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“Bchivewig War. “he fagorable ; a Holland, good erdina- | TB® Late Floods in the United Staton t 260. ary Ane | about ten A. M, pread of the warlike feeling. The neat speech of | of the President of the republic; to consider M. | tal ore i hanged suddealy The military position wf tne Danes and Schles iM. Garnier ained not a little by with | Berryer as the directing chief of the party; and to | ¥Y + pv ‘ fo ihe Coul ‘Frade—Destruetion at | to the north and Secet- Sete ‘Wig-Holsteiners, remaius the same as stated ia | sundry rambling orations; and a very sentimental | blame and disavow the acrimony displayed by the had ofl Ga Lie, ee term Of HautuchetmLees | accompanied, until about soon, with heavy. Cin” SUF Haat, Intelligence from Coprahagea, confirms | Rabbi, who immediately preceded him, and | Guzette de France 2 ee cotieigeted? ie | [Htom the Philadelphia North Amerionn, Sopt 9} | Flagstafls, uces,chimac; were blowa dows. & the belief _ patiees ecnarasrtan | meres ee words in the echoes of his voice, was Art, Music, the Drama. ti A fampk a were resdly fine, and thi itis a matter of no lide heiatos 1 acertain, | iter ja the house rs. Pig . 00 Ova ar hope! 8 that i. ” Mi geod condition, The trade ruled auii bat it ‘im- | Wil ch ‘ision le, Ul ject whic! was blown down, whi roke throug are preparations tor wintering in Schles-| Dr. Buller, a tall, thin Am FMak ne | Oe Knee oneitype oy rol meget seen Natio. | Sipalig sleared sh priege bemsiy eqeal oe Sears of lass | The Barc ene ar ton eas Sepremier will | 109f0f the porch, covering a lady, daughter nf wi hive View, they have eanaeed amen poi se purely bP ncreperetd — iS canna: five Talinn operas at Liverpool, Manchester, and other | ees bile foreign alo tn lates supply wasim very | have, together, ou this year’s supply of anthracite, | ire. at fall, pte Log with the roads GOULET @ speec! , 4d Trequeet. @ cortal ol L | ‘i 8, i ig, by intersecting them with trenches, | seemed te hav on ite secondary object the fur- ra yo ived £1,000 t Desde. wore blowk day, with sonreoly angthing ae py oper pre poe ger reenter ey not da gerous a — Pio a over ‘the Scheli they have thrown several | therance of peace. but for its primary purpose the | Liverpool; Belietti got 60 vlneasy Blas Willinus 60 | IE, 2Bi morning there was little disposition stmva | p. 8 Careful calculation and comparison with tite | Wharves and wmonget the shiver 5 teers a ‘bridges for artillery and infantry, oa each side of | exaltation of the United States in the eyes of the | guineas, Miss Audtcwn, 26 purmane: Movin ee be by the salllers 80 purchase, waives ab reduced retes, | pumps of last year, as doce Ore de leptadeng | Vessels were reported ashe any ll eae which « te‘e de pont is coustructed. Tae bridges | natives. hear, smd Benedict, 100 guiucas . 25 gui which | acters gen ernily raza mot dlaposed to euba: orks upon which we are here directly dependent | ent parts of the ie tet 0o eee i i i ; 7 a ae ew, ee. V -_— a iJ sq hikepriee prozeoted. by the no boats which lie net, George Dawson, of Burmingham, depicted Mrs. Bt. Albin, the sooompdished pianiste, who met | quote Unitea Btutce four 200. « 2¢e el ‘The Schuyiuill canal, last year, brought down Saeed (tory Bees at the time of thie murg to the city of Schieswig, and thence to| humor. If the American Waw ansions to prove | form be rble to perterm at a public conerrt. ; Crlete. be, Fn Ter ne ein caaey, OF Wikae we May Oo | be anne etemeneecée wsdered the wiater should General Willi- vovher direction, ckeruforde, may thus of the Danis! sem not give their aflai Hungary. The Débats has the tor owing from Vienna, 231 instant :—On the 18th, the féte day of the Emperor, excesses tovk piace at Pesth, in Hua- « In the course of the moruing the attitude of Certgin groups appeared iather threateniog, but they were not guilty of «ny acis which coula give the police a motive for iutertereooe. In the even- ‘ing, at the theatre, things issumed a different as- pearance. While the first verors fof the Austrian national hymn were beiwg sung the actors, a of spectators in the ceutre of the pit, aad com- of persons apparently belonging to the re- spectable clase, began to protest by cries, whistlin; and threats. Their insultiug vociferations ‘we addressed to the highest pei-ous in the State. To put an end to the scene of tunult, the intervention of the.armed force wus catied for, and from twen- ly to twe prise persons werearrested. Their social ition and the moment choren by them to promote isturbance, were an agyrava'ion of their fault, and was, moreover, on their part, a complete ‘want of political tact, if not of gratitade, ia hazard- ing a shameful demonstration sgainet the Emperor, immediately after the numerous pardons so gene- rously granted by him. The authorities of Pesth, i of understanding their duty in delivering Up these guilty men to justi :e. ullowed themselves to be led away, either by tne etlect of indignation, or mmisun zeal, to use means which in can ascmee las. oie lined country, and bd t su nishment without any form o! “ The most Pulte of the parties wee imme- diately incerporated as private soldiers in a regi- ment, and the others bud the bastinado applied to them, at the rate ef thirty strokes each. Affairs do not go on so well in Croatia as could have been Wished National demonstrations are frequent, according to ocular witnesses, the Ban Jella- chich does not exert himself Stier to repress them. You are aware that the town of Fiume has already vent to Vienn1, to demand that it say be detached from Croatia, and united to the district of Fiume. This idea, which will meet with many zealous advocates, even in the cabinet, will ly be carried out. ‘The Peace catia? ine Frankfnrt-on-the- ae (Prom the Liverpooi Mail, August 31.) Another peace farce has been enacted, the place eee time being Fakir om ain. lings were, ut least, ef an amusia, character ; and the more salient points have bees rdmirably hit off the reporter to the Times. The “ peacemakers,’ we are told, arrived at their destination on Thursday week, and forthwich com- menced business in the Pauiskirche. The majori- y, of the part ro —_ serene Nr Engtish language, including a large number mericans. Next came the Deane distinguished from the English and Americans by tarir having the appear- ance rather of fashionable Moutsgnards than of plain Puritans. Last of ail, the Germans. The way in which the speeches were received tested this enumeration. Livery speech given in English fell with an a plom! that showed it was delivered in the vernacular tongue of the assembly. The F ch speeche ily applauded by a more ‘ tan speeches were grave, flat. When a speech was sually important, u resumé of it was giv. in her languages by competent inter- preven. The Pr was Dr. Jaup, of Darmstadt, a venerable-lovking, Couatry-parson sort of geatle- man, who recominendred the opeuiag of the meet- ing with a silent prayer, which was duly offered up by all the members. The chief speakers of the first day were the Rev. J. Buinet, M. Emile Girardin, M. Bonnet, Fa) pastor of the Freach Provestant church of kfort,)and Mr. Coddea Mr. Burnetis one of those half-facetious oraters who cau always ha joke, und the moral or rite With pious assem st the employment of set that man is born without tusks or cl Tigers,” quoth the Rev. Mr. Burnet, * have claws; therefore they were made to fight. Men weie made with none, there- fore, they are bound to keep the "A repu- diation of the term * euthustast,”” as applied to the e83, Was another success on the part of Mr Burnet, expecially when he declared that, accord pen his notion, enthusiasm implied wildaess whereas nothing could be more iid aad rational than the counteuances of the people before him. After the more jolly Calrdousn, the French pas- tor, who went logically through the categories of seligion, morelity, reasou, d homaowty, and as in allusions to the Redeemer as the preach- er of peace, in @ tone of Gallican fervor strongly distinguished from Eagitsh what fa rel bdlies. His argument Weapons was based on th pietisin, came ia some- gubriously. Seuttmencs much the same larly expressed | alot, who ascend- antages of his sable his own were much more jo Mr. Richard Garnett, « negio ed the tribunal with all the hue. At this sort of meeung, a main of unusual cou 4 or color is always a favorite, especially with fair sex; and a North American Iadiaa who entered with (he other delegates, but wno had not yet epoken, wi verved Wuh plaudits alrnost equal to those which haved the eatrance of Mr. ‘obden. une of M. Emilie Gir- relanations on the of the French auditors. te was the represen- eof France pur excellence, wud his dutingwd appearance contrasted strang: ly with the primitive look of many of hie fellow orators. His speech ‘was equally diflerent from those ot predeces- sors. Dibucal allusions were not in nis way, but he came in a8 a propounder of philosopyical ab stractions, which he poiwted oti with French €pi- He neatness. The idea vi unite was to be | carried out—unite in everything ; wad every he eaid the word aniie, 16 was with rear 5 to universal history, aad, | e claring that ce: conquerors of the ot world were named Alexander, Cesar, and Napoleon, added that the viewrs of ine new world were named Watt, Wilberforce, Xe. Civilization was the grea Europe, and type and steam are now to do what was dove heretofore by fire and sword. All this, deuvered wuh 5 form style of gesticulation peculiarly bis owa, told with t force ; and he could reure with the sa- tisfaction of a brilaat Frenchman, who had eahi- bited som talent. But, after all, the at card of the performance | was the speech of Mr. Cobden, which cam wards the conclumon. it was a bold, slashing ad- dress, pot marked throughout by good taste, bat abounding in arguments aud ilustrations which everybody could understand. He sar peaceable plan could be found, the governments were bound to adopt that proposed by the Peace Congress; and if any goveramrut refused to adopt a plan of armtratioa, the people should repudiate that overnment. This was pretty strong language, aad S vehemence of tone and gretare win which it wae uttered, stood out im stroug relief against the sharp epigrammatic manner aud jerking acuon of M. Je (are . Aa allusion to the presence, at the mecting, of General Hay nau, as an evidence that even the warriors themselves had become averse from their profession—though this was in the worst poseible taste— brought the Whole oration to a showy conclusion. sting, wach took place on Fri The second meeting, wah took pi i- day, went off, on thee whole, more briskly than Maire Hindle ot Oldham, was one of the con- bong 44 ” and his speech, while kere t Teaeet mark, was her calculated to a 4 nstend whole matter in a ridiculous poiat of vie commenced by speaking from the throne, of the tribume placed in frout of it; and when, ia obedience fo the hint of a su; gestive missionary, he descended to the later, a Uwer ran the assembly. The military be attacked on the ground that be Tina seen maimed soldiers in the streets, and that a man with two legs was a better mem ber of seciety than a man with ovly ome. With anecdotes he was rather copious; he narrated, with remarkable unction, huw he had once met that his country was lurge, Mr. Dawson was punt Mr. Penson, the tenor singer, bas wri:ten to the equally patriotic in representing that we Britons | 7:mes, excusing himelt for being abennt from the Lind | 1°! SRocealng 0 bales for the wes. and prices are are not “shabby.” He waa evidently afraid that | T?eereel en Faturday bight week.on thy proupa of hic At Liverpool the decline oa american tome acute Frapkforter would think that the pro- | *thedral er geps ments mn London cn Sunday e 44 Ma middling Orleans being mow quo- Tha ye feesed horror of war was only a horror of its ex- penses, and, therefore, he boldly told the meeting that Englishmen, to get rid of war, would double the natioual debt ; nuy, many of them would even go on foot (st) from Frenkfort home—a geo- raphical observation that excited some li'tle mirth. Vith some unwiiliogness, Mr. Dawson confessed Anovg the cther visiters whom we may expect at the great exbibition next yenr, will bes German chorus, mace up of many Lieder tofel eoci-tivs, rivaling iu nua. ber the never-to be-forgottrm Coleoge gathering (an Atsem blage of more than Yoives) the intoation of which is to give performani &e—The sales of custor oil have beon exten- .18TO ewes iu wld Kt prices ranging from dd. @ Td, chiefy fhd » Xd for goud to flue second. 0 cheats five Chita rhuburb bave been token at 24. per 1b, ‘There ure buyers of China camphor at 64. but no sel- Jere uncer ti €d, Turkey opium firm at lis 13s, 4 Cutch dull at 16s, Ga. Gambler firm at lls 9d. of the King en's“ Infant Sleeping,” that he was not quite withoat military feeling. fi Dimi continues Acarce and wanted; we quote War he, hated, but he found a well drited reat *tHighlana Boebie™ by Winkie, st | oh cio a net ment a it spectacle, and loved to gee the | the price of £1,000 fine pictures are on their | Hives.—There was ® good demand at the sales of country — transformed into the elegant mi/i- | way bither, and will shortly arrive at Mr. Grumdy's | East India day, and the whole of 10 732 hides establishment, in Church street. Mre. Fitzwilliam and Mr. Buckstove are attracting numerous auditors tothe Royal Amphitheatre, and taire. Almost every orator had expressed a wish that the sword might be turned to the sickle, but Mr. Dawson, ever original, improved the standing rday, cflered were sold. The beet sorts realiaed extreme rates, AEG common descriptions \ a 4d. advance. Inpico—The d+ mand tor Kast Indis continues, and sentiment, by adding ‘a hope that pipeclay might | the bearty lspghter and applause nightly elicited ie | Sbout 400 ehests Bengal have changed honde nt erives be used to whitewash cottages and red cloth cut | Sem. PAT Dgeek M ast “appreciated | # advance of 4d.on the currency of July. but verpool au up into cloaks for , honestold women. Before ‘end that the pieces in which ry few sellere at preveut; io bought in tBey he retired, he took occasion to explain that he had | tyedugeee. ae WC athe e? - thabnanated poy es veal Oe te oy ou Tu irae merely flung out his notion of the spade exercise The Cle 5 sirens An Maier i eas 4 ‘or 3d 9,8 suggestion, without urging its serious adoption. | ,,75,9/ateou, Daily Mail thus notices the farewell ‘ompany's sales will be Mr. Cobden, also, made another speech. The the Aa ly an mn the Yad and 2th proxi- presence of the American chief afforded him an Th al —On Wednesday eventos. . and comprise 2 674 pleuls, with the addition of 600 opportunity to remark how much more savage we Rook hies Sarewell benase fae viogs | Piculs more, should they arrive im tim are than the American aborigines, inasmuch as we | to joining Mr. Kean's corps in Londom. Anythin, The Lnow trade has been firmer this week, with moro uote common bar £4 10s a expend more on the implements of mutual destruc- ye demand. We more enthugiastic than her reception, or more grati- ; 128. 6d; vaile £4 16a, both free on board im tion. fying than the result, we never witnessed. There was 7 O Fy a w paneer and bonnet aod glia ware shoe: | Yara fie Mcieia” fie OF or ined sam ‘, ie Gar A wi i t 7 o Saturday, a great rei cheated DY | ardheart-flt tribute tea talented, amiable: Sad mot | «Zant The market ia quici, and 92s. « 324,04. are the appearance inthe tribune of the Ojibbeway extr ion Ww chief, whose oration has, from the firet opening of "Leap utrmer.— Rogitah thest @ is & credit te the profestion sho Leap is irmer.—Englisb sheet £18 common pig the congress, been anticipated as an extraordia: erat An actrees or a woman. The | £179 £1758. Refined £19, 8panish £1658 per tom. porcean. Hit wid dreaded no deik Clas feck AM ay ay Rig A rp oily née, | | Lins Caxns.—Fine Amerioan in packages are of with a scarf acrosé his shoulder, after the old | crammed, and hundreds bud to go away without hay. | it ‘ale 0841 Se. Of thlek Amsricen wo are without French republican fashion, and the metallic plates ing the opportunity of testifying their reapect and ad. Seay Tendon made £6 10s. and in limited re. round bis arm gave a peculiar character to hiscos- | miration.” We understand ‘hat Miss Roberteon Sieg oe og in held nt £83 a £86, i tume. His oration was delivered in agrandiloquent | Te-*Pppear for # tew evenings im Liverpool, at the Chris- | southern 232 0 £84 108. Cod £34 10s, Pale ‘oes ‘ atyle, but its effect was rather upon the eye than | tian street Theatre, en row to the metropolis. ral ‘437 10a, £38 bes hee tor small the ear, the great point being the unwra) ofa In olive little doing, mysterious tanplenient whick he had pee sary Rody, 7m him, and which in the eyes of the peacemakers looked marvelously like a sword. When he de- liberately took off the linen wrapper, and discover- ed something which looked rather like a eat-o’- nine-tailss and which he declared to be an Indian banner of peace, the acclamations were tremen- dous. This was his grand scenic effect. He should have stopped here, but he did not, sal produced an See A very hfe regu jation, Ue ished jimite the time du: whic! a speaker is allowed to “keep the “floor” to twenty minutes, but the “ stoic of the woods,” luxuriating in the sound of his own voice, doubled The itheneum states that Madame Grisi has changed her mind with regard to her Russian engagement, and will go to Bt. Petersburgh for the winter season. Bignor Gardoni is en, for the winter season at the new opera house. L‘Uriente, at Madrid. Mr. Lum- ley hae engaged him for the next season at her Majes- ty's Theatre, pai but held firmly at £408 £43, Several parcels of cocoa nut have been auld from 20s. » 336., ——e 3is.. and haf ay at 26s, Lin- teed dearer and little offerin been paid to- = jor present and 31s. 6d. bao. for tature delivery, ear. re the early months of ‘Lhe demand is regular, without anima- including 5,000 bags st e changed hands during lle ante 800 bage Mad is dearer.—At public eal r] ras brought 25s. 64. a 266., and 970 henge fac a 268. 64., the latter for 10 to 7 Ibs. fraction. ow quote Bengal 2ts. » 286., being an advance of 64. reLteRn somewhat firmer at £15 108 for the week comprise 330 gland. Ganette, Aug. 30.) ‘he weather Pas the whoie, oeen tolerably auspicious during the week for harvest work.® In this neighborhood we have only had slight showers, but the accounts from the north and east are less favorable. On Tuesday a considerable quantity of rain appears to have fallen in Yorkshire, Lanca- the time. This profusion of words caused a re- | thire, further to the north, 6o as to imterru; 2,760 bags pepper, Penang action, and the venerable Dr. Jaup, the most ur- | the carting of grain, but subsequently the weather xe ved Pos qn ane president in the world, mildly limited every future speech to a quarter of an hour. Two Germans, Dr. Bodenree and Dr. Weil, spoke, one in French, the other in English, in order to be ate in the midst of Frankfort. This is a srriking fact, which needs no comment. Dr. Bodensee held in his hand a commission signed by several persons, including Dr. Grimm and the ministers of Schleewig-Holstein, which threatened to hurry the convention into an incon- venieatly rapid application of its principles. The doctor confessed he was not an ambassador, but still he seemed to hold some diplomatic office, cleared up, and the latest reports from thence state that carrying had been actively resumed; there ie, howeyer, still so mueh corn abroad as to cause much anxiety to be felt reepecting the weather. Farmers are too closely e ed at present, in the field, to have much leisure for threshing ; hence nothing very definite is yet known as to the yiel1; but it is worthy of remark | yellow Ha: that the quality of the new wheet hitherto brought forward has shown far fewer detects than, con- sidering the low estimate generally taken of the [ears before harvest had commenced, might ave teen expected, from which circumstance we ; and 37 cases Porto Rico at public sale were om 36a. a 42a, 6d., while 1,280 boxes ere m2 again a good demand by private contract, partly speculative, and the f transactions have taken place:— 500 bo aon secret terms, 320 cares brown Babia at 19s., 3.700 low brown Pernams at 176. whieh qualified him to refer to the Congress the | are inclined to think that the quantity will also | S24:500 bags inferior Manila at 358. 6d. The advices whole settlement of the Schleewig-Holstcin ques. | prove better than the character of the season led poe a eae ee ike tion. The Congress shrank from the practical dis- | us to anticipate. Some time must still elapse be- | Mediterran doi At St. Petersburg lay of ite Dr. | fore an epinion as to the general result of the | the article is quict, and we have no demand for white pavers of amicable arrangement. eup blandly pointed to Soapieticn which pro- hibited political allusion ; and Mr. Cobden, though he had no doubt whatever that the question at issue between Denmerk and the Duchies might be harvest can be safely ventured on ; indeed, it will be more than Cane difficult (in consequence of the great diversity of the crops in different locali- ties) to arrive at anything like a correct estimate Havana in consequence. Low somewhat firmer at 368. 6d. for old, and 37s. 6d. for new Bt. Petersburg Y. C. on the a] the price jor the last three months of the year is J: . 3d. very cleverly. settled by those present, suggested | as to the whole of the kingdom. All the informa. | t!l¢ for January and Fobruary, and February and that action would be premature unless both parties | tion we have at preseut been enabled to obtain con- py ae A il offered at auction to-day. were adequately represented. The “commission” | firms our first impression, viz: that wheat will be | of which'2(G0 were sold, consisting chiefly of goed which would at once have made the Congress | below the average of moderately good seasons, | common out of condition congous at a slight re- equal to @ great destiny, was therefore “ burked,” | even if that portion of the crop still abroad sho duction en previous rate. to the evident disappointment of the gentlemen who | be well secured. The extent of the potato blight | | Tix.— — end tin Da continue in request at brought 1 Saar Pe A continues to pe vainly eetemned, ard we ac- [— a oe ae np te h weneees o Sdwar: all, well known as the opponent | counts from Ireland are the same conflicti Boge - ¥ pGay were nought in of Sir William Molesworth, at Southwark, also Ine | Af,S18. 786, Being the highest bid. character as those previeusly received; mean- while the article is being hurried to market, and prices have for some time been so low asto occasion a very lavish consumption. The most recently received advices from Holland, some parts of Germany, Belgiom, and Prance, all speak of the potato disease; and as rye is also reported to have turned out a very deficient crop over a large Tonacco.—The market has been dull, no sales of the least interest having been effected during the woek either for home trade ot Tt, but helders continue of realizing full prices distinguirhed himself; but, whatever the other ora- ters may do, or however clever they may be, Mr. Cobden is the favorite. People ask which is Mr. Cooden, make up their faces for his jokes, and are apaious to get out of the church when his discourse us over. E¥hu Burritt came ont for the first time in this discussion. His ch, a history of the reas | portion of continental Europe, wheat is likely to In Wiaisvone mothing done; £175 « £180 is the of the peace theey, ia ch be was partion larly | more extensively consumed abroad than usual, po Ky Southern and North West. Polar anxious to show that the idea did not originate | which will lessen the quantity for shipment to this “f with Ame! but was borrowed from France and | country, and prevent ones so low as they Brown, Shipley & Circular. peony wee delivered with gravity and elo- | otherwise might have done. Ali this tends to fa- ust, 1850. quence, but out that flashy quality which has | vor the opinion that the value of agricultural pro- We have to report an exceedingly 4 id de, such an effect on audiences like that in the Paul- | duce cannot well decline im the I h markets; | cotton market thro ut the week a decline io still there is a decided want of confidence, and the most experienced appear to be at a loss how to act. ‘The wheat trade has consequently remained in a quiet state, and, excepting a cifling rise at Liver- pool on Tuesday (during the rain), no advance has tehen place at any of the leading provincial mar- tkirehe. Some of the orations went off dully enough, but the audience was actually astonished into applause by the epeech of Mr. Chipple, of New York, who, with his strong American twang, began in a most ig manner, but made one of the smartest prices of a Xi per lb. | This mut be bated to the continuance of more favorable accounts of weather for the growing erop, which have alarmed holders and ee to restrict their purohases wacts In Manehester the busi- £004s bas been equally dali, the de- jn the raw material baving completely destroyed yet heard. The steam engine be called | kets. At Mark-lane, matters have remained ia | coufdcnce lo the mainter f present prices. { shuttle, Which wes te uate natioas te | much the same position os before; in the early part The sales of cotton for Kk vuly reach 23 100 pether. Then he quoted the words of a transat-| of the week the tendency of prices was rather | bales, of wbich speculators h ken 6.270, and ex- lwntic stxtesman, Whose motto was, “ Be sure you'| downwards, but no eetual decline took jlace, | potters LEtO bales. The American deeeriptions sold consist of 4.900 uplands at 67d. ® Sd ; 4590 Mobiles at Sed, a Sid; 8,760 0 Sew Ielends at 12d a uid. The official quotations are, tair Orleans, 8)¢4.: fatr Mobiles. Sd.; talr Uplands, 77,d.; middling qualities, are right—then go a-head.”” Then came the expo- ion of the works of industry in 1851, and govern- nents are challenged t) exhibit the horrore of war “oe works of industry. ‘There was rather a large show of wheat oa Mon- dsy, by lend carriage samples from Essex, almost all of the € Ops from Kent the supply was mere moderate, and the proportion of new less. ur at Od aS4d; and 240 hen the resolutions on the list had been car- | The quelity was fully as good asthe week before ; | 7\, a 73,4 per Ib ried, an additional one against durlling indeed, many of the parcels from Essex were fine, The stock of cotton in whit port is 506,000 baler, on which M. Cormenm apd M. and weighed 62 ib. to 63 1b. per bushel. The best t 696.00 bales at this period of Inst year; that of American is 380,000, against 617 000 bales at same time The prevalence of unfavorable weather for the harvest base had little or no influence on our corn market, the general feeling of the trade inoliniog | semplee reslized similar rates to those current on that day se’npight; bat before the general runs could be placed, foctors found it necessary to make ® slight concession, On Wednesday there was spoke, the latter being received on this occasion with marked applause. Then came a vote of thanks to the municipal authorities of Frankfort | for their kind reception of the peace makers; and Mr. Cobden caused infinite delight mud asto- rh wheat fresh ap, and though the the belief that prices will low throughs nishment b seting as fugleman to an English was very thin, prices were pot fl 5 “hip, hip, hurrab!” demoustration of gratitude. moruing business was Most of the Germans stared with great eyes to vee tes were real with diffi- ; yellow, @ per quarter” Indian be 6d, a 6s 6d. per 70 Ib, About 2,00) bbls. common American rosin have been fold. at 2+ 10d. a Ss. per owt, Nothing doing im tur- the portly pietists of Great Britein wave their hats heat from abroad have been end bandkerchiefs, and atier such strange shouts, while Cobden beat 4 /a Julien. the proceedings , and a vote of by Cobdenish fun ad- ors,”” terminated the third | sive ticular anxiety to realize, and have generally in- sisted on previous term ded to cir- cumecribe the operat inclined to that a good many paresis would have changed hands had ecliera been more tractable. gress: which, as a good- umber ae hy life. enjoy in Teens say civil things to each other, is ” decided eucores, ut which the uninitiated, 1 n- cluding some grave disbelieving soldiers, who stalk humored mee'ing whe evidently regard with silent wonder. | The: some appearance of giving way on | | 2 Quester og neat year (eto be held in. London, | Monday, but since then the confidence of holders | Let 18: Exchequer Dills Ws, te 63+. pa; Bank anc the peace-makers hope that the Germans will | has pertially restored, tn consequence of an ‘The priveipsl feature in the for attend numerously. Mey they not be disap | inquiry for the lower-priced qualities having sprung | fat tone of Brazilian Bon pointed! vp on Belgian accewnt. Quotations of town-manu- | tietuetory ne foetured flour have not varied since our last, fine | citement produced by HM 8 ‘The Legitimate Congress at Wiesbaden, fort which bad fired upon her, killio ‘The Opinion Publique publishes the following letter, dated Wiesbaden, 19h ult ert pe | the most moving Freneh having commanded fully previous terms. There were a few parcels of new malting ba from Kent, on Monday, of good quality, whic! the eubject made be. we were present at one of realized 28s. pet quarter; since then none = aflecting scenes that could be witnessed. A train | to hand. The demand for ae ee has The bon ite avn and SvSeary ot of workmen from ail is of France, but the ma- | improved, in consequence of the belief this pric: jority of them from Paris, arrived here. Among | crops of this grain have not turned out favorably | further ad them were a Vendean and his wife, in the costume of the country. The Count de Chambord received them at three o'clock. They were ranged round a This morning it was difficult to 7 good | maintained jwalit t Inet week's rates. The value malt | fist. st 19to \. Duteh stoc! ies hewise crept up more or less. Llome-grown | list gives the dealings as abroa Jarge saloon when the Prince entered. After re- | oats have come sparingly forward, and the receipts | Danish Five per Conte 103 marking on the pleacure which he felt in seeing 80 | of foreign have been moderate since Saturday last, | 813 te 1; Ku ps renchmen, he said, ‘Ceme neerer to me, | Full pees were obtained on Monday, and to-day he my friends, still nearer,” until he had them all $0 | fine corn could hardly be bought at the rates then | im, that they scarcely left him room | eyrrent. Beans and have moved off in small | jy: ‘ow all the kind ex- is enhanced prices. Indian accounts | terda: leannot repeat to tities, he pressions that were exc! on rea corn has, owing to more encow InCortes the eales have been quite insignificant, | , raging 1, but 5 ber » from and to the sou! from Liverpool, been held with increased firmness. ct herein a seer, te. suber teers ba ing. yA Mesers. Baring’s London Circular. 65; Midler to 83),, Great Western 50% to Mi, Lowpox, Aug 80-57. M yor to XN; York and North Midiand Amanican Brocks —The week bas passed without any | The settiement of the secount of the past fortnight Dusiness worth noting, except s few sales of United 6 | In nd Foreign Stock and Share Markets is going of per cent bonds of $1,000 each st 108), There is net | Wo ' any material change in prices, but sellers would in ge clenaon---Ooneate clove 90% to 9015 See money, most securities be obliged to submit to « redactio: tendency Is decidediy Obio 6's, of 1875, are offered at 105%, New York 54 per grees. ene 110 vo 1104 on ay conte ot 101}; Penmeyivenie 6's at 83 per cont South Western J2\ tou; Great Northern B% to 9%; We have again to report considerable activity inthe | Spamish Five per Cents. ivs to 1vK, ditto Bhree per Produce markets, with an increased demand for offee rain ene, EMER, . August 90. sea ong, treme rten_Indigs and ue shore | wae dese fa So saasen te tins hoe te ‘merest retat! them beat” Every one was aflected at his words, and tears flowed from evel by The more | see of the’ Cawot de hamord i vening there is a are oot ange coceghe ond it has open fresh rooms. There remai now here of the firet arriva’ Lord Brow, and how Lord Breugham had told him that the members of the Peace Congress were “ the greatest fools in the world.” Forgiveness of injuries is, of course, a fundumental maxm wi the esa, and the notion of being called ‘fool seemed to tickle the audience so much, that Mr. Hindlay dweit on the word “ fool,” and worked it backward and forward es much as M. Girardin worked the word “ anité” yesterday. The Gallic “star” of today was decidedly M. Garnier, one of the secretaries of the Congress, whose clear enunciation and very i form created universal admiration. He laid it down as his fundamental proposition, that @ standing army is the couse of war, and carred on his reason- ing with @ precision so great (hat it might almust de called jautic. His views were rather eco- nomieal tl moral or reigrows, avd he dwelt much on the lose of labor coarequent on the em- ploy ment of men es soldiers. Attest, however, he came to the nt of nvlitary demoralization, aed pointed to the enthusiwm with whien chu play at coldw rs aller seemyg a reginent go theoagh “te exerewe, a8 00 instance vl an tawholesome a fresh inflox of visiters every . also advancing. uote be oon- Prince exercises a kind of spell on all fo — brienty. pon ‘on the ottan Bend, fo quich, ond G6. | clisred marmtoeh ob tenes ruite oad be token yoesaee so toed seam for hime. Sereral a the new visi- | lower. The corn trade is heavy, with large supplies ot | Progress | Pork moves very Fae yd ans tere, the workmen were badly accommodated with new wheat, and continued arrivals from abroad. The 20 active this week, lod; ; he heurd of i cad he occupied himself | harvest Is nearly completed in the early districts, and iyere working off their in foot them better places, for he regards him- Jn the north, There a ve pase pid Ey baring: LY self a host of all the French. To-day, the bn bank rate of Ver saiders th eee Meeker {Sicit 4 / Vendean is invited to with the Count de Cham- and ‘The sale of lard continues extensive. and bord, and two of the ‘kmen will also share in ook \- ae wen one ee that ‘pleasure. It was le to invite the e Of pote at 280 ,and | vance of 34. per owt. hes qenersily, bean, mad, ta jone remalm nearly unealeable ‘The demand for grease butter is about over tor the rem: fon, Livenroor Inox Market atinw per owe STH Bags have been offered at nuction, found buyers at t be mposeib whole of them, and, a8 he wished aot to show an: reference, it was decided ambord acerpted this avsured that whoever chance might fall would send him good noble ben: 3 — Priest tive; no me | Season of the year, no such flood has ever heen thot there was lost, during the two freshels, | ove halt of the shiy of the weeks just prece- | ding, say 15,W2 tor . leaves fir te aaanuty | Rio Januino, July 14, 1850. whtiothe city, only 265,000 toas ; or ional Accown (Nie, tee jess than the quantity bronght duwa | ri Accounts of the British Agsresion: wv 1549; and a» we cannot caleulate upon the canal | Interesting Shrpping Intelligence Death of Cape bets x in working condition oquin. this year, we tain Thorpe. uust take the above quanuty of 224,280 tons as the i i of 1849. In the last mentioned year, the Lehigh | PO eee Say Oe cae Mebel- wap conpany brought down 801,246 tons. Up to the | Steamer Cormorant entered the above pert, and Bist af Au me of this year, At had rang te0-4 502,194 | seized the following named veasels:—Lucy Aane, ions, of Which there was lost by two freshets, sav, i 15.060 tous; leaving 487,194 tons ax the quantity | Ltciada, Sarah and Ansa, and Leonidas, (they tt having, as is alleged by the English commander, been engaged in the slave trade,) and as she was leaving the port, having them in tew, the fort fired Our Brazil Correspondence, actually received. timated that the Lehigh wili resume woik in tour weeks from to-day, the 9th of September—that is, on or about the 7th of October, leaving, till the close of the season, six working weeks, during which the canal can sup- | UPON her. The first shot went over her hall, but vy; at 000 ‘con a wee k, 150,000 tons in ali— | the second struck her, and killed one sailor. The making, with the freights brought down to the 31st oe i i i r 4 oy pete of 637,194 ‘tie oF 164,002 lees steamer succeeded in getting outside with her prizes, returned, and commenced an attack upom the fort, which was destreyed. She thea left, and scuttled all save the Lucy Anne, which they sent to St. Helena, There was, in consequence, @ very great excitement here among the citizens, and the! We petitioned the Chamber of Deputies; bue nothing is to be done until to-morrow. Such was the excitement here for a few days, that it was not sefe for an Englishman to be seen iu the streets after dark. han the supply of 1849. Adding this to the de- ficiency of the Schuylkill caaul, we have a deficit of 388,352 tons for both companies together. The Reading railroad brought dowa, last year, 1,097,861 tons. The business of this year com- prised, opie the 31st of August, $17,162 tons brought down. The road will resume operations on the 16th ; from which ume we may compute ten weeks, til the 30th of November, of avtive work at 42,006 tons per week, or 420,000 tons in all; making a “ total eupply from the Reading railroed,-up tothe _ On Sunday afternoon last, as a number of Eng- time mentioned, of 1,237,162 tons; being an excess | lish officers were regaling themselves on shore, the Hotel Pharoux, the building was surroun by some 300 persons, (most of whom were respec- table citizens), swearing vengeance on them, and it was only by exchanging coats and hats with some American shipmusters, who were present, of 139,301 tons on the business of last year. De- ducting this excess of the railroad supply from the above deficit on that from the canals, we still find that there remainsa balance of 249,031 tons, or tn round numbers, 250,000 tons against the business of this year, as compared with that of 1319. thet oor were enabled to escape. The same was It would appear certain, therefore, from the | Tepeated on the following evening, when they mis- #, that the supply of anthracite, from these | !0ok one of the officers of the Southampton for am sources this year, will be short at least 250,000 tons; | Englishman; but fortunately for him, the eagle upon his buttons saved him. The following is an extract from a letter frome Dr. Bache, ot the frigate Brandywine, dated June 6th, at Montevideo, and received here a few daye nto es and we are Toformed that the Delaware and Had- son Company will have great difficulty in keeping their supply up to that of Taet year, and in fulfilling the contracts made last spring. The periods as- sigred for the resumption of business by the Le- high and Reading Companies are the earliest pos- mble. Every day’s delay beyond the time will add | B&ving repaired) and attempted to weather C 10,000 tons to the deficit. And in allowing 42,000 | Pat iB deing 0 encountered & seve gale, whic < tons a week, consecutively, as the supply by the | put back; and the captain has abandoned all hope of railroad, we have estimated the heat power of | getting hor to San Francisco the mechinery, and the utmost acti loading the care at the mines and in discharging them at Richmond. It has been suggested tha‘ Margaret, of Philadelphis, has had some trouble am: her crew, and six of them are s to go home in the Southampton to be tried for mu- I tiny. The steamer Confidence sailed on the Sth shipments as much as possible, th ly of the | inst., and the Antelope on the 8th, for Valparaiso, city should be put off to as late a period as practi- | all well. The bark Callao, of Boston, Captain cable; the fact being apparent that the railroad can | Dearborn; bark Trenton, Capt. Stetson; and bark bring down coal for the local consumption at the il a 0 Brazil, Cambridge to-merrow for San Fran- period when the demand for shipment is lessened | citco. The ship é ario, Low, of New Orleans, or suspended by winter. ee on Layne R av oe pamey of f Mes- tucket, was sold a few days since for the fie CoorF Poke. Ot A ee epee 7. | of the’ underwriters, und bought by Capt. Cooper, , from the terrible accounts given of the | Of the brig Petersburg, for 12,500 milreas, ($6,250), etion produced by the late fresbet, that those | and re-sold by him to an English house at consi- jaged im mahufacturing on the Schuylkill would | derable advance. The brig Prince de Jviaville, supplied with coal to carry on their Forion Revell, arrived here on the 6th, from Savannah, hol mel The b not I went on Thursday as far into the coal as I could conveniently get. Leaving the Ri whence she led April 10th. The steamer Go- liah, Thomas, is repairing, and will sail as soon ag ssible. A French ship arrived to-day from Havre, with 281 paseengerr, bound for San Fran- cisco. The above is all the news of interest | have, but should any thing occur before | leave, I will send you the items. P. 8.—Capt. Thorpe, of the bark Guilford, of New York, was buried yesterday, having fallen a victim to the yellow fever, which is raging here. Railroad, which has » bed break just a Clinton, I wended my way up to Tamaq are aware, is now getting to be one of t potnts of export for coal. I was pleased on wi resent . of the Little Schuylkill jured. Th stable lost pe damage on the railroad is not great; will cause the greatest delay putting order. The road has be: jasbed in « number of are of course anxious to places, but the operator: avail themselves of the advanced price of coal, have d wre at work to repair the no doubt will be in good rua- the present month. As there was no from Pottavilie to Port ed to Middlwport im the val Our Jamaica Correépondence, Kinaston, (Jamiica,) Aug 29, 1350. The Weather—The State of the Streets—Cottos Cultwvation—The Royal Mail Steamers, $c. c. Jamaica hes been almost deluged in rain since goltzoed, Jo th by ‘he date of my last despatch to you. Weather of ar bh to sat that, tl i ln prent vik cam, pod Bertha ri agate ! cod 80 extraordinary a description 1 do not recollect difl-rent companies, there will be # short supply of | Witnessingghitherto, at this season of the year.— coal we aes eal nds Tagine mika For the last eight days, perhaps,twith the excep- rom the phia Inquirer, Sept 10 t ‘Tne foun of tite by the recent freshers wae more | i088 of two fine days, we have had very heavy extensive then was at first supposed. At Keading | falls of water in Kingston, and from the accouats which have reached us from the interior, there is eleven lives were lost—at Tamauqut and its neigh- borhood, thirty-one—at Berwick, Columbia coun- | no doubt that they have been general. Several successive thunder storms, accompanied by the ty, twenty-one. The negregate, indeed, will not fall far short ot a hundred, while the destruction of P moet vivid lightning, have visited various parts of the country. | am happy to say that no fatal conse- property was immense. One estimate gives the quences have resulted, although the storms have total loes in this way at $4,000,000. This include not only Pennsylvania, but New York, New Jer- not been unattended with results somewhat se~ rious. In St a cane field took tire from the sey, and other points. From the Doylestown (Pa.) Democrat, Sept. 10. | electric thax in Trelawny, it broke the roof ef an outbuilding, penetrated within, and struck a he dumages done by the late freshet in the Delaware, Tohickon, Neshaminy, and other streams in our county, has been tremendous. The 4. beam above the heads of two females standing be- above the factory of Simon G. Gove, and the flour | low it, beppily without doing wny further damage. mall of Lucius L. Walton, on the Ingham Spring | In this town and its viemity, the injury from U creek, in Solebury, was broken, letung sach an | sterms has been contined tothe sp angry flood of weter down the stream, frivhteniog | three lofty cocoanut trees. 1 hope men, women, and children, and prodacimyg such a | shel! have ceased entirely, (at nent tis coneteination that has never been Witnessed siace | raining ip torrents) the weether will become some- the memory of the oldest lahalataut. Wiuiam | Wlet covler, as 1 has, for some time past, been ia- Naylor, who was working ina smith shop on an | tolerably hot. The rains are mot uaacceptab! island made by the eurpios water created by the | and the green fields, dreesed ia their brighest hue, dem above, undressed himself, and atiempted to | give evidence of their swim towards terra firme, but being | The streets and Ja 4 Kingston are reech it on account of the swiftness of the current, | Ugly condition. The rains, whieh have laid hold of a kind of tree, whieh he succeeded ia | mountain districts, have made their courses through. clombering inte, where he remained some two | the town to the sea, and at tais very moment hours, in & perfect nude state, exposed to the pelt- | have perfect rivers flowing through our stree ings of @ pitiless storm, before assietance pone be | The rats, reeembling as they do small graves, rendered, and he redeemed from his perilous situas | numerous; and it requires care to take welt alo ton. y salety, Theauthorities here have ordered tha Umbledy’s dam, which is below, was nlso | stones broken withia our pententiary, shall be carried Seay) the water tearing a chasi through | used to efleet the necessary repairs; but when they it, that will take along time anda vast deal of | will be completed I will uot venture to predict, ae expense to repair. our good “powers that be" ere not too much Samuel Sutton,on the same stream, also sustain- | raptured with the go-ahead system in anything ed « great lose, by having a part of a building | they do. Washed away. It was situated in the borough of | | think I may announce to you now, that catton New Hope, and consisted in a kitchen attached to | cultivation has been commenced with an earnest- the three story building known as the Hall, which | nees from which | augur great success. The press is occupied as @ pla f for the Sons of | is almost universal in advocating the propriety of it. Temperance, Independent Order of Odd Fell | A company has been formed, including am —3 and other kindred societies. Many of the garde members the Chief Justice, with a capital of of the vicinity were overflown, fences waslr £2,000, in order to test the question. 1 have little away, &e. | doubt of # favoroble result A newapiper on the Pidcock, or Neely’s creek,was also in a very ex- | north side of the island,—the Tyelawny,— whose cited condition. The water from the source of the | proprietor spesks from practical experience, stoully streem ceme fous down in torrents, — asserts, notwithstanding couater statements have away the bank of the canal and making a break | been made, that the article can be produced ready that will require much time-nod labor to repair. | for shipment at two pence per pound, and we have ‘The breeking of the canal did extensive damage to | two crope & year, whilst, | believe, in the States John T. Neely, overflowing several acres of ttla- | they have but one. There is now here a geatle~ bie lond which was in & high state of cultivation, _ man from Georgia, who is said to understand well and rendered it unfit for oli future purposes of agri- | the cultivation of the cotton plant, and he has cultore. Mr. N. expected his dam to brewk, but it | readily aflorded information wherever it is sought withstood the current and is safe. Several of his | of him. His name is Williams. The encourage neighbors estimate his loss at $500. j ment given to [ne ten ge ty the Butish prees From the Poughkeepsie, N. J, Journal, Sept. 7) is not without its beneficial effect. ie heavy ond conten t rain during Monday and | The Empire City, which must have reached Monday night last, raised the waters of the Fall | New York ere the publication of this, was expected Kill to a point perhaps higher thaa they were to cull here, or rather at Port Royal, on her way to known to be_ before, and caused consider. Chagres, on or about the 20th inst. There were dumege along the course of the stream through the | One Of two passengers for Chagres who were village. At the Red Mills the water rose to with- doomed to disappointment. ina few inches of the west awept | The first mail conveyed by the Royal Mail Com across Snuth and Clinton street them Peny's yesels under the new route, arrived here almost impassable on Tuesday afiernooa, when it 00 the 2tth, having left on the . performit reached ils highest point. The two streets were | the work in twenty-two days. The time allo somewhat damaged. Between the milland Haqul- is twenty and three-quarter fre ne I have litle ton street, the south bank of the creek was flood- doubt they will ac it when the new stea~ ed, and the water extended nearly to Mill street Mersare finished. This will scarcely be an ad~ The sidewalks in the former street were two feet Vantage to ur, as we have, for some time past, en~ under water, and beyond the bridge itianndated joyed such speedy communication through the the lend on both fot some distance, ‘accommodation of your fine It certainly the vieinity, and will not compensate for the loss of communication flooded the land oa | with the Mey Main. However, I thie will | be afforded us through the ¢ our Ame- ut did not cross the street. High street and Hame | team frie A ilton for some distance in that vicinity, were both under, and it ‘The Crops. The Boston Bee, of the Wh inst., says—A re~’ Cent trip through « portiun of Hillsboro’ county, im New Hampshire, has enabled us to learn some~ thing (the potato and corn crops in that region, and the counties adjoining, both in Meseachusetts swept over Garden street like a flood. The embankment near Pelton’s dam ind the water rushed tremendous force, making for itsel! nel, which soon led it again into the mm below the dam. The at this point " whet mmterial. In Mill street, it r soe very ne a9 well we New Hampshire. The potato ough ia 4 point where it must have commenced a desceat, | S°TY extensive, judging from yy ithe but fortunately did not run over, eloe the street | &*’-hered. The stocks become suddenly ‘uibite @ might h red serious damay The fall just | Mato, when it first begins to gn As The above the contemplated railrond track was most | “ear watery appearance on the outside whole then becomes decayed, and frequently,’ when broken, looks like eurdied milk, nd wmella ‘very sour. We saw several Chenango potato balla opened, in Mason, N.H., yesterday, and about every other one was more or less roiled. Weare told that the same is true with reference to, the potato all through that region of country. The extraordinary wet season is considered te maim cause of this decay. Corn was never known to be *o smutty in the above named sections «9 = A terntic—the spray rising higher than the tall trees in the vieinity—end it eppeared to ue that that the ter would just about reach the bridge in its de- it, Which never coald have withstood its force . here was no damage done, we believe, belo w Mill street. 'e learn that the freshet exten sed all over the country, doing more or less damare to bridges, dame other rty in the vicir ity of etresins; and it is generally conceded that, Cor this "i i year. Smut isa disease well known am ir, The Preave erys:—“Two agents of the secret po- es notwith | known eed, the like of it has se! tom been and is not unfrequent nodeealh camirias. ice have left Paris for Wiesbade Coan 9 the pop nfy » Od, and 110 begs vai amg ate OL Tay Uunruan. eo ¥ any bs ew At Pa This yer, it im making —— havoc, Mestow Count de Chambord is now residing. | The Charge | (iivur bee attracted considerable attention #4, walk rods. £6 1a; hoop, £5 | wheels, ewned by Ceorge Hallock, wets carried | @7A8#,Jn the above sections, is not more than hall d'Affaires of the Grand @ J —— bei | a oet Ceveriptions are abowt Be dearer; 307 Gasks WO focueh pig 4 If. tle, ae ye pan pe 5 were ma | cut. The constant ie have been the ane informed of their u Ht firwt refused them | Vie, piantation Ueylon. aud 190 eacke 400 bere Jamal. grey bo, the ewrotlen weter, and ctvuer Gamage ee) ibis: O Eonex conaty, in this State paeeports; but afwiwarde, changed bie detetriaa- }.5ee Pies vesteas 0 aie done in the vicinity, the particulegs of which © | Ste aleo quite general, in regard ta the pale Fol Uop att jormal government - ined. it has received postive and Jeylon 1, 1850-12 16 noon. tucket. Inquirer, Rept. 9 et, it about to take 4 Hes che owco ware, it be teers resolutions ry t Y paves nee Veer We were vwned peaerseey ma violent cue Orleans, between Galvuet Bauch, wed Smita, have been come to at Wiesbaden by the Coug de Li ie toneee pane 10 +@ Inetrawd business 18 cotton, to-day — of wind, such an Cae ag we have fot expe- | oMicers of the ite Cures ie party, in conse: Chembord and twepty eight Legitimiat depoties om gall y wm. & alee one euen tonte ie 15 unr, Sut cnecedingty One, rienced for several years. It aclens tat by thet 0 charge of cowartics @* spy who were present. To absudua the pyltcy of con- | bes been, pall allows tor epdvices trom the gesting, | Wi Ailiht ter dency up ing catly in the morning from and | OF the latter, oppow the proluagation of the powers TOviSIeBS Bre wall A6 poveltie,