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(eteteey the south side) there 1s compacaitrely THREE DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE safe to the Queen, or the Revolution in Portugal, ween, ‘ ‘meomplete or the 4th of May in France. Evem the Times SIAN OVER ENGLISH DIPLOMACY. vee ebeersadian. aD. . ann ; ARRIVAL seizes upon the text, and preaches its sermon of sta” ‘Advices from Congtentinople are to the 15th ult. | States D bare and meagr f or Tas) bility in the United Kingdom. Of all the lessons, A letter of that date says:— 4 Yet this will only increase his ry the Prince and 2 MAIL STEAMGHIP AFRICA said one of its harangues & or two, wg; of all ._ It is with a fe of shame and dissatisfaction | at the immense of the building, since he Prince Frederick William of — BRITISH | the lessons in eience orart which may be dertved from that I write this he English policy bat boen | can eaaly ee, as he walk along, how much more | Prussia, and Prince Henry of the Netherlands. ramcheapendaiahdeete the marvels of the Crystal Palatt, ene te mati employed againet the fathead agen a by M. Titel 0 aceon of ie they is 2 = is renamed, i, som ihen er Ban Queen was attend ra ty she Mistreas of the 5 it E @ cor venture to ve 0) 3 STATE OF THE COTTON MAREET. | ters ior the welfare of mankind are thove po- “y Grand Vizier, Sir Stratford Canning, | while. ing ‘ith the east end, he ‘sill ob | Waiting; the Hon. Eleanor Stanley and the Flom WE REVOLUTION 15 PORTUGAL COMPLETE. | dered the creation of such a building ‘posible. “In trou ta vk ins augetion rekagosnat Uberny, as | gre sppearanee’of the Atercan’ division. They aubetinin, the Lard Steward the'yea- u i , sel as a ie vision. Le - thet mij ney multitade which has ane er itself to- the term of ‘hi detention ‘has on the Ce about a dozen capacious compartments, fousebold, the Vice Chamberfain; me ther in and around Hyde Park every day since wit jut the am- | and they have occupied them in a me: mat- | Lord Waterpark, Lord in Waiting; Colonel Berke- ‘THE PROGRESS OF THE GREAT RXHIBITION. fase Thursday, free for evs urpose which man | men. But what remained woknown is the tele; ‘bassadors of protesta- | ter-of-fact kind of roy, giving tothem more the | ley Drummond, Groom in Wait a and Coloneh’ yey nee can desire within the circle the laws, there has ye despatch transmitted from Paris on the 15th of | tion against decision, ple a supposed se- | look of a display of g° for than of ar- | the Hon. C. Grey, Equerry in Waiting. been no vestige of petition! eoting, Wun 98 of po- | June, and placarded at Al on the 18th. This | cret un between K , the German | ticles of taste and art for exhibition. Thusthere| His Royal Hig ess the Prince A! was at- The Detention of Kossuth in Turkey, | titical discontent. “All this sounds well, and to an | de ‘h throws a new on the events of June, | revolutionists, the Italian patriots. A visit of] isa lamp stall, presenting 5 scores of lamps, | tended by Lord G. Lennox, Lord in Wal oat &e., de. observer at a distance it may seem all verity ; but | 1848, and implies an rétanding between Gen. | the Prince Frederick of Schleswig-Holstein paid to| all pretty much the same, and many precisely Lieut.-Colonel Francis Seymour, Groom in Wait-- np Gite, Bide there were thousands who would.not go near de Cavai, and Gen. Changarnier—an understand- | Kossuth, and the presence of M. Revis, on the same, in tern and in size 3 80 of w shoe | ing; and Lieut.-Colonel Francis Hugh Seymour, Bo dessa warns metre | ped nena eesyomtnn ean | eee ae moat ee ee | Oat Send Si Seseaee cae | ABB we Pane o Pine iti ij ‘ica, Capt. ie, ight i . Now, wi B. - in 0 give wei 0 the’! 80 \ sre Pablo cogseaey Atrio, Osos, Titles at | iver mecsaiar acy ie Geeta vit ser oxplate that | v4 sinuations. Now, the Prince of Sehleswi ‘Holstein | ments of the compartments are of the same charao- tended 2 , .. | tens of thousands now in London who feel that it | garnier explain that plot, which is established to all sived at her ag at half: pest ~s ay paar needs only a spark to kindle the materials of discon- £ ouisaaek Will nea Changarnier also deny @sy morning. She left Liverpool on Saturday | tent among the masses into a flame, the like of Ry other fact—nemaly, that he peopoece to M. afternoon the 1th inst., at half past four o'clock. bie E cohaieyd saw. meee Tater ate in March ye to KY vs ing in | the ae iphone birthright ge the dachiaa ne ut assage in ten is ester rices of admission to the Exhibi- | England, and to proclaim there the iu © | asi the famous convention ‘ul » When has, ov many a2 e day | bition fell AN “aA to 53., and, in consequence, the wee does not say a word admits the fact, a ., | the representatives of Weenie? and England de- eae. Ne receipta at the doors rose from £500 to £1,600. | We shall see whether General Changarnicr will | clared in London that the integrity of the Danish Among the passengers in the Africa is the new | ‘The sale of season tickets ‘also, to use the language | be as silent this time as he has been when so flatly | realm prevails against all the treaties, and had atl pair yon Bayen and Count Colts. ter; business-like, with rectangular regularity, Her Royal Highness the Princess of Prussia was and uninteresting uniformity, with a great deal | attended by the Countess A. de Harke, the Coun- of space wsieenec Peart as if the goods were | tess Louise Oriolla and Count Pukler. - ead out to cover ag much space as possible, rather | His Royal Highness the Prince Frederick Wil- than to present the most pleasing appearances. | liam of sia was attended by Colonel Fissher There are in these compartment diy any | and Lieutenant yon Heinz. which could be called works of art ; but of articles His Royal Highness Prince Henry of the Ne, is am accomplished and amiable man, who has no connection with the German democrats, but he is Vreneh minister. of the'stock exchange, continued active, so that the | contradicted by M. de Persigny. People are im- | virt deprived the prince, who has no rights | of utility, there is certainly a great variety ; and no therlands was attended by the Chevalier von Rap- ‘The Duke of Saldanha bas been named President | total sere ‘of the commission through the day | patiently awaiting the comments of the journal that | to the Danish crewn, of his eventual just claim; | doubt, upon inspection, a vast deal will be disco- | pard and Chevalier de Casembroot. ' 4 yt considerably exceeded £2,000. The financial suc- | passes as the General’s organ. 2 to the duchies. The Sultan, yielding to the | vered of interest and value; but we are now takin, The Queen wore a blue silk dress, with thres « - ‘ ef the Council of Ministers by the Queen of Portu- | cose of the Exhibition now promises to be far be- ‘The officers of the 7th battalion of artillery dined | views of Mw Titoff, rejected the propositions of Sir | only a general view, let it be remembered. We | skirts of blue and white tulle, trimmed with ge). This news has arrived by electric telegraph, | yond what its most sanguino friends had expected, | with the President of the Republic, yesterday, at | Stratford, and Kossuth remains therefore in prison | may remark, that in tho galleries of these com- | bunches of angle blossoms, ornamented with dia- via Paris. Thus the revolution is complete. | and it is now sure, no: only that the enterprise will | the palace of the Elysée. To morrow the officers | for a couple of months more, as they say; but itis] partments, nothing seems forthcouing to fillthem. | monds. Her Majesty’s head dress was formed of ‘We learn from Madrid, that the government, on | pay but that it will give the whole building, with | of the Republican Guard are to dine with the Pre- | now just a year thut all the diplomatists held the | They are in some degree relieved, however, at the | a wreath of apple blossoms, ornamented with dia- 1s th me back, by some splendid specimens of decorative | monds. , printed paper hangings, some by English artists, Her Royal Highness the Princess of Prussia as Horne and Scott, others by French, as Laurent | wore a dreés of white tulle over white satin, trim- and D'Almaine. Those decorations are extended | med with white satin ribandand bunches of flowers, < . } its immense Outlay of cost, as a free present to | sident. Tho republican papers represent thetc | same language, that the detention of Kossuth was to fhe Ist instant, despatched a courier to Lisbon, | the British people. Johu Bull may be rlow in | banquets as afresh attempt om the part of Louis | lasta-cow le af nionthe=tiot banger: and this means, with new instructions for Spanish Minister, | his movements, too slow oftentimes for us of] Napoleon to seduce the armed forces by plying | in the diplomatic language, till May, 1852, if poison with a F 9 ii . | Supple limbs and younger ye but he hes them with good cheer. will not despatch bim earlier, because Austria fears neferenea to the ue of Saldauhe's. tose shrewd head for ebiclation. eek defy all esti- 5 Portugal (oomscs be eas Europe at the moment ieee i= behind a pores = the ees cong gallery, and (caiepeeplc ith rpecunene Her oe ty Higby section mate—the amount of h wt realize from i ° A the erisis in France will probably arrive. Thoughthe | forming a pleasing background, while on the other | ness wore a garland of gerauiums as a hea speculation, - Take theahig T clas Our advices from Lisbon are of the, 30th ultimo, Turki: overnment Mn aisign anotlier or side, one still more effective is eupplied in the | and diamond ornaments. » One of the Madrid papers announces that Count | this one speculation. Take the ships of all . a t f : @e Thomar has bee edited Minister Plenipo- here, the socnigers they bring, the freight that is bes a — ae ae ae ee — healthier fortross than Kutaya to the detained patri- | stained glass furnished by Wuiles, of Newcastle, by | Thedresses of the ladies were new for the occasion, Seatisry and Envoy Extcaordinary at the Spanish | carried, ‘he goe -_ near a sold oe — fppointment of Marshal Saldanha to tho va ly ° | ots, and though she treats them with every respect, | Bailey, M’Connor, and other English artists, and | and the gentlemen were in full dress, the members sinc Gin vtoclaaant spanish | sacrifice, the orders that will be given, the purchases C a : en Court. that will be made, the money that is brought, and | *¥P-_ They, however, state that many of the re et every body knows ig here that Eagles influence — ye ones. Returning. ring, however, s the different yee of knighthood, British i aon tl Fi A is checked entirely by Ruseia, and shat, therefore, | to the American compartments—we may mention | foreign, wearing their respective insignia. We learn that the Spanish ments had given vivas for Saldanba, including those | the Russians pif sivayt find some pretext for the | that one of them is devoted to carriage eauingen Duke of Wellington and the Marquis of Londons pment ctive r 0 it that will enter into the round ang 2 : "1 I negotiating with France ph ai otabanit | were. erp des this senaan; and to thi i cabin, umaih He king “ os he yl He Balesty extension of the time of Kossuth’s imprison- | which sre certainly extremely light and elegant, | derry both wore the order of the black Lagle of Wy negotiating with Franc eo ee ieee ©” | add all the mew ideas that will be evoked to improve ar Saldunbe, bed pai path pice nao ment. Had Sir Stratford in time protested against | but which some connoisseurs, in our hearing, pro- | Prussia. z ‘he line of boundary between the two countries | Machinery and lesson labor, and advance the val ~ . & | the principle of detention, all this could not bave | nounced “too showy.” Aseuredly, such graceful | ‘The Lord Chamberlain having conducted Her aleng the Pyrenean frontier. | ofoapital—a 1 eck ners a ne pine ero despatch to the Queen, assuring her of his heppasedas but when in October, 9 be expressed and delicate wheel spokes or axle trees never were Mea a aa tal pana® apateilie, Ba fag yi nts state that the 3 | t Englandis to gain from this Ind i z * id * his approbation of this princi ¢ solomnlyre- | een. and Her Majesty opened the ball with bis From Naples the accounts state that th | benefit that Englandis to gain from this Industrial | "Tt was hoped the crisis would pass without any | Rif, DPPrODAtiGD ot A rep edod ncighbortocd | ‘The United States have « large amount of space, | Highness the Prince of Prumsia, the vi-drvis bel fer indemnity for the daioage done to vario iti Lie of thi sca oh) eee popular movement. pene peat tae eaene have 9 eet ae et eats? | uenitiead Plahode Beisae atau pio hat, eae t is the on dit of this morning, at the Crystal to Austria, whieh demands that the refugees should | in which each machine stands by itself, with a clear | oyal Highnes: ince ert and her Moy tiene ,in consequence of ihe war in Sicily, have been | Palate, tha “ he cslebraled: Ania group, rh M. The PE conga ergo s yrekye § Paste, al has | be ehut out from the incercourse of the civilized | passage al! round it. The greater number of these Highness the Princess of Prussia. Mis Royal brought toa satisfacter ngoment by she mixei | Kies, has be urchased by an American part, a: Seer ee a ne s world, though there ie no treaty in existence which | machines are for agriculvural purposes, but we | Highness Prince Henry of the Netherlands and the toa satisfactory arrangement by she mixed 4 P y Perty, | been induced to adopt in tho present critical state ~dh ‘ L whi i Poa | “ and is to be taken to tho United States for exbibi. | or gmuirs in her ‘iecitione will have very important | ¢@forces such obligation, and he recommended only | noticed several which belong to the classes of which | Duchess of be a a in the quadrille. : a tion. The ¢ it seem:, was among the bid- | consequences on the welfare of her Mojectee sub- | that Kossuth should be treated according to bis po- | we aro now treating. Of theso we would call at- Jullien’s orchestra was in attendance and after- ‘There was to have been an émew dere fer the beautiful group, and the Duke o perio the stability of her throne; or pe ae sition. At this time Sir Stratford was backed by the | tention to the caloric engine, on account of the ex- | wards performed quadrilles and waltzes. %&d, but, like many other predicted events, it did | 80; but both fell back before the 2 tsi ated upon the first outbreak of this insurrec- | English squadron of Sir William Parker, and yetho | cellence of the workmanship, and also on account | Dancing was then commenced in the 2 ‘ teak Mikcinokabedens | { hope this is true ton ro i <} | did not protest against the detention: he approved | of its being an attempt to obtain power from hot | room, the first dance being a quadrille, * not come off—perhape to the great disappointment | % “ » tion, the Court has thrown itself upon Marshal | ; ; is with ond {fuel than that ired | (Lord Fitzgorald ‘ ey . a] is there a piece Saldanba, and left it to him to settle, as mivieter, | only the resolation taken previously by the Sultan, | air with less expenditure of fuel than that required | (Lord Fitzgorald). 2 . ef an ee party or two. The people hed has | 3 . ‘ * | before ho was sure of the #upport of Eugland, not to | for asteam engine. Although the engine cannot | The orchestra consisted of thirty performers of prepared for a fiir, vo ra fight; and al statuary that can compare with it. ‘The ti ¢ li Fe - i + Ald f ough | fasts pe een te °, fe devtonnn upon | the extbrogtio, which he commenced by taking up | gic iy up the Hungarians—Sir Ntratiord did no- | be worked in the exhibition, owing to the regula- | eoainenos, among whom were Messrs. Deloffre, e it rel 3 ble, | his ferocity. The . * i nasi , | thing more for them. ‘The Turke are aware of this | tions adopted by the committee with regard to fire, | Mellon, Newsham, Hall, Hausman, Pilet, Remu- = itoe etn dipaertiomares etre netgtenseraaae BG rearing aad planging, in the | gnUels however, was not, the impression of the | Qoalfug, and when L explained yesterday to a high | we hope that some dato, derived from experiment, | sat, Badderly, Steglitz, Bauman, and Winterbot- y vontrived to be merry ean endeavor leare himself from bis des- | ¢¢ acne the Couns: 40 Themar's vceignation on | funetionary hege that it is a shame for the Porto to | will be Pameled ag wo understand that this en- | tom, and was conducted by Mr. Boose, master of . M. de Girardin has made, and persiste ia the as vints alone, the anatomical | (peton be bis fight, ‘und when the lattes: from the | ®@ the gaolerto Austria, the Turk replied, “And | gine embodies cortain improvements on that con- | the band of tho Seots Fusilier Guard These two \ sertion, that Genera! Changarnier pri in- | correctness of the steed and the tiger, Toate hai 7 a i | what have you English done fox the Hungarians t | structed several years ago, in this country. Several The following quadrilles were porforme wid En 1 Pears ggg ike acdc fig oy coy ai into which they bring Vie King’s headquarters urgog the “en of “troag | You have made gruskepesdbeata Parliament and in | presses and punching teabines! on Dick's patent, Vive Londres asard. engiand with 12.000 men, and now states that 7 F a tensive change. Donna Maria showed a strong vet the tifie ati »xhibited by the invente ‘We al iced Brave. 5 ‘ muscular power .. Would immortalize the | gienosition to summon to office men already con- | meetings, to the great gratification and amusement | are exhibited by the inventor. 'e also noticed a a eis M the General sent in a written tion to Ledru | prtist. But above t thas displays the | HeReg With the Cabral government, and. who | of the orators, and of the assembled crowd—but we | stone-dressing ‘machine, lathe, pomer-loom, saw- The tilowiee tee; ‘anne Rollin to the same effect. Gi tivaue say | genius of the one who co! ed the whole idea, is | Wioht have served to brin, es the leador of that | didnot see the reeult of theso epecchcs—we heard | mill for cutting ship timber, and a grindstone, eae ben ‘Walees were ried he hae the came in his possession. | the figure, attitude, o r and develope. | 5, Ry when the storm had blown over. The | the clapping of the mill, but no corm was ground in | which was labelled * Presented to Lord Stanley”— Scldetin Tanse — : | ment of tho rid conception of | name of Viscount de Castro figured in all the the mill ; we saw no flourcoming out ; your pretend- {| whigh we presume to bo a joke, although rather an The Belle of the Dance Te heen dent ‘ | limbs there isadded | DAMY. tions which were discussed at the palace, | €d. sympathy for Hungary isa sham. ‘The Sultan | obsfure one. ‘There are also a few carriages, one ‘The Liebenstein. Tr. ; According to Hamburg letters, measures o | | though that personage had betrayed Saldanha’s | ‘id more ; he gave not way to the threats of Iussia, | in particular which is remarkablo for the lightness | ‘The following polkas were danced :— , ifiation are being taken by the Da 5 | last cabinet, to Rita belonged; and upon his | and, at the risk of a war, he did not comply with the | of its appearance. In the nave is placed a large Katinka. Strauns, The opening of the Fr: akfort Diet haz been po: [| refusal, the Duke of ‘Tereeira was summoned to | Peremptery demand for the extradition of Kossuth, | lattice bridge, of wrought and cast iron. The Fortuna. Strauss. + pening of ankfort 2 I patch up the administration that had fallen. Jt | ‘ough he was uot sure of the English support ; in- | French maachinery is rather crowded, while the Refreshments we: 0 the company through- oned from the Ich so the th inst. The King of Prussia and was observed, at the same time, that Costa Cabral | deed, your ticet did good for the Jew Pasitica, not | space allotted to the United States is not nearly | out the evening in the Green drawing room. | was-only conveyed by the Montroso to the neigh- for the Hungarians.” The Sultan acted but upon | half filled; a portion of the latter, at the southeast A State su seeing this - ‘ effendi, Lord Palmerston, | corner of the building, has therefore been very | room, the re} alpture. | Mr. Bowl i » arrived here by | the advice of your R ere, it is said, to mee yee boring Spanish port of Vigo, and it was rumored in a ? % c 7 + | the last stea ruck down by an | yy seer ? - Spa- | @nd your ambassador, in sending Kossuth to Ku- | properly transferred to France, while another por- | cacy. meat month. apoplee! while visi Industrial Lx- | pied palit ens tng met rg pa | taya? he treated him liberally, whilst your govern- | tion at the northeast corner has been allotted to | Ter ete nt Body Guard was on duty in the Prince Sctwarzenberg is to leave Vienna for | inbitic rday ‘Great consternation | ine Minho, not fur below tle Portuguese border | Ment nover kent i: etre for the Hungarian re- | belgium. ‘alace as usual, under the command of Sir Soymow? Dresden on the 12th ias | wae exci: t ants, and an immense | forties of Valencia. To all those intrigue: ‘and | fugees whe fled to England, and all the subserip- We must now close our cursory observations with | Sadler, the Exon in Waiting. The oftivers present The Hellspor y t the Cape of | rowd immed y edaroundhim. Jt being | )yenarations Marsha! Saldanba gave, "however, a | tivas of your great men for those unhappy fellows | the remark, that American Photography iz highly | were Captain Bellairs, Exon, and Lieutenaut-Colo- ee Pe ©! | Known, in some way, that he was an American, Mr. | PPO? + , gt) > * | did not ‘amount to the sum granted by the Sul:an | commendable, but in other departments of optics , } Lobe td semicivntly intelligible rear od | to Kossuth alone. You became parties to the trau- | the United States do not appear to shine. The aoe on : pares ges ton | Sactions which finished with the dstention of Kos- | most conspicuous object is what cur countrymen pet seh ona tie pede eg at ete suth; you see the Hungarians starve in England, | beyond the border would call a ‘‘muckle great” sooner or later back to power, and the result shows | Whilst we treat them liberally ; amd now you re- | miscroscope;, bat whether its excollence is commen- J | that he alone is master of the situation. | proach us for having acted accordin; eres advice | surate with its magnitude we have not yet had the given to him, that he is The result we now witness in the nomination of | #24 having done more than you did e Franks ap gern phe, = fi x that no expense atteads tbe | the successful Marshal to the post of prime minis- | #T¢ really « strenge people: bm make a great in the ous foreignand colonial sections, nu- medical aid tha; London | to. and we await with interest the choice of his | 2, and then they pretend they have done a great | merous mine ralogical and metallurgical specimens colleagues, and the nature of his relations with{the | deal, and think that they are entitled to make re- | Will be found. Canada sends various samples of @eod Hope on ¢ seme fighting, but uet very ser Cape Mounted Kites are suld to have gone over w a ’ the Kafire ake. | lingers in a very le The infuz of tisite the Great Exhibition | that every attent @ontinued unabated. ‘Ten thousand dollars per | rounded by friends, an are an thes employment of the Bem are taken in entrance fe argon ere had been | Riddle us, Some of the | and th was pr ner, Was at once sent for, ediate atteation medical aid but I am he The market for Ame remains | Madame Sontag made her first appearance this | (2) \1) | Proaches to those who did more but spoke less.” ber iron and copper ores, besides minerals contain- wmaltered. Prices were as follows :— season upon Saturday night. The reception given ‘ : | apt, must confers I blushed a little, for I saw that, | ing silver to the amoant of about 3h # cent. Waited States Five per Cent Bonds, 185 «9 | to her wes enormous; plaudits, again and again Austria. | after all, my ‘Tark was not wrong. There is also a case containing native gold, obtain- 2 . Six per Cent Bonds, wi repeated, from every quarter of a brilliantly filled | Tue riNaNces oF Tuk EMPIRE—~Tite KING oF GRERCE | — More ratifying than the unhappy resul? of Sir | ed from the Gireen Mountains on the south-eastern Six per Cent Bone — | house, Welcoming “back the most fascinating of | —1Hy NUNGARIAN GENERALS—avrains IN TUSCANY. | Stratford's last representations is the fac? that those | side of their prolongation into Canada, where the Six per Cent - prim donne. Ivis said she never looked better, ! ‘The public looks forward to the new financial | of the Hungarians who turned Mussulmon, and who | sands contain pieces varying from the most minute Sew York State Five per Vent #toek. bee ir Cent Stock, 1805-60. Tf Cent Stock. 1855 nt Bonds, 1858 62.. ¥2 .& ' | or showed herself more fully in possession of all her | ordinances with intense anxiety and impatience. No | were till lately detained in A will now be em- | grains to the weight of several ounces. Among the | wonderfu! power, natural and acquired. 1 have | one has the faintest idea of what is likely to take | ployed inactive service. Kurshid, too,(Guyon,) who | other prodacts of that country are white carbonate red never before heard her, and even had I, | am far | place; but oracularsentences, which have fallen from | remained Christian, receives the Nishan of Herik | Of magnesia, lithographis stones and gypsum, to- x} , | from competent to criticise the merit that has stood | the —_ of one or two of the Ministers, have con- | Pasha (General of Division ;) he will probably be | gether with & variety of ochres of various sbadus of jos © | the test of two generations of opera goers. “be | vinced the nation that some energetic measures may | sent to the Arabian army, where he mi Et, pertaon, color. 106 | certainly sings all unlike what | ever heard of be expected. As I lod you to expect in my letter | soon get the opportunity of distinguishing himsclt | | In the part of the building devoted to the pro- p ‘Maryland a — | ing before, with an exquisite purity and a mirac ofthe 27th ult., the foars exprossed by the Loyd tha: | anew, for the differences with Egypt are not yet | ducts of the United States, will be observed large iG (Bog. 5) Canada Six per Cent Bonds, 1874 a= | lous execution, that must enchant all who hear her. | one third of the taxes would be levied in silver, are | settled. ‘The Sultan enforees the ‘T'ansimat, or, ecimens of native copper, together with iron- | The match between the Flying Dutchman ané Im the British House of Commons, Mr. Cay- | The house took every opportunity of manifesting | totally unfounded. The Oest. Correspondenz has | you call it, the Hattisherif of Gulhane; he insists | stone, coal, and other mabeinauen’ iilasurvaiee of the | Voltigeur, which is to take at York on the Sey Drought forward his motion for a repea | its approbation, summoning her before the cur- | since set the amind of the peblic atrest on this point. | upon it that the time of military service should be | geological resources of that country. At the cast | 13th of May, is well entitled to the designation that ag : og by tain, and not content with her presenting herself in | At Jenaih Baron Krauss has been induced totake fixed in Egypt as well as in Turkey, that servage | end of the nave fine specimen of zine ore, from | we have placed at the head of this article, when of the malt tax. He said the effect of the tax | company with her collaboruteurs, insisting on a last | some additional clerks into his department. From | should be abolished, ard that the taxes should be | New Jersey, weighing 16,100 Ibs., taken from a | we consider the untivalled performances, of tha was to increase the price of beer to the poor | and individual appearance. Her Majesty, Prince | motives of economy, he nearly worked himself and | levied ina more proper and less oppressive way | short distance below the surface in Sussex county. . | horses, the difficulty, even ofthe most knowing, of man, who had to pay five hundred per com: | Albert, and their illustrious guests from the couti- | bis aseistants to déuth ; his object, to use hiv own | than before. If Abbas Pasha does not comply | | California furnishes specimens of golit ores, anda | deciding which has the superiority, the contticting hist this 8 is ‘elit of Gn | nent, Were present, and the house was most bril- | words, was to keep down the expenses of his de- | with this peremptory demand, the armics of Syria | bottle of mercury. opinions on the subject, and the interest attached in vpen eee, OBS Cs d the effect of - | liantly and fashionably attended. : partment, and he p:obably succeeded insaving the and Arabia will enforee the will of the Sultan, and If the revpective departments of France and | consequence to the contest which is to decide the img the consumption. The House then divided, | — In the midst of men of every clime and nation, so | State a few thousand florins. This may justly be | Abbas Pasha is likely to be replaced by Said Pa- | the United States are more couspicuously empty | question; and this interest is greatly increased from when the numbers were, for the motion, 1 familiarized te the costume Of ‘Turk and Persian, | called the “ the penny wise and pound fovlish sys- | sha, the youngest son ofthe late Mchemet Ali. As | and unfurnished than most others in the Exhi- | the unbounded confidence entertained by the pub- it, 258—majority hat Go uiilien, © and Tunisian and South Sea Islander, within these | tem,” for not only was public business unneces- | tothe Bosnian insurrection, it seems that it is en- | bition, we could quite anticipate that it might | lic that in the hands of the ted owners of against it, jority against the motion, TH. | oics. walls, that after the Chinese Mandarin alone, | sarily retarded, but the country was losing mil- | tirely suppressed; the Sultan gave the order that | be alleged that some national jealousy of our | horses, the trial willbe decided really on the merits. Mr. Hume moved for a select committee to inquire whether the mode of assessing and levying the in- per : sede asec Marrachusetts Five per © it, Bas, 1808.) 105 Five per Cert (Sterling Bonds.). 90 1 pereereerre 22; | | as he strides over the broad avenues, does the eye | lions of florins by the depreciation of the currency, | the chiets of the rebellion should be punished, not | ancient and most formidable Tivals had Considering that tho owners are connected with | tis refreshing to see the na- | while the finance Minister was saving the salaries | by the haltar or by powder and lead, as the Hunga- | couraged their contributions. If this plea should | northern part of the kingdom, and their training | tional fellowship that exists among the contribu- | of some half-dozen councillors of sections. | rian generals were, but by a temporary exile iu | ‘ i el be urged we desire to resist it at onee. ‘he simple bles being situated in Yorkshire, we think the: qome tax might not be made more equitable. | tin. and citizens of the United States. Amecting | The King of Greece arrived here yesterday after- | Tripelis, where the Porte grants to them an allow- | fact is, that we are punctual and ests te | rightly evlected York as the pla 4 Some discussion then took place, and the motion o'clock in front of the office of our | noon, and has taken up his residezice in the palace | ance, according to their former rank. It is a great | Which, for some reaeon or other, these two great | tt match” isto come of. In the annals was agreed to. ‘The other orders of the day were | ; of which Col. Kimmall, of Mary- | of the Archduke Albrecht. After dining with the | example of humanity which the Sultan gives to the | States are not, at least on this occasion. © are tish racing, matches have ever held a distin- Shen agreed to, and the Howse adjourned land, has been constituted President, and Horace | Emperor, se be nn at the Italian Opera. To- | west, but the civilized world is not accustomed to | glad that no consideration induced the Commis- guished place; and, without attempting unfairly tq ‘The Great Western, #t = etre 0h Seat | Grecley, Seeretary—ty consider upon such subjects | morrow a grand review of the garrison in full pa- accept lessons from those whom they call barba- | sioners to es for an hour the opening of the | disparage the preteusions of rival racing towns, e Great Western, steamer, arrived at South | as would be likely to interest and aid them. | rade will take place; about 20,000 men, with eight | rians. | Exhibition. Whether our guests were ready or | from the interest and importance of the matehes F ampton on the 7th instant, with 839,517 dollars in | A large register is also kept in the Commis- | complete batteries, will defile before the royal visi- Reports from Servia say, that Ali Fedich, one of ; not, we ned our doors at the time appointed. | that have been decided at York, ‘far famed” specie, 40,000 of which are on account of Mexican | sioner’s Office, in which every American is | ter. It is reported that a prince of Wartemberg | the Losnian leaders, was amply provided with wo- | If their places are empty, let not the entertainers | Anavesmire may be considered, in this respect, | expected to record his name, place of | is also expected. Iknow not whether it isto be ney, and that he had received it from Croatia. be blame ‘is We think a useful lesson—one not | “classic ground.” So numerous have been the ‘ dividends, Among the passengers was M. Payno. | Teneo at homme, and address’ in’ London. | attributed to accident or to a with to show the only creditable to Engiand, but in other ways im- | events of this description at York that it would be ‘Charge d’ Affaires from Mexico, who hat instruc’, ‘The r of our eitizens here ie already very | strangers that the Hungarians are again reduced _ The Great Exhibition, nt to ourselves and others. Ifthe Tunisian | diffleult to enumerate them all thons to arrange certain important affairs with the | Jarg very steamer that arrives adds afresh | to obedience, but the extra troops which have b iz [¥rom the London Chronicle, May} 1 his stalls with such interesting contribu. | One of the earl at York was in the Mexican bondholders. He has « certificate from | J% » unprecedented crowd from the Union. | summoned to Vienna for the occasion are Hungari- To-day we have to montion a visit of two distin- | ti Ceylon and Canada could oxbibito largely | Year 1748, in which the Karl of M the Mexican treasury of 2,500,000 dollars. The Lvorybody here calle us Americans, as if we held | an regiments. it appears to me that the standard fuished prinecsses of the royal family of France. { ie no reason that New York and Paris | cheenut ge . Whipper-in, Mexican government is about » apply to the cham- | the whole continent. A Mexican, a Canadian, a | for recruits bas been considerably lowered since the ¢ Duchesses of Orleans and of Nemours, with | should be behindhand. combe, on bis biack horse Oroonoke, four miles, nd the Due de Chartres, Seats the Lenten Tame, Shere | and won. ‘Iho Larlof March afterwards became and others of theit | inthe oppusite corucr uf the building Brother | te Duke of Queensberry; be was « distinguished in the afternoon, | Jonathon displays a great number of useful, and, it pporter of the turf, and constant attendant at inanexamination.of jwust be added, otiona.”? The | York races for upwards of fifty years; he was one | known as such by the epecifie appellation, but | filled with young roldiers, who, though evidently | attended by General Dum: @ United States citizen alone takes the generic | full grown, are complete dwarf: when coiopared ty | S¥ies, arrived at the Laxbib bo have seen service. | and were cecupied some how Ber for authority to negotiate a Joan of 6,000,090 , Central American, or @ South American, is | Italian and Hungarian wars, for the streets are | the young Comte de Pari: dollars An old Polish soldier, who died afew day: since . f 4 an term of American. Complimentary as this may | the men wi b a a < beauti « ee of Lavalides, in Paris, bad reached | soem to us, I yet the rather wish that we too had | A note was forwarded to Constantinople a few part of its contents. The illustrious exiles (Who | gost prominent fatarerof the Ameriensdivistom, | of the principal natch makers of the time; and ‘his year. | some national designation peculiarly our own, at | days since, in which the detention of fourteen of the | Were accompanied by Mr. Dilke,) upon their en | it js true tent revolvers, on a | Stlebrated carriage match, to run ninoteon miloe ‘The Scheldt throatens inundation along the whole | «ll events until the whole boundless cgutinont ix | Hungarian fugitives was demanded for two years | trance, went almost at once to the | new and renius | in &i ty minutes, will be long held in remembrance. in longth, between Tour- | ours longer. Austria offers to bear the expenses. The , letted to France ; and it war ino | of the n 1 i ain. an important mateh for 2,000 guineas, be- I twoen Lord Kockingham’s Whistle J Mr or’s Brutus, at York i bleattention. % i tie conquered | Inge of pleasurable pride that they remarked the | ing | ntrast. Georgey | l#tge proportion of the foreign nave devoted to the | carne oufurth ; he | Productions or manufactures of thoir country—the | that it li invita- | artistic way in which they ged, the vast | row t of chom- | Variety of works of art, or of nious industry | under 1; | they compr even in the presmt incom- owe , tate of that Exhibition, and the | slows ‘ recherche portion of | have no doubt that the them—the beautife ot | secat deal hy a visit to inlaid, the gorgeou t | build He will tea of the’ works in go United States are net, eg With all our numbers, however, it has been wi great difficulty that the twenty-one jurors of awar pass their time affords a stra allotted as the share of the United States, have be ives almost like a hormit etoor Was perceived to fall ‘ h | selected. Not that there was any aversion on the | appears little in public, and ¢ opt yey ple to accept 20 honorable a position— . His sole amusement is th vated with the first scientiiic meu in in laboratory of the I’ 1! Europe is certainly no undesirable distinction— | his lodging, which is simy that it was felt that there ought, for the honor | and his habits, for - dual adaptation to | the infamous charge matter hay | the surrender at Vi a Mr. | cin dignitate, and thi way in which the conquere to plough, or to har- verte large farms eaahip w conveying steam | meeting, in 17 Putmaking due | be between Sir James Per North + of inventors we | 22d Mr. Shaftoc’s Pioneer, ineaa, whi aor may learn a | ehded in the former being sue t angle of the | Siting mectingy in 1788, ‘two facet t thiseth Mr. Maynard and Sir. Bake in that par tovarry thirty stone cack; and although Mr. Ba and #ilver, the eauty « The Preshure G pub . nson, of New | of four half ' tapestries and thos, the | b i é © jason, of New | of four- per cent st pestric ‘ y the ik Je iliannce | Ket’s horse was the favorite, Mr. dl was the Viens of the 2%h ult., etating that th Sead,’ of Mow | slate, inGoete ond ¥ lesen, able articles of f ‘haueeeue | euccessful competitor. The celobrated mate of Aasiria line imo Lime past, xb { Boche, of | rebellion is to be seen night s province of fine arte- ; “ ork | When Sir Charles Turner's Beningbro beat M ary . ©. Daneaa, | rubberat whist inthe moreant Jewelry, the smarguterie, and the btjoxteri he ich | Wentworth’s Ormoud, was dex i Piodu = adbourne, of | @ here were te the ehar r of the compartments on other ext %). In paseing, we cannot omit to men of buttert " MeDaniel, of | the A wh le the 0 Jess splendid, | but reed 3 celebrated ( bampion, who won b« ave t s hibition is | Buda, on the ee b oe Rape meen RL ord & most edify pmplished, wa. ched to , and b ye is fas. | Re-action number of articles of interest and utility carta, and the York spring sting in Parope by the © re RKSE | have tolegraphie news of the eer waa lp bat, unfortuarsly, Cham- A One cere etcams! hed enee, ling to whieh a Gra ¢ visi E ting. abd broke from a building yard ne Clyd = i _ The neh Republic. | bas been issued, empowering the fthe buile Majenty's State Ball. Tunoing t) Be trade between Livery , t ~ \d an I aro of the Sth inet Letters of | tares te poe all persons emxpect ritor ups Nations by our tra ] tr he London Times, May 8.) We now come to a match of a nove! de iption, aad is the largest, with ey t bag th wing intelligence vr | to dixturb the p peace voder t friends, and will, no doubt, fecl somew'! |} . The Queen gave a state ball Jast evening, at | Which took p at Knavermire, « © York Au- Ss in fe Tr i of this day, | week or a month, aad even “t dat the comparatiy bare ee | Buckinghwm Palace, t meet numerous and bril- | gust meeting, in 1804, betwoon Mr. Vlint’s Rrown gue M. Emile | their liberty for the space of a y ir department pr: Ip of | jant court, ix ms having been iseved to above | Thornville and Colonel ‘Thornton's Vingarella , d se | Any eno Suskiam © temnausteetion the nave, opposite the space oceupiod by the United | 2,100. Haltpact 9 o'clock was the hour named; | Mr. Flint rode bls horse, ana a laly whoce mearures upwards ain f inet, whether by word, de« “. Ww States, isa huge wood and iron bridg whilo, az if | but before thut time the nobility and g tho name of Mrs. Thornton, r - ean : he iold | &@ Tepresent grace by the side of forge, there | gan to arrive at Buckingham I . race, from thes ity of a The case of Mr. Dyce Sombee Wis b ' al the | beautiful chef Weurre ef American art, the figare | lomatic corps, with their wives and dau | the turf in the « F of a jockey, en TRE ae of Mer. Dye soar bee whe bo : 4 { of the Greek Slave, kindly allowed to h a] the gentlemen of the re unprecedented dogree of interest and att ry Bh ~ whys yy pre yy line of which the | bY Mr. Grant, its owne of | ors of distinetion, the ¢ the public ; so much so, that an assemble —_ “4 - hearin > ith aye ar at bis dis- government t Ameriean commi high functionaries of ing, as supy . to near one hundred thousand | on — - a 98 come — oes hat dand Serdinia |i me ee - persons, attended the course to witness the contest, _ gt gam blir Piedmont will be | the nee Alber e ight D end quarreling with hotel keepers and their ‘ | fami ry (the th Light Dra- b i ill b t | tamil, 1 i <7 go By isto bie a wil ir : mu in ng the course ‘ ; dd Genoa wil Ss Ss 0 las! hi ola fo! mind was ordered be almost an Knglish port.” ‘The object of the ht the g y | lasme, aod Mis, “Thorton, ke eomperueioe, pellog , . tiele is to excite the jealousy of Fra he fy at Vrown Thornville had, however, taken the Our London Correspondence. een ia | art ; es The v | and would, in ail probability, have won, even | Reetand rovetat The Epsnereetion ty Nowta. (singal up the grand stairense t } ia nocident hat not happono’. Nothing The Rrvehdionary <A The Agram Journ he Heth wit. eaye.—¥ pecimon of Araerican sculpts xpirio were illuminated with the i by her want of euceess in the above mateh Concet— The Vale to | aut as in Fron ter lay ats PM, mule g A before } ~~ ror resainding i , yi ‘ ee plender; > were added, appeared at the York Angust movting im , he precnd fo from Potrove t ¢ gerd of Arnants | distor, “ whose manly ty # to agon casion , ode Colonel Thornt o Lo ° Sohn Buli-—A pened in Alg te the fanbourg on the right bank of the | The female i is, how t the superior | ment | against Mr. Dloomfield’s ma "Allegro ae This steamer will 1 Cangareia ws Uona, and burned ¢ tt unig bs | oo ped i 13s at | the veteran jockey Duck!e, in a motch’ wows, Lith Feeney al d during | Work of bk far more Save to the thr 00 guine At starting, Low oP a The Con I the besiegers, | and impressive than that of the celebrated m mW was , ani made running for a consid i® Portugal, eave that w iv t t ois. deans. 4 , f fa u- ne sculpture ‘ t iridle bend b when Allegro went up and headed | the affair Pres atte the 4 heise Belhe, he F 1 refnforees nen of bean y th d wishin t lengths. Tho lady then challeng fastant you » ; , Commieton 1d ned ¢ of virgin innoe he of her | efter @ pretty contest, won her race od ye Saal and of b Franklin, | Semmberio ; kis deen is inog ide of the saloon, by half'ancek. Iicr'bold and rang jockey ship tp pos = ses ” od resalled 3 ‘ ” acke M ardin, “could have ser I € beon ! : Room) was aleo ee | elie’ tory ge Not the assembled thousands politicel phase, it g telat fren Parte’ Goveriter ¢ | quadriije band being placed within the | Who bailed her snecosful struggle with the most etna forty. ee | exer eaten oO : hang « 5 faccinatior r and reserved scate being elevated | outhnsiastic chouts of applause tui eoneratclatios get, in spite of ni! ‘ m the I ter of Wa ‘ , inte 4 the day it was con | down the east side of the apartment. Both ball | Im 1807 his royal highness tho Pr of Wales ; vagh That 3 } : tently the centre of a group of & rooms and all the State saloons, together with the | ™atebed his colt Tratulyar against Mr. Watt's colt one can see, bis ch f are quite | then, lay 4 “ ; t will 1. b _ the mind : every approaches, were decorated with choiee and fea | Shuttlocock, for 1,000 guineas. Tho ce 1 to thoee of the of . wove who bas seen it. son examining the general cha- | grant ebrul if ai d off ove navecmire, at the spri Bot even excepting hor Mujosty ( Visto t : A ; Glee and rece he picture gallery divided priv colt won easy. On the a:b « " 7 it 1 i t and | monts,and of such of those m gfeaturcs aa | the tro bell rooms; and ® th s- | 1805, @ mateh took ph : It ie amusing to see how the 7 aus, 2 ‘“ f ¥ . hwia cght | may chance to attcnct bit no the apectator, to | rembled be nerival, watts thx cance OF tee |% a place for 1,000 guns ‘ he) op | pared f ' and b ki ~ bE t hy spectator, rombled on their arrival, watil the entrance of her | tween Lord | portunity to insist upon it that Eoglant hee an | t hen qnotes the paragraph } get a better inmpression of the whole offee’ on each | Majesty Teale Eviteh, dmpregne ble government. Wher) + re | ved . nt seat dan ia Chee —e a ee — pesng slens tho galle. ie sored Higunene, Priaey Honey of the Nesher- the, forme nr ltw ‘ : . : , Me - ‘ be bro i « oe, © will toon observe ho * oxposi ends, arrived at ten ininutes before ten o'clock. | @ littl remarkab) ‘ 0 y thd wraein marks of the New York Mac! al lit ; | religion. Senne al 1 Gust | in this half of the edifice ie not half fuishod Precisely at ten o’clock her the Queen, | records of tho day: that hanes, wher mn Moe Gigration to Bagiand, vr the fea proved by | by i f | Ring th may 9 " he | there #r@ whole eompartments spied -— ond hie Royal IHignees the rae entered | the Darlington stakes at Beishtes, on the sth of so Royal Comamirtioncys 7 f the Todueteial Lauiyi oe BU pus woy te ‘Aibeus.” he We om | peaugely way orp complovemthat in the galleries | the white room, from Glorety | Avgust, elguld haye acrived at Vringhow oe on the