hours, enlisted | the cars. In an hour the work was done, when | house point a half hour before the Pizarro. What | '¥¢ Mme h scene of the utmost excitement. At about sun- orders ceme.to place them back again on the | might have been th mence had she gotten a | & Spanish my more than three thousand volunteers, ready and ” : ig e consequence had she g ® | into the harbor at night, on o rise this morning, a large war steamer was disco- | able to resist any enemy. What greater folly | Steemehip. | In another hour this also was done, | pijot from Mr. Rogers, or whether it was her in- |" i feat from the diffe las, to be in the offi could be expected from robbers, whese only desire | 8P4 the work was just esecomplished when | tention, after having crossed the bar and gotten in iG passed gat on ¢ ‘veted from the different cupolas, to be in the effing, | Som i xy - the battle of the evening begun in the town. | tere, te hy ked the Creole: and c ing her. Had the I pillage--who intended to share our property x . *. | our watera, to have attacked the Creole, and cat Gemetren: thes hed: dete to the eastward of Sand Key, with her colors flying among themselves, and had promised twenty thou- The tLieutenant Colonel of the Keatucky regi- | her off from this place, we can’t tell; but such it is Sy hey ad detern for a pilot ; and she was soon afterwards boarded sand dollars, and a plantation, to each officer, and | Ment, dering the evening, had marched his force | supposed must have been her derign, from the fact engcace Romacamen of pots Wal by one, who was cagerly interrogated by the offi- four thousand dollars to each’ soldier, with lands, | ‘Pte the town, and they, with the Louisianians, did | of her wanting a pilot to chase, and from the know- | fry famed would hy Syey ‘i , i ver! § ” | this whole duty. ‘The Lieutenant ¢ ledge which her oflicere niust have had that it waa | OF the desperate cour cer in command, relative to a steamer of which | With it sitet Micecive all those who, thirst- | Major in command of the. Missi innpoesible for e veesel of eo great draught to go in- | i# unnecessary ay, org they were in search. He could give them no infor- jing for gold and for blood, ladertake euch advyen. | the steamship, againet the positive orders ofth side the reef. The only use for a Pitot was to | posed of Ge very or of our on c mation, however, as no other steamer had been in | tures! If there are unhappy countries in which | ¢Tlin chief, formed their men and quickly joined | come inside and await the approach of the Creole. Gestnn the Giaht ext ik byt t to th sight, and he was dismissed. This was the Span- the abandoned may boldly exercise their crimes | their fellow soldiers in the city. The enemy had | The Creole, aftet being detained twenty minutes during the night attack was equal to that at =. = = Poers and soldiers joined us, one of whom ligh!y wounde ded Col. W t or Whits of the Louisiana ree Hara of the Kentucky regiment, pt. Logan, do. do. do stight= Lieut, Jones, of th nt, seriously; 1, ———-.. of the Gen, Steff, slightly; Qr. Sexe lississippi regiment, mortally, (dead,) Cal, of Gen}. Stuf, missing; Major Hawking, of the Kentucky regiment, € TUE VERY LATEST EUROPEAN INTELLIGEN CH. BY TELUGRATM FROM LONDON TO LIVERPOOL. sae Crim ren fe : ; | . They speak in the highest terme of the , and live in idleness let them know that Spain offers | been repulsed, however, with great loss, by the | by the healih officer, was allowed to come to the roomgt AP ie ie fi tho, ot nando England, ieh war sieamer Pizarro, recently sent out from io euch hope. This island is no place for such | time of their arrival. wharf; while dropping down, the Pizarro passed | tovey apd ahlle ot Gen; Lopes, wite, sey ay is Piatt Og =theoe ahaa a Spain to Cuba. At about nine o'clock, another — persone—an island which owes its prosperity to the | | Cem, Lopez ney ordered the whole force to re- | on above andcame to anchor. ‘The commander ane a ging Fen vg * Orie bing 4 f “4 ispo~ steamer, crowded with men, was seen coming — indusiry, the loyalty, the integrity, and good con- | (mbark on boarMhe steamship, andthe vessel stood | ordered the filer £0 put her between the Creole and | E\l'we way form some. id rwdeie thea tatters eae ge business down inside the reef, under a heavy press of steam, , duct ‘of iis faithful people. Sihd aaveind. i eloht at ti coming run | the shore. Je replied he would be d—d if he | [0 hope’ Sean wits they bad: gous Andcf the | “een Continential places, with the exception of ; d. e weight of the men and of the | would, “reole touched the whasf, ich hich thee " i i atecria, directly for this harbor. 1 he Pizarro disco: ! Se evens, ret aarene—caeeatie ammunition, made it clear that se would remain |, rush wow Calfuyas me a one 'ts ie mdies oma flinching courage with which they were . opera ‘ = in demand. Bilis Wows: and she was. evidently determined to | At eight o’clock this Z, we learned the ar- | *round, and be captured by the first Spanish man-'| und side nrms for the shore, and soon the boat was | EMO oe ae te aR salen on ie oon intoreept and captare her, Our cupolas and wharves | rival at this port of Don FCruti, Lieutenant of | fe q'er, trniicn wal eimag-ef eet soot erand ai | cbutely abandoned. | ‘They’secr enough to | APTN Gor. of the Charleston Courier] |g syne ee agar Nasal jie; a ~ | the Gove: ¢ Cardenas, We immedint 2 and por wel stand off | have gotten once more on American soil. Fortu- | * vam, Mi ans, Friday, May 17.—The Jow SeI5 fone tho movenvéats of he ter boata there | cured information frm this quarter, an fllvwer | amd ater her fo pieces, in thie extremity, the | mately’ for them the U. S. Barracks about a | | we give.an extract of a totter fom Havre coutoins the following-—* Ministerial or relative characters. The Creole, with the Cuba | At three o’clock, on the morning of the 19th, the sown overboard. With he exception of ammall | oh ao city, were vacant and afforded @ | we have received. You will observe that Lopes | gory received by the naval att tueo et eee iti . | rol % Pa | shelter. The Pizarro lays here still, having kept | end his prrty reeeived no sympathy or support from y '. ee being ‘somltine ta reer e | tena Tanto fp ovigt ‘casey boca dayight was ee —— the vessel at | up steam all yesterday aed Vast bight, pa a eapehe the inbabitants il That even the convicts command thet al beg nen from 2to 40 years of eh pat. re m. re aue lac on the d to join the fperma&nent navy seamem ps soon inquired to | hensive she Was in a dangerous neighborhood, and Piearro had the heels; and as the ‘of recape , known, put himectfat the head of seventeen men, j 2 7 | what place they were bound. Gen. Lopez informed | jt might b - ly * b had a suspended some months evitantly. one but the little Creole, saualated by | Meantime the people fled, leaving not a woman | Mantua, on the North-west coast of the island, and | men aboard, and one of the Spaauh officers Who | They lande mstrations ag ‘armaments are com giemly on, but the littl Creole rorin and sides of bacon thrown into her | OF child in the place, thus manifesting their horror A the liberation of Cuba. Many offi- | eseeped from Cardenas. of cour uncertain to what polnt they are « 4 4 . d their Willingness to go with him, but It was the dex ‘. o, had the ap a ay, the attention pai fires, t thi etch ho hed kL ; ‘aa the design of the A ans, had they | tf nct probable they will mak cond et r house point Romy A ecto: er z At helt past OP St “aay We te attacked by fifty | The of Fg wae 7, ref — | found it impossible to eecape, to haye boarded the | land on the I She povernehens shenmen ent of the recall adversary, and came into the harbor in dashing | foot soldiers, twenty Jaborers, and a namber of f 7, Seas: sa ghty be geen om the Pizarro if they could. Could they have doae this, ‘ followed by her powerful enemy, who ran by _ country people, under D. Leon Fortun, commander | Syyply cf coul’ for the vessel, the. lie | thgy would have taken her in rn minutes within thi o aki ¢ ¢ ere dri , fh 0 ; . " By : / xX men, and four ofheers of the garri- Nee a Tae eae ie alanine Ginece- | perfect daondcr to thelr Unat, leaving behind etve- | 107 0f, ater und the, tardiness with w ton, ne, Joined the Avwericans, darung the Tbe Creole" esd cod fieey General Lor fal killed and wounded, tahing off a Colonel White, folowing particulars:— bedly wounded, expedition sailed from New Orleans on the The steamer in which they came was the Creole, ‘7th inst.; vioited the rendezvous, gathered its scat- in of the pirates was Don Narcisso tered strength of six hundred men, and, under the In_ their flight they left behind Sen’r, command ct Gen. Lopez, attacked’ Cardenas yes- © nd Sen'r. Legara, whom they had detained A. M. ‘The plan was, to for some time as prisoners. [ven the prisoners, at Cardenas joined the liberating hey demanded to be taken to the ne nited States port, and soon the officers | rally concurred with them in eo reasonab mination. Gen. Lopez was forced to y | wishes, and gave np the command o | The next day, as we were in fight, and have come over with t t | much attached to General Lo; en Negroes | Phe news has jost arri | aleo come over. When the men returned to the | demas, of a body of men. « beat, at Cardenas, they fo out twenty ne- You ex ngine the eaciten | aroes, who ptayed to be taken with a were vent ore, however, except t a, ght of Key Wert, | who hid themselves, and were nc 4 we obtained the They 8 n y ” i arava, May 19, 1 ven of the landing mist journal, Union at two o'clock. / s es : a 4 eno , : eatry Matanzas by surprise. The night was dark, , they would not join them, but took uparias against | fromCardenus. We led her ito. the port a very | ncee Marvin, the Di ction of that augast body L herewith en- | teinbleass tnd the weather favorable; but a diliculty was tm. At 2 o'clock in ihe morning of Mowlay, ‘ bat owing to the quarantiae requie- | dered tim to be delfveredng aie eee been pat e red in getting the boat near enough to the e governor etenzas arrived at Cardenas, 4 The it. possibly be J were diseovered before fie;!. . be i jo 1 ate, we ° A d | the revenue laws, and will as they hed to croes the decks of a bark, and climb phan to possess themselves of our property. have | ourselves to the anthorities at Key West, and that | No remonetrance’ was. jac sed r and then, im over her saileand spars, onto the whorf. Finding fled away cowardly before a mere hy of brave Spent 4 - * 0 the e Gremeelvee discovered, they. rushed into the town scldicrs and people, They are deceived if they | pad ay marge at sg yi EES when she was seized. ‘Th k prlounens, they tastes canues, Ge tries ee eae beat on tee and attacked the Governor's house, the barrack ¢xpect to excape by their ilight, the chastisement | Irclceed by us at Conlenas; not one women oF | . y the la Gome rey one hundred and some fourteea oF Giteon heard of it with deep emotion. The The officers and men of | and the jail, at each of which places soldiers were they Ceserve. Our @hips will pursue and overtake child injured or insulted. Part of them are Americans. The Spanish ete re can lead to no serious ny | l ie m, ane are of the Tro war despatches muito Weel Kowever, aad the: Clovergor and four oft. | Meantime, the exptal prescsts © mom warlike | Se *xPediion peld Mierally for what they ate and | Phat witt | cee Pikey Ween, Mi ther Oritnaioet purty” niomt Lae mode prisonsrs, by eight o'clock in the mora. epect. ‘The enthusiasm increases hourly. No- | drank. A large jewelry. srore enme ints their pos. | Tunders | | Op our arti y, and the ground to ote Bramee’ Meee = Se bees ere to the General thing but men ruaniag about to mount guard, with | S¢ssion during the fight, but a guard of | stand, leave to-day for New Orleans, and, above | baving been } , and the second to Ky 4 Tom net the fail track hed t Heo 4 their guns on their shoulders, are met at eve: soldiers was placed over it and not an artict | 800 on the Isabel, General Lopez, and lis 'nid, J. | stenmer. sb 5 ay er hi, A that tail traci been taken up, an re , ry The emigronte from | Senchez Yanega, ore ‘among the latte After the | Onderstend p throw her on that of Rassia. Allthe opposition up, in care of © Cardenas we tile t Cor en aoe We sailed from Key West in the Irabel, and had on | poy ‘hed to Matanzas, and thatthe main point. ; object of One of them gavé our officers a breakfast attack had, therefore, failed. During THE CURA NEWS—THE AMERICAN PRISONERS aT », without exception, speak to the same effeet. boat had gotten ont to rea frow n parscwlar, upholde the English alli- e ; woe taken to determine their card ern! Lope d ‘ of the | oe ey ree uw oe wl ae es [Prom the CMirlestun Marenry, May 26 morning, and in the evening he was ki voted for coming to Key W agen’ | somsnaan’ Poets Shesey, be atanest com eas te, teas ging that bat % Graland there ii invoked for it “TT ste of all el Ld a By the arriv Saturday, of the steams! charging usatthe head ofa company of lance then asked to be sent ashore at La Vuelts de Abajo, | th CS ae a Trance imme= Heaven, 1» bY peop an In estimating our Joss, I set it dewn at from thirty | where troops were stationed with the Spinish | after Pebroary, 18% France,’ jebt of the hth inet. T in the morning, ebout jdiera ly by the ladies dh bel, Capt. Rolling, from Havana, we are Pye ny, hoasiating of Sbirtyale resale’ ot prsteae! ion of copious details of the late in compan » Pree, “showed no anger when Lombardy, | diers, with their sergeant at their heal, In the | the Irtand of Cuba, by the forces under Gen. Lopez, sioa of | € forty killed and wounded—that of the Spaniards | soldiers who had joined them, and who were #, and Hungery fell; but now she ater at one hundred killed and wounded. The people | anxious to have followed him. ‘A nuinber of the | " of the United States should remember that at dark, | Americans were also willing to follow him. The | .. = the eveming, a company of lancers charged upon | to disturb the peace of Europe, beeanse an Bay afternoon he had re-emberked a part of his troops, | Which will be found annexed. A : ~ iNing to fe Ab q 1 nes eS we "cud od thems peogenea to. 1 |. View Comal takiee 0a Gadinonal @ of ah Mamned to muake & descent uron La Vecita Gen. Lopez and several of his officers took pas: |" the evening of the 19th, we had again repaived | eupply of fuel was so small that it was thought phe = 5 ee nan pvtane : | 1 Lore = tallere of hie boges son ea Some of the popers assert that Lord Palmerston of, some other contiguous point, when he | fege on board the Isabel at Key West, and are now and silenced the enemy in Cardenas, and had quiet | there would not be sufficient to take them baek | the Governor and hte side taken. pri in th hos token advantage of France's present position te ae ahacked by & cotps of cavalry, ia two squad- wannah and thiscity. Gen. Gonzalez, one of | Possession. of the place, and that by Cieneral lo | to the thore and reach this plier, and they | yw jeamer Creole . Gea. I % Aol. OH f the Ken. | Pez’? positive orders we abandoned it, and stood | determined not to return, General Lopez seers | t only two mon killed, and twolte ag bh ary Matiasd tae erconeteeee tuchy Teghenen bch wounded, bat set dangerous | PN) font instend of marching into the interior of | still sanguine. He enys that his name will yet et Among the lntter, was Gen, Gon- om wer. - P Idi erished. ‘The Americans fought with | ly, pA at Key West. Capt. Logan, of the Kens Cuba, and fighting for its liberation as most of the | call a host to his standard, The American fe ond Col Capt. Logan wae wounded by he Courier fey mad pretends that a plan of @ rs Teekiesences | thot astonished the ‘Spania ds, | tucky regiment, died the day afier the Creole left | ‘ors desired to do. in the highest terms of hia courege. He was to | two balls d hie death onthe next day — | general ineurrection has been settled, to break out Cardenns, and his body was consigned to the deep. INTERESTING NEWS FF: HAVANA. be found throughout the fight where the bullets (* enemy, , _, We learn that deapatches “wore peoetved in this Itis eight in the evening, inet, and we have | flew thickest, They think, though, that he was bw a ad stemmed out of the port. The majority bs f by the Collector of the Port, from our Consul | just learned the arrival in thie port of Lieut, Col. of | deceived ag to the extent of lis popularity in | cy 'hig noble q {es opposed to the General's plan of Jonding | St Hevena, etating that there were about one han- | Cavalry D. Florencio Ceruti, the worthy Lieuten- | Cubs, and this was the cause of the failure of the | pariot and solcier Th Sadar. o ‘else, and insisted upon comiag to . Sted privoners in confinement in that city, charged | &nt Governor of Cardenas. We have immediately | expedition. As to the fact in this reepeet, it in difli- | The steamer Creve t# now lying in Key W. rees, 54 408. Paes oe port. Ile Was anzious to be laided, with the with be been eoncerned in the invading expedi- | *©) ht to obtain information of the oecurrences | cult to z Lopez bas long had the reputation | Spanish stesmer enticed tavana,afier ha The Hemburgh Tersenhalle of the 4 Spanish ‘soldiers who had joined him, and who al- . tien, would be tried by court martial, and request- Ne x ten tone, Soweto yey ee! 4°) Whi 4 aaah pon Suse } meron son woes tare boon tut. thet the Prussian General Bulow, intende owes Jeged that the we #tonce declare ae ing that en American lof war should at once | lack of time hae net al tis to leara all the de- ty is cl se eau ~— 4 — ret qe ain aerens hats cbrous thet cer. | Copeniiogen Oh the tomy (eet oh perecae an a beyond the mort ranguine expee- | on the pacsing of electoral laws. This ag and seemed only anxious to get a shot 4 | for being the organ of the commande? af tos [= The expedition was then embar' ‘The price of gold hae risen in Paris from 16 to 3? franes per 1.000 franes. Bouree—Fives, 87 40f.¢ - be ordered there. An abstract of these tailsWhich we and our readers anxiously desire, | his estates 8 som Pole bey crowed: the reel Gaitag the wen romnmited to de tow Guan ee, wl we fan foro them with ‘euihentic econ 34 fgrenstnrongh atfewnn, | Yccstarepet tae tnredes. "That all except she | luge the Tsien ormy were Yesterday Geaeed , ). the orderly and extrav: nt attere, the ‘with a hot re jon from all q 1 7 ‘ ot Ad are Fight a eT Se gene re Orit ‘he Yuen Seshear ov ru OPERATIONS OF THE LATS LIBERATING expeditionary pirates, At thie o'elock. onthe from wall, housetops, wi ou ‘es, Re eee eecars 2 Se a and ae of the line, as wellase@ ne a oneditation With the pilot wbout them. | ARMY OF CORA. mornitig of the 1th, favored by the darkness of the of Spanish troope,, moving | NB Vrorget to any, that after the sailing of the | Ao war, have beep equipped. ‘are now t the town, and have . On the 16th May, when near the of Ma- | night, and when no one could have as a the hee being hailed, retarn- | Creole from Cerdenss, they landed the Governor, and Narure, taly, M ger themaclves in the vacant U. 3. barracks. here, vane coast of Yucatan, the divi- my these voy the wane ete pl pm earg ae aay plage wes | be arrived in Havana on TrANy star at, taro, | UME BO malarial de * i . . ad se as or a. . Collector has seized the Creole, and will for- | tions of the expedition, numbering in all six han- Iending Vrecet Goreme, DP Catan, ke | thats or fear Milnes sepummenten to caprender. ‘The | _ Masts (hie morning » Arana man.ofewar steamer | gauseerisee ot neneats ioe Senn feit her of couree. On leaving Cardenas, the Ge- dred and pine men, were eoncentrated on the to the ' i. dora! released the Governor, and the other prison- , #itetaship Creele, ‘Thoy consisted of « regiment | placed himeclf at the head of lhe email detachment | hore was them set fire to, when ths Voverner, | *™ Giscorered aad bowrded by one of Whe pilots, of | wax doing Hnglish first clase vessels