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Our London Correspondence. of blic service, is bound to set apart one hondfed ‘Time does not permit me to pursue the su’ 4 Lonpox, November 1, 1850. ‘and fifty mulhons of doilars to we interest oa i ks. It is not going too far to say, that ‘The Affairs of Germimy— Sketches of Some of the Der Swans. Ut ie Men i tomifications of farope, Evropean Polititwms—The Congress of Thieves cost as much as the interest on her debt—all money at Warsaw— National Debts of Ewropean Cown- Proms suas ’ and erp oe ne the ‘- Jnited Stales population employe: agriculture triee—Hov’s Prews—The Steamer Frankhn, and Bur there ie tne Rothschilds, Bariags, and other Matter—Sir Henry Lytton Bulwer, with @ thousands of smaller vampyres, who realize Chronological Table of Events of 1848, c. §c. milhons from the we+pserty of kings to maoage It is ne use paying any atteation whatever tothe their pers And there are the Broughams, ; Bulwers, Kc, ce, whose retirement costs evea Present condition of Germany, nor has it been for Fiore . tale catieln ped sae pn ent a longtime. Ihave not given the least detail about ¢quivalent to the sulary ‘of the President of the the movements and counter movements of the mitad penton oon yale . rhe ; semanas ot ‘ soile mischief und #bsurdity, under various pretences. seremaete of Preesia end Austria, nor of the ool | ber isno peed of onicndon the psi ng mt ing and uncoiling of the lesser adders of theirem- harrassment to the grace-of-lied governors of the pires and the appurtenances. The reformers aleo bomen feily A Thee Rawaic je Leo 000 mrong ” i i ip Europe, en as Zot to ether uomanage- G9 SH worth parsing Exempli gratia, Von able opt of the ota vaws ad imvemaeswin Gagem, the Lamartine of the'Frankfort Assembly, jaye, as divine rights, constituted monarchies or ‘who might have formed « great German confedera- otherwise, crushed the life from the masees. The tion, if he hed had the soul of a maa instead of the pyramid of society, siauding as yet reversed, is ly wdjustivg itself to its ba id all the pi downcast form. He prostituted that splewdid opportu- = Mer uave ated thie iy eo tun aration nity to begging such 4 rascal as Frederic William top, will aancyenr ie their blood aud ashes The to accept the federal crown; and, after a hypo- emancipation of Europe was pever so near as at critical repulse, he could tiad ‘nothing better than we peels dy snd be et has despaired, let hum 4 ; i " fort. the silly Archduke Jobs, whose patrician origin The Pope has dove an excellent thiag for his ‘Was thought to be iudiepensidle to office. If Von opponents in the two worlds, H- has returned the Gagem had descried his position, he would have kind offices of Eugiand against the Sicitiaus and ~ ‘A ‘ els, a8 Urual, by open attacks upon her church said, with universal suffroge the sovereignty pasees eeu bhehment ; and pAaoy bidding for popularity at of right to the people, wud ull their representatives New York here'ter, by creatiog archbishoprics, must come from the popular ranks. Orders and and advancing that peculiar instrument, Bishop ‘ Hughes. [t is not Jong since he faciliuted the peivileges, and firfeaud toile, have been abolished, mattioge of the aeunaee to the throue of Spain, With the conse nt of the King of Prussia Itisillogi- | in return for the wrmies of Isabella, and he has the cal to seek in that clase the President of the Ger- same epecial grace in reserve for both Austria and manic conteccracy ViuG-ygrm was, atew weeks | Naples, ee , strutvng abvut Fre drichstudt, in uniform, with | A great event hxppened about this time two years all the peaccek vii) of bis species, but ia Row | since, in the iwtreduction of Hoe’s printing press at sot Hamburg, in citizens’? | Paris. That splendid machine is keeping ap the ws that bird whenhe has | chesp Freeh pewspaper, in ae of the stamp Jost bis teil Als! that eespots should know so davy li would do us well bere ; bur the proprietors well the master eyiriis movement of the people. | of papers are too stupid to avail themselves of i How unernugiy they einke at their own worst | The New York mechanics who c 1 Loadon enemies—the people's trend. Poor Robert Blum, | should, by way of curiosity and amusement, visit amongst the reyudi« clothes agein, ar orje who was the fis: mar yr to Austria, should have | the 7vmes office, to see the clumsy and ridiculous | for ages. But Franklin himself could iesaty bare waved his couatry by bis life, mstead of crying to | substiute for that prese in England Bat | know her from the grate 41h bis wounds and death to | they will mot be admitted The owners of the et free without hin Hie acts and speeches were | abrurdity are aware chat uw costs them at Jeast fifty immortal; and | di wot or spur of seeing the whole | thousend dollars a year more in the single article Austrian fabric crumbling to pieces over his tomb- | Of paper than it peed do; but they brought out Ap- lees hewd = To ali the :yraats of the continent, his | plegarth’s tolly, und they adhere to it’ There could destruction War » temporary release; but, perhaps, | not be a better tlustravon of the genius of demo- to be their final overthrow, caey ton aetocracy than this blunder exposes. May bix shed blood be tis worth copsidening. Seer ery de nade But # greaver fact has just taken place—the . arrival of the Fravklia ocean steamer at Havre. cpa’ Shere was the rrpubl can John tieeels Be This compleres the convecton, by direct route, Host oulisaat, whids thu C"Canactie Mia jar | With France. For importance, nothing can go be- eine te ce eae d Ledra Stoll ond this fact, unless it be a sub-merue telegraph the father of Univer eae hud Ledeu Rollin, | trom Washivgion w Paris. ‘That will sven follow. ¢ father of universe suffrage io France: with Captain entertsined a lurge purty at his Ghat force Jreaston struck hin, while the | rabie on buard, of which the correspondent from evaliers, Reuters, aud De Tocqueviiles, Oc- | buries will give you um account. The Fre: cupy protessorahiys ava portfolios in a republic people see ‘the zvitude of this enterpner, inaugurated dy that euch uf history, February | Wil probably rio their tariff aud navigation bo tree A LUbhely devominated, BOW, awe, now sv iniricate as not to be intelligible. & Catastrophe.” Apropos of -Lamartine, he te se eiate uit tuar Oieaicg ws ear EY bo vibrating between hie edtmitavion of the tnstitue| | a * , that je bus a derire to be relieved by thiakin tious of Turkey end thore ot England. Whateve ie ten ean Ollie deeuhebne e gratitude for princely fovers fom the Sultea may Opt ny Mr Corry said—This is much induce him to say by way of compliment, thers er ye can be ao doubt the: bis taste preters the Brash payee, jm mere feauve occasion; it ia an eposh CREATORS to 8 der He nasdwrie | "The arrifpl of the Franklin, Captain John Wot- ten a long argua ; * a thly | ton, Octobe 18, 1560, at Havre, will be placed on romance, ** toe selior of the People ) No | the pationulfenilenoare of France and the United wonder the tart clecnon adunuistered B him PS) puch @ scathig repuot 1c clussitied BM after | Stew. Th day sow evtablisned a direct steam Thiers. Thiers oid yes wn; but he was lef ont of | Peweelion ym Haves to New Yoru, uniting the the pececes, Aueesably By gener ie ae pa - port of the States. Superiorships aud equi- Was Carried ivto iis predecessor by a dozed depart- th a ments. It Wee 10 Compaxstou that hie present fittle | eaves wal ver insures Tegulas and perme nent service ’ Since Iss6, thi two countries have enjoyed an So a ed pul bum tute a Vacancy a @ rene tnal. wmarine should have died oo the steps of i - . y the Hotel de Ville, the 15m Avril, 1818, when he | maitrcsmercanie by the lune of Liverpoul steam: made bis speech sgoiuet ihe red toy. His fame | 1948 France oeieiminea, with the true. spirit of then would have survived him, ana the cause he CLPrprise, 16 open a diTect steam communication bas imprded would have morebed gayidly tothe | win the United States And let tt oe remembered enjoyment of its povciples His utter incapacity | that it was ou the initiative of France, that the is to be attribwed wot more to bis Weakaess, than first steamers i the bistory of ocean steam aavi- to his ignorance about Ame it. hiere Wee tool enovgh to say that Ameri- were shallow becanse they relied on the popers; but Leamartine gave no reasoa for saying of Bustide that he was stupid enough to be one But to return a moment to Germany. The absolute King of Denmark will be finally sup- Perted by Englona wot Rassia, in his preten- sions to Sebieswox Hi lstem, and they have arranged the riceerion co that the Graad Duke of Oldewboi, a relative of Niehoias, shall succeed him, ae he aud his milliner queen are pow bian blood. Kursia, Sound, and atthe Darden che took the proce oure Ase Years in this mag- nificent project, trom which she Wassoun called off, she can, theretore, give us the credit of having per- revered te fual success. by mutual exertions the great fact has when piaer, aud both pauons share an undivided hover. The ue of switt sad lasing communication binds them henerforth together. What steam and shill can do, will be dove to diwtance and tw tecilitate shippers and ie between De, es the Fre und the United miact with which they lotions Berdecux and Mareedies have an affiaity altar, wad at Saez, | with New O:tevns and Charleston, and other Ame tens we ready to be | rican cies, Which will sovo Unite them, and the ratove ss seitled? But of | ume i not omtant whea the flage of the two re- the Austrivn vod Prassian [ ).pnes will predominate in the Aclaguc and the +t dunger of their le Onterrane an. how meny N raised the mor this bherentier sovereigns, thre te v fighting © ch einer, for they are in the palm of the band when makes ib v of Europe its chess | gation ts ait im board, sno moves mil the wut . Modera States ide peudent of the rest of the world doubttul 1 they arr Cisvered to quarrel; for, proba- vpon the Lighway of metious, by their owa con- bly, all the periurbotew is a pretence to collec, | quest of the cers — Lt not onty brings them wearer inp artoerehiy, huge urmirw, to ne placed under the | io exch ober, but wodresses their interests, and order of the Crear, tor hie attack oa republicanism wppesls to their pride, to make © ex- Ja Europe, end on Cr n-tontinople. P charges of products avd inventions. Oa the Your tenders wie wware thet the Thieves Con- Mechere ure be tw 1 event, this direct steam navi- ant. It makes the anghdest of gress hoe brew iw esse min Warsaw, and still in- E curetee The Unied states may depend on it, wee, What the otder wants that this is the oul s rows tag at preseat ia con- ow, the dem tor cotcon and todace tinental polines The rest Bume of these islets, ie the lewst signifiensi perie, Who would veace bie thick bead with Venton forite overihrew ; ‘ing the prato- ) bod Wines, silks, and objects of art, | dumb show, without | on the orher, Would be quaorupied. The French bless, Lows Bona- | Netional Assembly should kuow that, four vears but for the republ ago, the United Stotes modified a most hosule nee of his own it | \anflexpresely torthe benehtel France. Almost wt he will, be can, do | tity per cent ot the duves on prominent Preach nothing. ve of vowrrsal suflrage be his | arivies were taken off, to open the way to recipros destroyed 5 he were to go tor restoring it, the | city, Tu 146, ihe yeur of the appropriation for this Peopie Weuld vet touch himen second tine; if he | jine of sternite, wud partly with 2 view to support stands still, the royeiist. will oot reelret hum. He | it, Congress reduced the tanfl of 1942 as follows, bas be ep most) my ly i -wieel.as almost all up | on leading Frepeb exports :— Starisere Hed he remembered the pit from which 60, 67 tod per cent, ad valora: he wee dog, eid gene inte an es'ablishment of » 66 to 25,0 do do 100,000 fra ym, vod cul weed repubhean » blow do do pripeipler and we oetme he would have been do do Te elected wo defeat orher prevenders. Bat his ently alte 9 do 4 chepee pow reat tor Co of Warsaw, which, aa 2 4 S b 3 it ia seid, bar dieser a “the 90h 0080 40 Go bo threr hundred and tity In consequence of 1h diplomacy, pe in be ryat dueccion, wasiotended as en invitation to France; apd would, cre this, have been eect pied, Hehe had net been absorbed in the shape of pro- toculs or decires, will be bu aokind Let | foundation of ber prevent glorious iuettuions The boa gl Wook r! thir conclave, which dares Cod | consttuenis cf Congress will requite steadiness in front daylight in our mur, aud imkes its stand ia the | this policy of reovetion; and» goo4 example Wasnes heart ofthe civi ced world De Jupiter Toaens, the ver Jost op Frenee, wich hh Emperor of Kuvela, citichen i saperstition Ist | friende and enemive Need 20 be * reign shall end « e sot December, ; 100, is muking the most of how thirty daven Ita | Orted thet, for twenty months, California, that land bas made a dungthv lot the Polwh eapitel, aod dic- ee the wealth ture; and that, for have offered the voluntary sacri- '* navigation laws 7 to be dome by t tates on i's seminit on those very heights where Warene's love che der brights surveyed Wide o'er ihe f of reiwela to el! mevkind! This deerepid ereatore is sur cunded by # vet of w ta like theae that rurhed int f the Toilleries in defence of ent gentlemen ia die ed wipe ned side-erma, who shew the want two cquatries. + to connect the wan's and re- with those of the Mississippi end © must ent diluvian a Cof prete Volley sshould be made a~j iaiat- ne people of Larepe ran over them, letas | ed; one is the seat of the political power of take an inventory of (he names and tithes — bourepe, oe ie the ocher of that of the Unived RUSSIA States Bot ber access to their several treasures Nicholas, Crar of Prsein end bia wife: Count | Would improve the condition of both. As a resi- Nevselcode, his Premier: Lieut. General Orlofi, | dent of Crpeinnatt, | shall be expected to speak of anid-de-cema, and b D'Adterbera, and | thet rteple—her staple—salted provisiens, of which Baron D'Oste neta P-inee she is the ereavest murtketin the world. She could aykow, Prince Peocher, Lieut. a’etal Major; Field | more then feed Porm without an effort, if the wills M Prince of Warsaw, Count Paskewitch B were not more stubborn than sea, and and others ndetorma In the Frenchcaptal, choice ‘Lat rerail by the pound, at from thirty to AUSTRIA. eens F. Joseph, Emperor of Austria, a lad of nineteen; | Si1Y Four, #nd consequently, they are out of the Prince Swartzenbury, bie I’r-micr. teach of pine ine hui the of the people. The PRITRSIA duty at Heere is 3:13 cents « pound, and the Paris The Prince Royal of Prossia and sutte setrove is 21 2eents tc 6 cents pound. Bacon costs BAVARIA. more then « frane a ponnd, and fresh meat is al- ‘The King of Bavarie end ewite. mort universally exten These articles might be re- . w WURTRYRE RG. — picts mt wiece ’ “ae the staple The King of Wortemberg «nd ewite; Ferdinand ; Of the predocing States of ¢ tsaissippi valley the Bourbon, of Naples, p baby Mies Ferdinand could be introduced mek rench eities at a moderate Besides this sickens tity of toadies and rascals fr: Europe, end trem tte shek ng governments Spain Porte gal, and the Now, i# wot th pretr man race in the ¢ 4 the old disorder of en! revise the Whole code of Jawe between nations! Yet these wre the bases of thie fepgeus convention, nd it commends two millions of soldiers, mere or leas enlightened, | Of the two conutrir 4 mightsoon count by hundreds, feithto!, ond reliat'e. Having seen its personel, | \0*teed oF tens of milbons, and their ships by tens there are any quan- | vty, the prices of land aed labor would be augment- the petry powers of | ¢¢ With ue; end here mechames and owerters could enjoy the best food in anundance. The agricul- ture of France would not be reased because the 3 additiwnal Amerncen demand for French fabrics ervaytoarrest the hu. | Would only enable the makers to live better than * worlds, and to restore | before ene ond other exchal will require new lines dgiveto Freveh shill and capital let ve look et its exchequer of bhensande * The conselidated debt of Evrope is over $8,000,- ‘The event hes something much higher than a 000,000, and 1s borne about as foliows:— commercie! sense It har gt both social and po- Great Brite 4.090,000,0%) | vent. The diflerence of language, and the dif- $ fieul'y of acres, hue kept the people of France ‘ , and «1,290 000.000 | ihe Unived Stoves too fat esubnder Steamer at ‘ oo 000/000 niviog end departing . 129001000 fares, will encourege intere: , Ot diminishiag ve. Weshalilearn to kvow and love one another. We can compare 286,000,000 opinions, trust each other, and aequi Fey i ” quire new 00, t d new tongues, now fail of undiscover- 76,0°0,009 | od riches ta either. : be oy But the gravest im vs eS | ten however, deeper thenits efleets onladvisuats ' 00,000 or eexchepure of wrasse That event prepares the yon | Cloeer union in frie ag well as commerce Total.. #5,041,000,000 | the wo leading nations of the earth, each founded The annual interest of that debt amounts to | onthe only wise principle of bopalar sovereignty. about four hundred millions of dollars. That sumis | The steamer Frank |in is the harbinger of perpecual the gross + ero of about four millions of mea, | amity between the democratic republics of France and more than pet of that a men, | end the United States. Hereafter there will be now Eiraning opie | planters) im absolute perce ond confidence between the first tis after ex- | military end navel power that ever existed, and the *« paid, of the whole crop producing power of | greatest commercial and agricultural nation that ‘ted States. England only, every year, be- es exitt. Every man presentcan fathom the mag- ~on make an appropriation for any branch | nitude of this oceasion, in this, its real sigaifieation. * of Oct 18, 1850, + and his contempt | gation were seut trom Havre to New York. Ag | tthe ede of ours. The commerce | ‘THE GOSSIP or FARIS. bh of a) cope the sources tmo time always permits the expression of Pants, Oct. 31, 1850 the White would and with The r 7 the past, itt lati the future. | 1. ~ Celtic race, in ofa as following is an al the epeech key ‘ieee oP Face ada nied ‘Ss | Pinte Alo Ralion pe —Lamieys fret | ls ei hr asa teeta | oy Papen te knows that this is pot the first introduction of the Season in Pavis—The Theatres—New Balloon | session of A; ‘Morocco, and Tunis; enable on Seiten oor Raine pee gr gt besser ee bat relia! civuization, over ae eburch, io ero bat A ET, ie. os ee ‘Winter bas come, as I wrote you in my last let- ble portion of the globe; offer an'escape, or seen tried men’s souls,” the war for American Iade- i i he ter. Snow has fallen in several Departments of | valve, as it is call o te Bareee, by the employ- e | pendence, when we were a puny and tottering | France, and Jack Frost hasshown his nose at the | ment of her restless, idle, tion: ‘and friendly in: t ebay os ge to AF net | gates of Paris. It iste be hoped that the season will | lieve Europe from a portion of the pn the honor and privt- the oppressed. England flattered hervelf that the | be 8 gay as our politics are diabolical, sad, and | extinguish the slave trade, and secure for a season anee7 sene eucceseful campaign of 171, in Virginia, would | gloomy—“Vive le Joie!” since we cannot, as yet, | the peace of the world. you on rock oa seth soowad oat cacao a | Hynes ito aac Yay ute ft ane memes iron on eae ‘Amoticon > beatt. It ia now | Mile. Alboni sings to-night for the last time this | the Gambia, named Panet, is said to have been My one hes graceful and just to refer to it. In the | season in Paris. She departs to-morrow for Ma- | appointed by the French government, to undertake all J. events presence of the -epresentatives here assembled, | drid, where she is engaged for the winter season at | & journey Sareey the faaare, for the purpose of ‘country’ ane eee ey or live and | the Royal Theatre. She will bereplaced by Mme. Senegal “across the desert. Monsieur P. anaes an never lived. On this much more than festive ocea- | Viardot-Garcia; and wefehall soon witness the first | companied the active Raflenal on his travels along pendence. Ihave sion, | cannot refrain from ¢xpre the fervent | performance of ‘!’Enfamt prodigue.” the river Folens, sed to the gold mines of Kenribe, tutions, and [ can, ratitude of my country to Frunce. he debt of oaks which our fathers owed to theirs, has lost neve of its obligation on us, the descendants of the revolution. Toanexhaustedtreseury gallant France lent her puree, to faltering ranks her volunteers, and over sea and land waved gloriously her meteor flag and sword. The 1%h Oct., almost our date, Cornwaliis surrendered Yerktown to Washington ond Lafayette, leaders of the combined armies of America and France ; and that service was conse- crated by a subsequent delicacy ow the part of those who rendered it, beyond praise, and almost beyond the possibility of any recompense ¢ xvept imitation It can never be forgotten—it should be emulated by Americens at the earliest opportunity. It was the last wish of the pure and gifted spirit talian opens lover: the years Bouet Villarmy is bined belied o. the ater 18 res ‘tated to have crossed the dangerous bar of ber, under the management of Mr. Lumley. The | the Grand Bassam river, in March, 1849, when he Salle Ventadour has been restored, and I have | persevered until he reached two magnilicent lakes; pe told that it the ovens of Sy Seng. yill | sods oy: nee that the Grand Bassam is a coa- luce @ great eclat. e Opera ini ** La Son- Ri nambula,” will be wong. by Mme. Sontag, and But a plan for a far more Legolas» ot atroupe of élite. Lumley has also contracted an } bas been finally adopted by the Frenc Leora engagement with the far-famed Italian barytone | ment, and the execution thereof entrusted to Col. Collint, who will replace the unfortunate Roaconi, | Ducouret, and which is to proceed by the Senegal. who has been se badly treated by M. Baroche. Another exploration—political, commercial, and Nothing of much in nee is to be noticed at | scientific—has also been projected by Dr. Bodi- the small theatres of The theatre Des Va- | chon, of Algiers, which is to open a trade between | given two new vaudevilles—one called | the Mediterranean shores and the millions who in- ** 1? apneau de Selomon,” in which the beautifal | babit Sudan; and for thia, the doctor only requires Mile. Page produced great effect, and the other, | &2 armed assistance of a battalion of seasoned i it the world Ifthere be any ea whose name and fame beam from this vessel's sides itled ** Le lice de Tantule,” ry fi Frenchmen and 300 to 400 trusty Africans. greatness—any who lament over the success ps as is coamoee property of punked was Ben- yg oeimese cuauene Boulle the Asa little counterpoise to this sudden annexa- | t experiment—any who would sie ws yout jamio Frauklin’s wich that he could see the earth . ‘had tamed actor, after a absence from the st: tion of North Africa, excepting always, for the | in your glorious career--any who ul has also returned en theatre, where hy sg time being, Morocco, Egypt, and the Tateer | Bars elie cocued on ee sympathy; [ at pitaliplayiog has uced the usual sensation cipalities, by the Algerian Celts, we have @ Mr. got, Motaee se fellowship with the despote and At the theatre Du Gymanse, two new playshave | James Kichardeon travelling with Dr. Heinrich | Pogctionarien ot Europe, been produced for the débuf of Numa, the firs | Barth, a learned German, and a Prussian botanist, | tention of Barclay and Perkins’s draymen. If it entitled * Riguet & la Troupe,” and the second, | Dr. Overweg, from Tripoli, through Central Africa, | te imputed to mo that [ have identified myself “ Charles le Téméraire.”” . ’ | and oo ud =] Nile, and who is — to Sage with tl ore whe are hela in slavery on thls sal. ‘and i ome ft been investe our government with certain ve soug! promulgate emancipation. now. Sante nts the Hippodrome was to xives 02 | diplomatic powers. : Igdgo the juntice ofthe Hnpeasbmenty and plead galley, Mars. Mme. Poitevin had been advertised as On the other band, the force of circumstances aoe seasieny 2 he ond the limits bemg about to ascend in a balloon, mounted ee clearly to point out the speedy occupation iy, Sageretions na bull, performing the part of Europa ‘carried | of Africa to the south of the equator by the Anglo- off” by Jupiter. But, on account of the bad | Saxon race. The opening afforded by the Zouga wepibet, the entertainment has boos pesiraned, | sua tint among these prowiious srcumeanecs! xe ‘doubt eee mee abana s804 the foundation ofa settlement at Port Natal is also ‘again after a hundred years. This was not an idle word. It was the dying thought of the sage and statesmen, who, as the ship’s motto has it— « Evipuit falmer colo seeptrum que tyranius He did not anticipate this day. He must have fore- seen the greatness cf France: her lead of Europe is but the end of those triumphs in the field and closet which bave adorned the history of her people g 8 ¥ i f measured the growth and importance of the,United States, or conceived that the march of events, within two-thirds ef a century, would have assem- bied such a company, standing, in a two-fold sense, but with a sipgle purporee— “ Freedom's soil beneath their feet, And freedom’s banner streaming o'er them " We are, gentiemen, tree citizens of remote, but friendly nations, which, henceforth, must be the arbiters of their fellow men, Betore the expiration of Franktn’s period, France and the United States will arsert together toe still more glorious mission of retormation and progress, of which the remotest races shall fee) the mpulse. The statesmen of both countries will soon see that, for them, any other political combination is impossible ; and that formed, all others are powerless—past, present, or 10 come. é a I propose : The alliance of the republics of France aad the United States—against their principles and ge authority no adverse system, old or new, can cep its place. My subject: —Mr. Bulwer. He is always fruutul: a kright commander of the most huworuble order of the Bath, he has a right to play the mountebank, and wear his tog- gery, even in America, to wit:—the star, the colar, and the budge. That wholesale butcher, the Prince of Vrussia, is not only the guest of his brother-in-;aw, Lord Cowley, but is a fellow- knight, who left the coutinent under acloud, in 1848, for ingland. Mr. Bulwer was very active in that year, ulso; anda brief chronicle, after the verance of the captive Sie thie ja company pane cultural, and cotton growing country. | with a candidate tor the Prosidential chair I emia esi at ne cot dha nes | hates Jonas’ te Abyouantevelt,Ranguns | fmpec? in cn Serr oh etn Und understand that this-young man has broken his | t© that settlement with the view to ascertain the | Ty Soaye @ aistinction between an act committed on engagement with Risley, and I fear that he will | Source of the Malalarcen, an affluent of the Orange | the banks of the Tiber and the Davubs. aad a similar be the loser ia that affair, for Risley, before de- | River, and, if he ean, to afterwards work his way | Sct committed ou the banks of ths, Porous er the rting for the United States, gave power to ja | Up into Abyssinia. There can be little doubt that | yi isstes: I no such distinction. They Freack lawyer to ene Hernandez for damages. the whole mountain and. littoral districts that | m betworn Kossuth in Turkey Who is Mr Cha; ‘an executioner from the | stretch upwards from Natal to the een will | Massachusetts, [cam make United States? This question has been often put be Ree to present a good grazing and agricultural | Ho deeds uage ot Mr Webster. and [ad- co " \r in poe bein tonnage’ seer wad ‘Anoeg other travellers in the interior, we must — eat _ eg s having studied the maniire de s’en servir, has | Rot omit tie By soe: Mr. be gerne hy ar Lage Reber j sailed for the United States, taking with hima | has travelled for many a spyne sien nae splendid model of a guillotine, with the intention | #24 Who has started me the Nile in et oath to have this deadly instrument accepted by the | being able 0 Nag e ‘ee 4 vedition United States goverament in exchange for the | Baron von Muller has also carried an expediti lows. What will those who would abolish | UP the White Nile, with the view of determining | be given up, ang I sew that th - nied hment say to this? its source, and forming a settlement on its banks. | ot the ectabliched Jaw of nations —— - “*P'will finish this letter. by giving you a bit of | In the event of his eflorts proving so far successful, | fometbing om earth greater then arbitrary or det intelligence relative 10 Ole Dull, the celebrated | the baron, it is said, has determined to quit the | Bilis ont, the liehining bas, invomething emoog Swedeh violins r Nile and to proceed westwards, endeavoring to pron + ipo) ca oaeeetee Swedish violinist. lle gave a concert on the le ked ore capable of shaking despotic p: peo 16th instant, at Christiana, and his inteation was | Tech the coast. This, it has been justly remarke wbirlwind, gr earthquske—that ta, the to proceed to Constantinople, passing through Fin- by the learned president of the Royal Geographical indiguation of the whole civilised land and Ruesia, and then te visit the largest cities | Society, Cuptuin W. H. Smith, if caprble of uc- Well. atter 15 years of absence. [ revisit these # of Asia and Egypt. No doubt that that * wauder- the The young American equestrian, Hernandez, full of significance. Natal is at once 8 grazing, | bes crime, Lam in gvod company, ing mm Faneuil Halli, I say, “f see that the South deman ud bisequatiy noble com, spirit of kindness and brot t, will be a splendid triumph, for, ia- | I come in th perry Be * eve ‘oe those whe cherished dependent of the chorography of the several dis- | I js | ing minstrei’” will again visit the United States, re newither al Btn a sec tade til eke tate She | ere he coined vo much money. Bs Ik.” | ict reports—but eerualy vague once tom that | v7 canker ty ot Constitutional Monarchy, Demonstrated by | g.sth cutter. N York AM. Lawrence, N. Y. of civilization ; for we are even told of there being v icis one of my own American Facts” ; -— d James B. Collins, do. | 1. Ward. Boston. schools of instruction, Sr their written . | 1B. 1 ‘ my own tuclinstions Agel eae ee ce one 3 $2. Somme. km rs 4 ~~ Phila. pct ee ee aps more ancient than coleme te uae it Bere be cnene, <bean 4 4 A maerson. N.Y. § those 4 ave tere with some epecial objet clusive letter in favor of constitutional and legal | R.A. Parris, Phila, BK. EK. Wilson, Phila. Baron von Muller’s journey would form the | let me ray tr is, if it is amy—to tel the ofti- megane, te the Spanish Minister. W. Ward. Nortolk. A. J. Bulton, Baltimore. complement to Dr. Krapf and Mr. Rebmana’s 24s of there © bat there are milions om the Muy 17.—The Spanish government sends pass- | A. llewsen, Phila, RJ Auchmiet, . labors; but there still remains a region between | sper ite of the sic. who glory ta the success ports to Sir Henry, with an order to leave summa- | N. k. these districts and the Red Sea, correspoading to | Which bar crown: © efforts of the people or thie ly. c. Th io Ci f the ancients, which | C°¥2try to buildup this institution. and who look to ba . . D. Oalwi Ww the Regio Cinnamomifera o | | America to send out through all lands the gorpel of ay 24.—Sir Henry arrives at Dover. I, HH demands both geographical and commercial ia- | l liberty. To tell them, too,that there is one aad May 25.—Sir Henry hasan audience at Downing | (| pickin: K. quiry. This district is supposed to abouad in ir inflaenoe im Burope. and that it ae. §—De. G. Beiieotan 1 H M. Be pig Parag: spices, aye ber — as | § be enemies ot freedom potar to thet -| 3. t Jones, N. Y. aloe valuable sive tea (Lord Polmerston,) t0 explain Gir Hisary's expul. | G.b;bseee'Peanayivente, 3. srticbioel temomanse’ its peym pearing wiakians paaghee epd rap eagrae me sion, and to demand en apology, &c., &e. A. Luff N.Y. Ww al extend from Suakun to Cape Guardifui, spreadin ade eternal that they Sir Henry’s expulsion never explained nor ex- | F. A. Btouss. miners D9 t. D Sg vo Y. far into the valleys of the interior to the south jot na. epee + <a, cused, end bis successor the first min now at De Forest. - French, y- Abyesinia, and it has been found that much of 9 wet up to govern . Maxwell, Marietta, the so-called Mocha coffee is actually brought liverty by eacteving others | irl Race Aspect of Poland. from Zeilah, where it is collected from the neigh- ng i le bp, tne Ht Reve omeemge, thle ay Poland, the greatest place 1a Kurope, encircled, | borhood, | “1 should average,” said Lieut. Crit- |” Citizens of Aimerica, the ark ot Liberty is with you, when in the zenith of ls power, a territory of more | tenden, the quantity of guns exported from the | ana the nations of the earth are flying to it. You aes than 13,000 square miles, inhabited by fifteen mil- | Somali coast at 1,50 tone, though occasionally, free—but your slavery tarmi-hes lions of souls. The natural and commercial wealth | after a good season, | believe thet the Mijercheya urtputaticn and @ile the quiver of the ememin: of of the country lay in its rye and wheat, flax, wood, | 'ribe alone export that quantity.” Jt is gratifying purge your natiog frog salt, honey and wax, fine horses, and fat’ cattle. | to know thet Dr. Carter, @ zealous and intelligent | (hesteln. | Continue the good work that bas began Streams, uboundiag with fish, transported these | traveller, now at Bombay, has undertuken to ex- | Kuo. Zon, ,jvonmeck BO fonilaur the friend of treasures to the Baltic and Black Seas. The pre- fae this country under the auspices of the East | Jour enemy ul seat Russo-Polish m_ extends over india Company, of the Royal Geographical Society, | suliy but frmly square miles, the population of which and of Sir Charles Malcolm, who, for upwards ot forth 4,700,474, and 4,S07,129 in 1846. Eiesn years, has been anxious to bring such an | *. 7 L.. there were 4,305,604 Obristia: |, 175,595 in 1813.) | exploration to an issue. | thmus of Panama to the mo-t northern 303 Mohammedana, DOT, 805 Tews (OD 481 in 1843), ‘tis also truly satisfactory to hear, that besides of your terri:vry, your eoil should be sacred te and 337 Gipsies. The ebief occupatioa of the in- | W! i Mr. neg aoe a ene a | freedem ard humsnity habitants is egriculture; thei jacipal branches | zealous mem u jeographical ety, ia- Sidthiedins Micenmaad taled oer Sen i cee of which | ured to African climate and travel, sailed in April | Acme: or Frorma Inprans at New Ortnans, sheep- breeding bes increased very much), linen, | for the Cape and Algea Bay, provided with three | —— 8. steamer Fashion, Capt Baker, arrived and iron wares. nthe southern hills, towards Ga- | boats, constructed here upon the most approved | 7. afternoon, after & fine run of four days from licia, there are iron, lead, zine, coal and sulphur | principles, and well furnished with provisions in | Tempe, having lett that place on the Ist, and mines, and marble quarries. ‘The trade of Poland | their moet concentrated form, as well as a pleawfal | *@pped at Pensacola to land Brevet Major Graf- is marifestly advantaged by its navigable streams, | stock of instruments, arms, medicines and tiakets | ton’s Compeny of artillery, whch company is to as Well as by the Augustowo Canal, which con- | of all sorts. His object isto visitthe Zouga, Lake | ey ort Pickens. | There came passengers, nects the Niemen, the Narea, and the Weichzel. | Ngan, and to penetrate northwards by means of Major oy Arullery; Capt. Jordan, U3. Quar- Three hundred miles (German) of mail roads in- | the rivers flowing into the lake. Mr. Galton avant oat Hayes, Artillery; Lieut Hadsoa, tersect the whole country, the centre point of which | Companied by a,Swede, Mr. Andeson, and the pariy | Nery Cand in charge of ind is Warsaw, which, with Lublin, is the chief empo- | are, provided with letters from Lath Cirey to the | {\¥ells chapman U.S Army; Miss Axtell; G Tivm of : venue authorities of the Cape. ) Liniton, wite, 5 60 tonne ths HI on a ope donne 4 Lastly, it only remains to be mentioned, that while pes zs : wrens, lady, son, and we national debt at 200 millions Polish ficrins. The | fresh glimpees of the interior are thus promised to | Miss Romers; Mr Seawell and servant, La; following statistical details respecting the condi- | 08 by travellers frem almost every direction, | firm enaticl, 8 also a party of Lndiaus from tion of Poland are teken from official documents | the Auaatic shores of this same vast contiae: lorida. These Indians are the ariatocraey of their published by the administration of the country, but | being constantly more disclosed by our cruisers | Pétion. being no less than Sam Jones's family. ‘Che we regret that they do not go beyond 1846. ‘The | nd trade the recent appointment of Captaia | following is a list of the reyal family:— quantity of goods imported into Poland in that year | Beecroft. a zeulous philanthropist and peoutapher, heathen tofues Seanetetian TO was Valued at 7,488,007 roubles (106,000 roubles | to the office of Consul-General for West Africa, Meta tebe the chdsh Mie. Shase, more than in i845), of which 1,041,072 roubles were | may be deemed a most fortunate incident for these —Queen ot the Mickssakles, and imported from Austria aud Cracow. The chief | benighted regions. Som Jones. ry of iment = horses and cattle, 4 —_—_—_—_— | di bee.- Oldest son of he Quewn, aad heir to 3] roul ; coffee, suger, and spices, for Inrerestina yrom Tux Coast or Arrica.—The | $60,095 roubles; silk and silk manufactures, for | Colomzation Society's bark Li Packet, Capt. | oy h Php tag ge mh gy 2 # sprite and beer, for 503,144 rou. | Howes, arrived at this port, yesterday, in 4 days | (tier husband, Rotee Uadjo. tes noted warriee) bles; corn, for 135,251 roubles; salt, for 383,158 | from Liberia. Dy this arrival, we are in receipt of | “See sol hes, Uno-obeee- Telkee tee ned Belcea-ho- roubles: and cotton, for 156,581 roubles. The regular files of the Liberia Herald to the day ot her | era of Ab-mo laith-tree, value of the articles exported amounted to 5,968,188 sailing. | Lob-lee.— ler son. roubles (50.556 roubles more than in 1845). ne The Liberia Packet landed her ngers at | B00-lee-hoktee.—Silave and maid of honor to the eh ‘ood, 558 roubles; i 2 ter Queen nef articles were, wi for 1,853,311 bles; | Monrovia on the 28th of August, all well, after a John Phitips In reter for the royal famtly. of th Madrid. Cause, Cuba, and Englund getuag a deed in place of a morignge. RUS. Ovr Parts Correspondonce. Pants, Oct. 31, 1850. Changarnier and Lows Napoleon--Dumissal of Gen, Neumayor—Plans of the Elyste—The Con- sprrecy at Lyons—German Ajfairs—Denmark and the Duchies—Catholicism in Piedmont— Hungarian Refugees, &¢4 Ge. The dismissal of General d’Hautpoul was but a mere “replotrage.” The misunderstanding be- tween General Changarnier and the Elysée has continued, and a great éclat took place yesterday mornwg. General Neumayer, who is the “bras drow” of General Changarnier, has been the aim of the attacks of the President and his ministry. The government of Louis Napoleon seems to me, in this case, like the attacks of a little barking dog before a Newfoundland one, at a distance, fearing to be swallowed “‘d’wne sewle bouchée.” Decidedly the presence of Genera! Changarnier ia Paris, is a great obstacle to the views and projects of the Elysée, The dismissal of Gen. Neumayer was caveed by his refusal to utter the unconstitutional shouts of * Vire U Empereur” at the reviews of Ver- suilles. Thus M. d’ Hautpoul has retired, because he feared to be answerable at the re-opening of the National Aseembly, for the disorder which hap- pened at Versailles and St. Maur; and to-day Gea. Neumayer is disgraced, for having refused to obey the ciders given to him by the “entowrage” of the President. Gen. Changarnier thought, at first, he would send in bis resignation to Louis Napoleon, | but abandoned that plan. He considers himself as the sentry of the National Assembly, aad, like a soldier who knows his duty, he cannot be taken off his guard but by the Chamber ‘The plave of the Elysee have been unveiled by thie lost affeir. The great desire of the President dle ef Liherty—nor balt ia your of mercy until from the Atinotia to the Paride, . wool and woollens, for 1,174,555 roubles; cora, for | passege of thirty-four days from Hampton Roads. aud his friends is, to force the National Assembly | 1.037.674 roubles; cattle, for 518,740 roubles: ‘oll op. Pod out fifty-six oa real whom | yatiman ie of the snterpreter. Gad the seperacntetives ‘cnnent te letece point | for 248,697 roubles, and metal articles, for 240,657 | were the Rev. Mr. Wood and fedy of Liverpool. | "The Ing Will stay bute short time amoag military power. al he ater te ta By roubles. i exportation of cora and cattle Wis | The news of President Taylor's deat Te- | you, as they are yet fearful «f the vengesuce of <0 og Mm ae E ne oe much less t in the former year, owir ig 10 he ceived on the coast by the arrivel of the beria the Kin Sam tenes of whom the rather ok lysce und conseqnent= | failure of the harvest and long droughis. Tne ket. The Herald ol ; y ut of his post, if sible. tried to wound bis feetings, the plaa of campaign of the ** Decembratlards” to take away from the old General all his tiew tenents, one after the ovher, and then, when he | remains alone, they will blow upon him with the Foye that he will fall like a “chateau de cartes” This plan would be very good it France was not behind General Changarmer. Bat there real obstacle, which must be first annihil the Etyeée. The conspiracy at Lyons, which was discovered “French leave” This they were assisted ia eflecting through the agency of Ho-la-too-chee.— New Orleans Picayune, Now 7. in speaking of this sad number of persone e1 ed in factory labor was, _ ve in 1846, 46,1 id the total value of their pro- ‘the death of President Taylor is deeply duce was 9,626,519 roubles; 3,931,360 roubles were | im Liveria. ‘The death of this illustrious trend ot our | spent in the purchase of raw materials, dedactin; yy 0 eudden J ag pret ee ne ayure cain of ‘Savana | pervaded the United States daring the tract of the Assessors’ returas tor 1550 extubits bles, The f loved Let us hope that while a nation may be mourning the | come singular resnits ce 1840, ut least 40) woolion Meturee Wee LODL an SEM loonie, | Were of m chief ruler, & spirit may be imbued wnich | giles of ruilway have heea finished in the sate, paper gegen lar aos tir) aithful induence w the exciting to- | ang many lives of stages displaced, bat the harees ro ee; in cetton ar jee Was a o feelings towar and expressed b: looma, and the value of the produce 2,245,275 | the lamented President Tayler, will be ferived in Pre | 140s 10 71,060, im 1850 In the #ame perion, enttle State Vatvation or Massacuusetts —The ab- , ; 088, 4333 ‘nt Filmore, who, we anticipate, will eect ali he | b¢Ve increased from 278,737 to 209.600, while sheep lent week, t@ bot very important. It makes me ag “w Meh produced 1507 0 Bown at ate tor our Mondeo t dud admivister his owe govern. | have declined from 343,300 to 179.587. Te pro remember > wepeare’s play, ** Much Ado about 4 ent in spirit and patriotiem, acoording tot duce ot wheat bas dectiued from 101,178 hostels © 28,487, and Lodian cora increased from 1,773,073 bushels to 2,205 856; while cottoa aud worten tpindies bave doubled in number, distilleries have decreased from 78 to 43. all kinds. I addition, er ee of the constitution of that great country which ud of A. linen were manvfactured oy the peasants use, and 3.661 688 yards for sale. The miving 1n- | \eety and indepemdenne, eed % Amerionn li- Ty produced Vf of iron, from 35 pri- cue taeen, rah! os, ALB4 owt. rouse itoa, The U- 8. stoop-of. war, Portsmouth, bearing the 850. 20,000 ewt. lead, 3,680 ewt. copper, 19,000 ewt. | broad pennant of Commodore F. H. Gregory, asian ethieiiabistiiaichphiiiin:’ “CURE: bees zine ; 4,15) workmen in metals produced articles to pape prs oo + pm Mi Sa i nh pate EER » ites Bites q ~o ‘ oast of Africa, arrived at Monrovia on the 2% $e % 12588 ee rp Sle to eight pony tn of September, 15 from Lagos—all well. She | S*perfictal (eet of wharf, . oe 14.894 980 8.40! ” veral arrests have been made, but they ormonnt to very litt is well knewa that the red republicw is plotting all over the count ut the majority of our population are | on guard, if they are to succeed, you may be | in that it will not be just yer. | Mie Pereivay has returned, en poste, from Berlin, and no doubt his short sojourn im Prussia is o be attributed to some political cause not yet known. 1, depo The Merald of Sept. 17 coatains the following “ blenoherte: ‘ a | . The French fleet sailed from Cherbourg three ae fog" e. lous tattoo was | #ecount of the capture of a sinver, which, we pre- | be qe mille s wa oy gag sae, Sat oe, —— of our men of wat | 5,201,913; the repayments amounted to 1,290,508 | *#Me, is the Chatsworth sformerly of Baltimore, | of shipping “ 623779 409 007 roubles. The sum of 1,097,976 wae advanced to | 994 Which arrived here oa Tuesday, in cha r The rarlways, in the same period, hove increased manufacturers, and 1,121,690 upon pledges the se d Biidahigenen Sheppard, a prize to ine U.S. nearly 600 per ceot —Bostom Journal, Now. 15. repayments from the former were 88,515 roubles, _ aud from the latter 671,315 roubles. "The sum of The ("8 brie Perry, Lieut, Commanding Foote 1,200,000 was edvanced in the town of Warsaw to premote the erection of buildings. [fu the course of 1246, 219,000 roubles were deposited in the sav- ks by 6,471 persons, of whom 5,885 belong- aw. | The news from (iermany is begianing to be very interesting. The meetiog of all the crowned heads at Warsaw has great importance to the eyes of an observer of European politities. Nicholas has already near him his brother king, the Lm- peror of Austria, who has been accompanied thither by the Prince of Wurtemberg, Prince | of Schwartzenberg, and the Count of Nesslrode. The voion of the two empires of Austria and Roesia will bave great weight in the scales | of European politice. Austria is no more an obstacle fer Ruerla, and their alliance will be a deadiy blow for Prussia, which is still resisting the authority of these two powers. But im a very short time the [rusian government will be obliged o become obe di and la force des will show to 2 Guilleume that safety are only in that alliance. | a Duchies are still unsettled; vet everything Je me to suppose that the question will be decided in a short time. . In Piedmont, the debates relative to the dis- rensione with the Pope, the Church of Rome, and the government, are still in statu guo. Several orgene of the prees have declared for a_ separation from the Komao Catholic church This propo- tition may not take place at our present epoch. Tn Piedmont, Cathe .cisin is deeply inlaid ia the hearts of the inhebitants, and to separate from Discoveny or a Taro Rive to tur Puanet | Savors —We understand that Just nignt, the ex istence of a third ring erownd this pinuct, whier | had been for sume time snapected, was ascertvined | by the astronomers at the observatory at © bridge. It is interior to the two others therefore, its distonce from the body of 3 - | Mustbe emall. it was well observed throngh the great equatorial, with powers varying from 10 to nea teen smot 900, the evening for astronomici! observations ‘all haste the fellow being remarkabiy fine, perhaps the finest sinee the at the Bea. | CStablishment of the 7 ca although, sia- , to the offiser aed laciously in- | Pash bape we shy vas 80 hazy, thatio ths bo you know, sir, that t js Bensilian | roeye only the brighter stare were vr occupation of Algiers by the French, who, by the may 1 Bt the fellow’ tponomed without bie | It Will be remembered thet the eighth satelute o: by 4. she be age a enten eect ot baaeay re bos ne pd pane produce aay popes, whatever | fe planet Was aleo diveovered at Cambridge, ov B 4 y ea pi lo in her Brazilian character, ro a ne . mn — trae served somewhere about those My territories | wa+ 5.16 on board. and she sailed for the United oe, at, sae Oe ee which extend between Benguela and Damaras, to ‘ane Liberia Herald presenta quite a commercial whic!. we have previously called attention, as pre- | appearance. a the numbers before us we obsei senting totally unexpected featates in climate and | the a:rivale of Bremen vessels, with full carg: configuration, Dr. Knox, in hie recently published | from Europe; British merchant ships, from Liv work on “The Keces of Men,” says—" By ax d aleo the arrival of host cending the Senegal cautiously and rapidly, clear- from ports along the coast. ing the high country, dividing its sources from ne of the Javier, im attempting to cross the bar at | ‘Totat........ the Bights A few works ago, off Loango, of Discovery in Southorn Africa. (From Uolburn's New Mouthly Maaaine | ‘The progress made in modern times in African | discovered to discovery and African colonization is, as compared | the ae crown on bir with the slow results that sprang from [utes and | 88 Yer im American. Wi Portugvese settleme ni truly remarkable. At the | Geused the United States fag head of these moveni undoubtedly, stands the une eb The Consus of 1850, | Bxp minster, Pa.— Population Mates seer ‘ tereee | Femules ....... those of the Niger, @ thousand brave men on horse= funk peed | Metedonien oe date , brek might seize and bold Central Africa to the shall, on the 2ith September, capsized, and | Population of i8i0.. North of the tropic ; the Celtic race will, no doubt, | she a aE Gun een Ce Kome would undoubtedly be a cause of revolution he her cargo were owned by General Lewis, | Inereaee in ten years . im the kingdom of Sardinia. It is to be hoped that | tempt this come day. ‘ of Monrovia. ‘ | : oes asus esse *s question will soon be decided. “ By sending a force up the he wi ooh says the The English bark Cloridon, Capt. Taylor, sailed prog katy ey Fad wy ny GAT i iter, ‘* “ f age; 19 pe died ai hil the same speculative writer, ‘*wufficient to provi | from Monrovia om the 27th’ Sept, for the Kroo | drewtaitenced enoen deh he Yeats aia ol Freneh eye ng the moontain range dividing | country, for the rere of conveying a large party ‘Wincuneena, Va-Tre 3 ap en lll the sources of the ‘go! from those of the Niger, | of emigrants te ‘est Indies, eomead ten census jw yA pe and shutting out the westera territories from Cen The Herald, under the heed of navel, say & porulanon ‘wor thongan?d two hun «na tral Africa, the valley of the Niger, and the rich | The Liberia government r-hooner Lark, R Gooner, | (@tty (4,280) to Winchester. Tai bxein communicating, perhaps, hy a portage of no | Req., commander. sailed on the 224 Angast, for @ seven handed and seventy-etx (776) yet the ven- fe. distance with the waters ‘of’ the Waite Nile, | Basa, en a cruise dewn ene loowerd cooes: read = of 1840,—22 per cent, | Betweea 13M and 18 Moy be thus reached, A chain of forts extending | ~Balt/more American, Nov. 16. there were a decrease of 166. The news from Constantinople mentions the decision made hy the Sublime Porte, to give free- dom to the Himgarian ig eapite all ihe solicitations ot Avstria. I think that these unfor- tunare exiles will soon be set free, and ellowed to reach the mighty shores of the United Siates, where they will meet General Ujhazy and his countrymen. Adiew. BHR increave of