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THE NEW YORK HERALD. _ | WHOLE NO. 6396. MORNING EDITION—MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1854. PRICE TWO CENTS. DDITIONAL FROM EUROP! | with » sacrifice of about 800 lives. This is terrible; | intimate friend and confident of the Czar, has broken | retains its brilliancy, and is not affected by nitric or A eu E. and the thought is more dreadful when we consider | down—that is, the “ conference” will have none of | 8 be net d. It is only dissolved by i that if the same sum that has been spent in military | his counterproject. The voice of Great Britain, the ic F 5 Bet cblorh acid. Several imens of this 7 explanations have been given for the re- d Pi ; #QUR LONDON AND PARIS CORRESPONDENCE, | works had been expended ig providing harbors of | land of your sires and of the tombs of thoae whoee | tal were exblbited to the Aeadengr ana, oh the irs: | Sum ofthe flets to the Dardanelles, “The new state. | orirrecnin,anbe Teckoned on, the non agreement refuge—for many of which there are great facilities | blood isin your veins, has by this time been beard | position of Baron Thénard it was voted tnavl ment, that they are about to set out again in charge | that he had founded his hopes and established hie —all this sacrifice of life and property would have | by her Parliament throu, ‘8 sufficient sum should be placed at the of a convoy of stores and men, speaks for itself. But | policy. Hehas been mistaken, Austria and Pras The Position of the Busso-Turkish Question, | ipa Bed ent throughout the length sad | of 4, Saint Clair Deville, to enable him to make ex- | in truth, the official papers recently show | Sia tisve pronounced ‘again bing wie i 0) usso-Tor! » | been saved, and the prices of coals and other articles breadth of Europe, and its fiat is the determination periments on a large scale. hat the Amsbemebesend treaties eine with which they have joined in neg ef * ig dn got coastwise would not have been so awfully in- | of a peopie, “slow to wrath and of great kindness,” | M. Cueto, formerly a chef de Bureaw in the Minis- par ge oa the peasy med their Cra bes Tarkey, by their a ature of the first note of creased ‘Madrid, been were subject to misconce, 5 4 “TUE ATTEMPTED CONSPMACY M1 TURRET, | cieteed ss they are at present. We look to the | to be trifed with no longer. Zot Foneign Athi at Madsid, bes been named that we may expect very satiafctory explanations | December S, and that of Tansey legislature for redreasin these vers; an a This day a courier passed through Paris—the acene, 1t is esid that all the Russian residents have been | °f the last naval manceuvre. It is by no means im- | in no illusion which obstinac; ‘and sele man like Mr. Cardwell at the helm of trade, we ex- | in other days, of events on whish the world hes ordered to quit Paris, with the exception of the Prin- | Possible that a Rassian fleet may ultimatety fall into | generate, the Emperor Nicholas to be able te party ; and energy and 3 $ Fs ho Wiews of the English and French Press. | pect that some measures will, ere long, be adopted | turned as on a hinge—on his way to St. Petersburg, | cese Lieven, in whose favor a special exception has | the bands of the Admirals more readily if that fleet | determine the courts of Vienna anh Heche to give = to prevent for the future this very unnecessary sacri- | with instructions from the British Ministry that Sir been made. Wigs Sd eae sy cbr Ramin pore rr rag porte Remtange ko ui ive bperesy AOR Slee & fice of life. George Seymour should at once cease all diplomatic 20 BUROPEAN WAR. favorable to Russia. From the premature ex, more or less directly to the Russian hog Rng ACTIVE PREPARATIONS FOR WAR. ‘We must not suppose that the Russian army are | reiations with the Imperial Court of Russia. At the of the Russo Greek conspiracy in Christian Turkey, | the object of Count Orloff’s mission. pr Beeson mE tks lying altogether on a bed of roses. The latest intel: | Foreign Office he was joined by an agent, bearing VIEWS OF THE ENGLISH PRESS. ") 50 Copartare of Count (eset fanaa Vienne mswithout to pooesro meen Pntecry enterprise are beyond PES OF PEACE. Higence from the Danubian provinces informs us | commands of s precisely similar natare to General [From tne Loncon Caron Fab. 10) sions ofthe Gant in overrating his own fufuence,the | andCambition were touched. to induce the ‘Gorse , HOT that Prince Gortschakoff does not enjoy amongst his | Castiebsjac, the French Ambassador. Mody pene information ans it will be impos- | tendency of the most recent occurrences has been to | States to enter into the sphere in which Russia moves. troops sufficient confidence for the important part | ‘The Emperor of the French, too, has held a solemn sible pets Ferny ‘ese ee Tine encourar® Turkey more than ever to sustain her | An extension of territory, it is said, was spoken of in “ MARKET CIRCULARS, be ts cliod op to play in the approsching compelg™: | conclave, sf whieli ie Ministers, Marshelt, ‘and the Bat, o long as Redeshid Praha remains at the head | PO" 1” Pram ipa Liverpool Mail, Feb 11.) ‘Satcan nettles pein pean nanan eset cs eibe. de. He is, no doubt, a good artillery general; but when | chief officers of his empire, were present. At this ct, ent ee oe, Sent, thes, the Fecto will It isnow admitted that what was only & to concentrate all the Of the war to- a in command of the army in Poland he never gave | meeting all diplomatic reserve was entirely Inid aside. | {Pam'ne recromered tak eo sal eran cmnae; | ivalry between Ni and » a8 the re | wards Asia, endeavoring thus to show that England London Correspondence. any proofs “d his talents as a strategist. The troops, | The warlike resources of France formed an animated | changes have taken place since the commencement pe lg a ay ‘aoe ene name Geek pore ee ae —_ Lonvon, Friday, Feb. 10, 1854, ber Ry i aie ing, eng ere ot subject of discussion, or, I should rather say, cf con- | of the nen Ls an = fPraetinee Pasha, — mismanagement or worse intention, converted into a | 3 ous. Austria was made to understand that she had <qum WAR IN TBE Ba8T—THe COMBINED PLABTS— | supplies of provisions avd forage are forwarded most | gtatulation, for their entire completeness aud extent pi Rope ‘on different occasions eerachic ond | ee eee Tetrege Teale sod a Leggo no other support but Rusaia in the hypothesis of new ‘CuNSPIRACY AMONGST TAB GRMEKS—OBNTRaL BC- | irregularly, thus adding not a litle to the suf: | were unanimously subscribed to. resumed his place in the Ministry. The removal of | mry have been the fh iige ens hy hurches. This | revolutions and of a new rising of the nationslitien 2OPE—AUSTRIA AND PRUSSIA—GENBRAL INTALLI- | ferings of the Russian The troops, moreover, His Majesty is understood to have spoken with great | the Seraskier, who was the ized head of the | tm Sed ig whi is ene kaa ie oe Aen | noes her empire. All these efforts have failed. @&SOR—STOCKS. are far eae ous ving Seng hy firmness and with unwonted freedom. Thegroundof | W8! party, has, Line ziveu rise to the onpontepriniplee, that the action is referable to no of the Rinoror Rete dy "before ‘thelr inflecibte ‘The present mail does not take out much addition- bes eal d, under all circ Cer that there is little | lit'zation from the commencement of the dispute be to 8 preteens with uaa ary see i maple whatever. aa to bs Gagged ¥ baa eS determination not to desert the cause of Earopeam ai news. We are still in statu quo. It appears that | to fear from Russia; and farless is there need forthe | gonceraing the Holy Places, the recal of M. Lava | ever, (ar ‘more probable that the ministerial | ,<.7¢0; it cannot he denied tha: Great Britain has | right, which most undoubtedly is not thet of Russia. , , been dragged by the coalition ministry through the | Neither Austria nor Prussia wants to extend the the retarn of the combined fleets to the Bosphoras cightern regeecats bao me bed ee bar Tette, the appointment of M. De la Coar, was rapidly | crisis has been cauged by personal dissensione, or | drt into a position in which she cannot remain, and | limits of ita territory to the prejudice of any modern ‘Was contrary to the express wishes of the English | ing orders from Engler ie oa a ‘ike all bullies, an | passed over. The determined purpose of Russia fis go rd (foe Tt is well | cax neither aavance or retreat without dishonor. State, for they are well aware that the first step and Freneh Ambussadors, and they have been order- | srrart coward. We apprehend the war will be a | from the entrée of Prince Menschikoff on the scene— | pied’ in > hy individual oe ey oe [from the Manobester Exsminer, Feb 11 j made in that direction would be the annihilation of ea buck again to the ' | short, if nota merry one. The burning of villages | the impossibility of shaking h purp a in favor of agai Black Sea. The Tarkish Ad- | gh The burning of vill " y g her evident ad Ge: | san party foe ae y ‘The state of the relations between Russia and the | ali the treaties which constitute the equilibrium of in Wallachia and Moldavia, the oppression of poor, Ph ae n Western Powers has updergone no change that im- Europe, and would throw the door open to every am- mira! was, at the last adviees, (Jan. 30,) preparing oe ie got vor the troops just | ® Witnessed in the flagrant aitack and carnage at fice ba -mag = ony ad ae Biap piles apy probability of a pacific settlement. Count | bition, to the right of force, and to valuable chances an expedition to take arms and ammunition to the — py yascente will. have. & *Tirerent e ta Sinope, of trasting her repeated protestations, were by the war scaped captivity or | Orioh, we are informed by telegraphic despatches, | of success. Neither Austria nor Prassia allows herself y gam death by similar means, there have always } Turkish army in Asia. Whe they come hand to hand with French and | dispassionately but clearlydemonstrated, And now, | unfoitanately, been Turkish functionaries ready so | soinalon in sccuvine ther alliance oe eae ae | {awbe caught by the promlee of the Czar to carry the ‘The most i t news is the of a | English soldiers. ‘ak f bribes from the of their y y “all FP = | cuyeney goto by Tamian agents to exe the | y Rogie ar plenty o nriwan ont | Tsutnt yertn stub a Spun | tomy. Of ine yer, howvaragatna ape | RsePai bese Fone of eG prope | snc wha ane ath ningun » Greeks to revolt against the Sultan, A number of pose byte arentation at the Moutha t | ed, it is time that we devote ourselves with every ban beet pave eee Cae a traitor may be considered as decisive. The preparations ee from assuming the offensive on the Danube, es energy we possess to meet her on that field where | 7! independ- by France and England for war show that | and from forcing the Russians to a serious arrests have taken place at Constantinople. F: system, it is not so casy to flnd them out. In Paris | france has never shrank fi te ence would not only risk life, but would find it | poth struggle we we learn that the standard of revolt had ac- | tis different; and hence we find that at a certain Giswy) bebe eeoks he on from encountering an impossible to his obje The T Lr, these Sevens pare Roreniered all Haves on that point. Neither Austria nor Prussia has need thens office in the Boulevard des Itatiens, which the Rus- amy A \A population oe ae. = ini’ peace, and are put ih tir energies for a | of Russia to put down again the revolutionary spirit. ‘toully been raised. How long will Russia be allowed gan satite their rendesvous, for the jo-morrow it ie known that decrees will appear in teel taken arms now imminent and terrible struggle. It is asserted | If the revolution is putdown in the whole of » . she can think of to pean mace, " eh about | the Momiteur calling out the remaining’ oleey of | turowing itself om the mercy uf Rosia, at the will | that Prossia and Austria have given, assurances ot | itis not we cau afloer it Teanga eee {* to try her hand at every means she can of getting mews—true or false—to be hawked about | the contingent for the years 1849, 1850, and the | of Any minister ; but it ia perfeotly intelligible that their determination to remain in th flict, } th +t circumstant ‘te ee overthrow Turkey, whilst England and France are | the sega in the cafés ae Fog a Cir lld whole of the contingent for 1853—in fact, taining the political partisans should baady accusations of | under all circumstances; but 7a sane a said ice cal See ee, tare hel contincally declaring their intention to maintain the ene been made, mnie pa Seen ‘under. | *tective army of France to 550,000 men. Paris itself bes P nt of th or aiid tobe in complete contradiction with the known and e very elements, on which the demagogical party | integrity of the Ottoman empire? iene pling ecg: Sag po effect—bet ‘we cannot | 18 turned into militemyataler. 300,000 havresacks, ee e eapey » and of one or | avowed intention of the two Northern Powers to | seemed to rely, co-operate in the eaivation of order | ‘There has been a ministerial crisis at Constantino- | hear that any prisoners have been taken. 40,000 vate fa ge = artillery equipments to an bowen ed it may al yin Fn maintain a passive attitude only so long as Russia re- | and in respect for authority. It is again France, | ple. The Seraskier and Capudan Pacha have been he) pers ga yee Aspeloe was de, Communications’ from appertinnate chev oat conduct oS eee. as to the extent to a Torkistenpice There ‘han prt ghevngie4 eaenare annie, ste eee ‘coupe replaced by Risa Pacha and another Tark, both sup- Pt rsa pinion tothe ree van. cmasnty we were | where everything is bustle and activity—that whee Se ene of ny, to be controlled | slightest difference between the Four Powers as | and menaces. Suc! being the case, is it ; to be more favorableto peace. Redschid Pacha, Lad as ries ontctal Grder dictating silence on | S0ldiets are already in motion, proceeding to bie “ence pa a obvious that ‘ol to the policy of preventing Russia from actually ac- | to say which of the two alliances it is hich presets posed the various assi; them, and that trade is great powers cannot a serious uiring additional power or territory in Turkey; and | the usrantee against new de at however, still remains at the head of the ministry. | particular pointe. The Minister of the {nterior has | peginning to feel all the impulse such « state of | Without securing to themeelves the choice of en: nesia acd Austria have preserved their neutrality | tem; ? . pts? To all these insufficient means, contrary to ‘Omer Pacha is laid up at Widdin with typhus fever, ment dectng them to forbid pg rsa poiitical agitation neoossarily affords it. To-day it | It when thelr onject shall have, been ac2omplishod. upto this point, in the belief that Russia, through | reason and to the interest of the Gerinen States, ae an occurrence most unprecedented may ir interposition, might be induced to accept or | th pears to have been added another, which ‘With the exception of skirmishes, there has been n0 | speak either of the movements of troops, of any al tae 5 the aucient frontier of the empire, but 3 Nes! ft one ee “eee +t ry namely, that 800 British blue | 9Uer ni , but it is | propose terms that would obviate the calamities of ‘t bave deeply wounded the pational digni regular fighting at Kalefat since the batiles of the | preparation for war, or even of the court balls, ex- jackets aot through, daly officered, en route to | {OF no such i ak that the Allies fa arming Ls The attitude of the Western Powers, as well pomyp erste 9 Vienna and Berlin. It tt ose & EE 6ih, 7th and 8th January. cept ti Deg Ma onthe! ssc oepeak ot bred ‘Marseilles, there to take ship for Malta, If such be | bY Jand and 3 and a disposition on the | as the haughty and unconciliating nature of the final tively affirmed that Count Orloff, in asking the 2 jeniteur. are part of the new administration to confine the war i" ‘There can be no doubt that England and France | increase in the ibe of corn, or to cast any doubts as wea ey Ah orn} evidence of fhe urgency | fo obj im whict support of the W Gat Once eer eee Apron nna by Red Re German boners to ioe at least « if are active ions for a war with Rus- | on the success of the approaching harvest—a cir- forming be wn "h gnc at we slumun ots London pes | cas tnt ae Gnas ars comuoce| “YR, M's Sv ig Op ean | Bevery any anes aacaag’ | (atch drama cron i aac | the apa of oui rat | lish | Of the food riots at. Périgueux and other places im | 4 noto French Bea 4 spirit of com a § Russia. It is evident, ¥ Spry sxtred im le tory, yy sea and by land, against ‘will conyince you of this, Ten or twelve Eng! the provinces. Louis Napoleon is a shortsighted nglo- poms sent to Mitylene. Seve- that the solieitude of the more py ‘t of conjecture; but it is most improbable that she would | chances of that neutrality. If that propoai' regiments are under orders for Constantinople, and | politician : ging the press may do fora time, = ‘rench of yy Beil bites A ind aga pomevee ad to identify the esgen es pve sty Roce pledges of ate © to Lown was really made, it shows a strange disdain for some of the fine steamers belonging to the Penin- | but a moro liberal peloy would, secure him the love | Hot.saled from Varne on the 17th of January. In| Povo witn that oft alien: by Potriotig ie action | (che, Of eventa that. may seriously invalve let | powers to whom't is addremed. | We cannot . | of his geeple, which is 8 far better safeguard than among | 5, which England and France are prepared and political in! se jan con- | ceive anything more insulting than this sula and Oriental Company will be chartered for eon- ld the military. life pre, quest of the Danubian Principalities would confer | promise of protection made by Russia to the Si all the ordonnances and all the police he can muster. | tyém. Nothing but old stories ot the to enforce, is as far as possible from implying a wil- BP Li yeying them, Tn our country secret despatches are constantly Soris polis ne r} =e) ber! will 16 mal ‘any concession to the enemy, ve. ae Lae Sr ar Seo over ee Deviance of Germany, Can it be that Prussia has need of Coant Orloff left Vienna last Wednesday for St | sent from town to town—from one end of the coun- | and strange ‘about ‘the fl The result of the Present suspension of operstions | mercial interes's of the central. cud’ eastern portions tact fer policy? “Gen sneer ve rake troops Petersburg, having failed in his mission—at least 50 oe Pepe oy gem or is sets society the ion prevails that war is as in Asia cam gh eae to be FN a a of the Austrian empire, That she will not break | to consolidate her independence and her sove- ‘we are told. But there are ramors that he bears | (iP ma . uarimmenrtidene wel oe re. | 25, commen it Russia will herself precmeebar ‘checked’ wile. the jMiceang AC the with Russia except in the last extremity, may | reignty? Ifthe German powers declared their neu- 5 ise on the part of Aus. n éf solemn declaration to that effect, and that, the scab- ’ ys be readily believed ; but such o war as uow threatens | trality they would have sufficient force to maintain it, back to St. Petersburg « promi Pp sponsible for the con of no secret messages bard once flung away, it will be long i ere Turkish transports are actively moving from Con- | her frontiers would inevitably compel her to take d th ould besides find suffi tra and Proseis to remain neutral. Now, it is quite baw and jon — 5 a pie ab it again find a sheath. Here sd thts you pe nd staptinople to Trebizond and Batoum. Kurschid | sides for or against the Czar. A distinct declaration the Western governments to respect it Oomcbed impossible for Central Europe to remain neutral, patches, and p' to — ally meet censible men, who tell you thst the Empe | Pacha ts energetically reorganizing the demoralized | on the pert of Austria, that the moment Russia | intnch terms, the proposition of Count Orloff and ‘vuced between East and West. Such neutrality all tat nae to be false ese ne Yeadon natere | ror of Russia’s position is 0 isolated, so false, aud so | force which @as rendered useless in the late cam- | crosses the Danube she would be prepared to cu- | the idea ot the Emperor of Russia would be evi- piscec to disturb the public peace or favor ph weak, that war is logically impossible, aud thet they | Pei”, through the incapacity of its chiefs. Above | operate with France and Englaod, would in all pro- | dently an insult for Germany and for the Western Ene ri E 3 ‘would be tantamount to # participation with Ruasia | tions. This is quite as bad as that policy 6988 | never will believe in it till the noise of the great guns | “I! the O:tcassinus are lsying in stores of arms and | pability decice the question of peace or war. Whe. ; for the former, becaus Ceotrai Europe is filled with all sorta of combustible ye Sypomecicey mee prea, oa cogpem Sony of booms in their ears. They ask it itean 4 reenemer ta preparing, with new hopes and thonserach such a declaration has been made or im- pads ol adh as a Th ene ol ing mister, which the torch of war would soon set ina policy of enon Sionesnunn see the im- | that the merchants and nobles, shut out ani red | Whoer + , to recommence their cease- | pied to Count Orloff, remains ameng the secrets of | ship of Russia; and for the latter, because it would blaze, and if Austria does not oppose Russia she Miss Pardoe’s new novel has jast been asthe will be when the finest British fleet that ever | les war against the invader. Official information | diplomacy ; and the next move in {wuss look to herself, Let us take Poland, for in- | by Hurst & sp a al successors—ai : ot a a # i i 5 z 7 i s é g gE, ‘ a is g F i game of | be to conceive them capable of interfering with & im | wudacity and strategy, will afford some clue | declared neutralit: of the headlong pamion of the Autocrat.’ Their opinion | 1s closed to the rrezea er Wawa hed sricast to the vatare of the communications that | nations and the Tyht at fate Me Mangus stance. A Polish legion is under formation in Tar- are Seen is, in fact, that Nicholas will shortly have to endure | Pushe aes an Capen must be | have taken place between the confidential represen: | received with a natural emotion this singular tee cad wil ees by, Gauseal: Wynocki; | CoMerwomen’ ‘*kerchief ” ponies aren Aan "ag ; for ‘roops | tative of Roésia and the Austrian government. communication, and he replied to it with the a, manded 3 | “Reginald Lisle” is the histery a disappointed the thousands who hurry- | °? ail the frontiers of the Czar’s dominions, The t t is . bu: the General delares, in his proslamation or circa | heart, and the asuthoress has treated the sugject com | ing on to the promised scene of carnage tated effectually prevent the a of any consider. to nei oon ioeeiies sal eeetolatia Wien foawence te age Passa. "ty, ye 3, the attitude 2 ae ler, that the ultimate object of the legion must be the | amore. The stoty te ce ce ine a ed marin expected daily from Kalefat, where the pares cof has beat ches thea ce Dane the Eastern question, is toe change which the latest government a) to have been neither leas de- most work ‘entrated their forces great proof ices appource a: which regeneration of Poland. And — P nematic throughout cniamable invention. | The incidents strength, and from whence it is supposed a dash at | Petersburg can place no reliance on the promised di- | Torkish Ministry. The ier and e Capudan See hen Vinee ats ther —s, ne ‘wouid Hungary remain tranquil? General pka } are not of the usual hac ed order; and, in short, | Bucharest is intended. Omer P; , however, bas | Versien by Persia, Even at Teheran corruption is pow- | Pasha have been removed from the government, and } Francis Joseph declared formally to has tarned Mahomedan that he may have a command | the tale is narrated with SE es ym ae int unfortunately fallen into a bad state of health, which | ¢tlessoxvinst national settlement. Asregardsthe pros | their displacement has originated ramors of various | envoy that if the Russian troo; frontier, and hundreds—I might say | ® Ustle knowledge of the world. rapidly be- | may obiige him to cede the command for a while. It of the stroggle on the Danube, general satisfac | kinds as to the causes which have produced this | nube, Austria wo on the Austrisn might say | Comin and we believe that it will be- on will be felt at the that 0} 7 ‘ pod ane m, + Eh ans are fighting with ig popular here, “ would be matter of serious regret if any such cir- | tion els a sunounoement mer | rupture in the councils of the Sultan. Their successors | her interests and her hatiopal thoasands—of gallant Hungari come 80 also our herr me lo i ckee in | *umstance threw @ chance in the way of the Russians | Pacha is once more able to undertake his duties; bat | are said to be favorable to @ compromise with Ras- | sanction in an irrevocable manner the Turks. Of Lombardy it is needless to speak. Lae has Writ, Gaia eoeabth Loeb es in | just now. The successful sonduct of the Ottomans | the statement that the bye army has lost | sia, apd some great modification of the policy of the | to sacrifice to a Russian alliance the int ‘The Italians are ready to rise at » moment's noties. | oor! by 34 Koint stock, literary association, who are | DS See br ~ age niahs waleneed ere cater is web pe a fentical ment eee why te the ae, misuten, how: Manta the rent mookig by the ¢ yar othe ctineaatrerycitd orcs Pee eit i , } Divan. Both mi - Austria has it in her eth etre want ar heen pice p to beh ape th cement would be a pity they should lose any of their prestige | With the wrongdcers. Yet, so long as Russian armies, | gver, are known to have been at the head of the old Tan. 13, wee counter project rete matted war by declaring against . poses, and are ome its real useful, | BOW, at the eleventh hour, when giants are about to | Stthe bidding of a restless tate, disturb the | Mussulman party—eager not only for war, but fanati- | name by Count Orloff submitied to it, declared them. the kindest act she could perform towards her ‘dear | the arrangements as may eonduce to \ | place their shields before them. peace of the world, the ig ke they suffer are, | cally bent upon. projects which neither France nor | inadmissible and rejected them unanimously. Im as § hi ad [ E 8, 5 | cue " ness asa place of education in geography. Good ‘A great ball was last night by their Majes- | on the whole, a benefit to ity. The unavoid- | Engiand are likely to countenance. As Minister of | face of Imperial brother.” Curiously enongh, there is now @ | names are attached to the concern, and we wish God | ties Eide Tuileries “and: all thee the raowt brill nt able paradox of feeling which erises when so mach War, the Serasbler of course bad the direction and | comprehended tat’ thers reastaed no hone atone talk about Austria and Prassia offering media- | speed to the undertaking, which has all the ele- | ijtamination, the richest habits, the gayest and most | evil becomes a cause for , Feaolves it- | control of the whole military forces of the Ottoman | verting the German cabineta to the Russian icy, tion between Russia and tle Western Powers—in | ments of success, aad cannot fail, if only the Projee- varied toilets, the sweetest strains ai ony, and | ‘elf into indignant contempt for the criminal who is | empire ; and as the leader and representative of | and according to the news which we recei 4 plain English, that the two German Powers intend | ‘F* be true to their original purpose—that of ad- | the most cordial, and reception singly responsible for this wanton and uséless war. | the fanatical war party, such a position conferred | terday, he must have returned to St. Pe = ; e ani oie vancing the interests of geographical acience. could offer to it a scene of ly joy and ‘be alleged determination of Austria and Prussia | powers that might have seriously complicated the | without visiting Berlin. Such, then, is the back out e Vienna p . We bave little theatrical news to communicate. | festivity was there. But there was an obvious gra- | to remain neutral is nothing new. The material | Gificuities with which France and England have | sitvation, The obstinate infatiation of the To-night Earl Fitzwilliam puts » question to the | G. V. Brooke is again at Drury lane, in | vity in the deportment of many whose official rank | fact to be considered is Count Orlofi’s failure to | to deal. The Allied Powers, in all probability, | Nicholas has only served more guvernment demanding information respecting Count | Howard rage ia bad play ot Brata at ind gallant presence ren them necessarily ob- | obtain a pledge of neutrality. The solicttude mani- | have been anxious to place the War *Departent manner his isolatfon In pod tad ie diplomatic re- Oni misaion to the German court, Lord Ciaren- r characters. on cade jects of observation. Whenever there was a possi- | ‘ested by the Court of Vienna to remain on terms | the Turkish government in hands were not | lations are interrupted with France and England; a Bascal cucu Sue ct | Sty aoe prem ng ade | any hc Cate ay tn ee | Ry ope | Seagal Sa a er, an guerre” might continually be aegranti . bh, by oh ‘te their control. This change in the Turkish Cabinet | trust, those two formidable symptoms of hostility; accom. In the Commons Mr. French has given notice that | ‘‘ Bustache,” has appeared at the , with | heard to issue from them. The Emperor himself, has, no doubt, been brought about by the indirect | his acts excite everywhere the bation of be will ask whether it is true that the English and eee ee We Leer ort Bom spite of efforts to the contrary, could not disguise | original object of the war, is now tem ly - | action of the French and fia ambaesadocs, and | opinion: his arioien, bo Toasted of expariece ea te French fleets returned to Constantinople contrary to next Ore Carine Kean fer Gioster ary Gata eeetod peean Lev il Ei oe bp on stages of! [ere son rose his eit ne ae ips te re oe ae poonked “haan Danka of the Dasxibe L- euergetic, ana 4 “ mj - | supremacy ice ice in the con- 4 these facts, the wishes of the Ambassadors? At all events we | Heaven save the mark! Miss brought back men’s minds to the proper faatnibe of | liance on the ng to respect integ- duet of a war, the success of which depen upon the fine, tethih that on ed ie ae ae a sete ae Cushman is doing ds wonders at the in “ Fazio” and the “eae rity of Turkey, ibtedly intended to obtain hall hear something, ¥ “A pe ening asi oe yo the evening—a business of love and admiration, of Aa al (teas co.operation of France and England. Such an oczur- | which fame becomes buried and in which empires Austzia is concentrating a large army on the Ser-| with a mishap—whether by being tapped on the | war or any of its di pal otal tee poodenn of the Czar 10.6 practical teat tne tures; Se wads may be the Temes feaaee for | stil ids out i ae a ands Ge has stated vian frontier. The Turkish ambassador has thought poet or borg ay we know not—but it oh. Tnvitations have been sent out, however, for two | repeated-declurations of the determingtion of Austria | the dismiseal of these. rinisters, there is no ground | the conditions on which peace may be made with fi, to ask an explanation. Count Buol simply ob. | quite certain theatre has been cloned quite | Ja/s costumés—one for the 19th’ and the other for | to resist all territorial sgprandinerens of Rass, are for believing that it will lead to any compromise with | honor for all parties; these conditions, which she hee 4 Sas cane A pope gape Ange Our opera | the 28th inst.—and ladies are apy that the same | fully entitled to the confidence of Europe; for they | Russia, or that it means more than a formal identii- | » right to impose by forse. ehe offers once more by served that it was a precautionary measure. Dedeenters iad hoped to oe strains of pout drees will be admissable on pe speedy should pledge the Cabinet of Vienna to s policy with wiion | cation of the policy of the Porte with that of France conciliatory means. ‘The Eaperor Nicholas cam according to the Standard, two or three Ameri: | Lind, who had promised to visit England ; bat it ap- | they desire it, the fact really being, that not only on ita interests and its honor are alike iden There | and England. still accept them without humiliation. Who cam cau offieers had arrived at the headquarters of tne | Pears that the Swedish government are not disposed | the ground of expense, but on that of personal is little fear that any Austrian statesman will ever | The real danger of the Turkish empire lies much | affirm that hereafter it will not be too late? Ww allow her to warble in Saxon land, as being con- | ing, there is diffi in the | acquiesce in a transaction which would close the | jess in th ot irit of Russia than From the Peria Patrie, Fe 8. ee trary, perhaps, to the provisions of ‘an armed neu- | novel faves at the Palace. Tne Frosh inet Danube to Germany. however, has nothing | in the state cf” her own population. ab pe ytd te motile " - A . + in the state of ber own population. The supremac; One glance at the map of the Danubian provinces Tne Overland mail is telegraphed. Burmah still | trality. This will be felt as a bitter disappointment svete eatmenty witty , and their sense of | to gain by the war, if her old frontiers are to be of lees than § willis Mcoensanas over twelve malllicus is sufficient to show the strategic ferporianee of the appears to be in a very unsettled state. Our officers }, but we must hope for better and more | the ridiculous is 20 acute they have a morbid | maintained; and, therefore, when the Principalities of Greek Church Christians, whose traditions and | offensive movement just effected by Omer Pacha, continually being assassinated, In China the | Peaceable times, and meanwhile wish her all health | horror of being a cause of wit to others. Their bals | are finally evacuated, peace will be in view. Until | sympathies, both of race and religion, are more or | according to the last telegrapbic tches. The - 5 © | and happiness with her youthful spouse. The only | masqués they” are accustomed to, and all the romp | that result is attained, it is certain that Austria will | jes Mevurable to Russia, isan element in the ques- | great valley through whii he Dewubs rane tslater- imperialists eeem to be gaining ground. other news we have to communicate is avent Wind- | and fan which are characteristic h with =) ) of them ; but a | watch the invader hostile vigilance. tion that we have over and over again urged as | ected on both sides by a great number of rivers and Sir Charles Napier will, it is said, take command | sor theatrieals. Shakspeare's “‘ Tempest” was bal costumé, in which they are to personate charac- | _ It would be a wiser and safer policy, on the part | fraught with more serious difficulties in the way | torrents, deasenttnn fee! the Balkans and the Car- of we Baltic tleet. formed on Thursday last :—Prospero, C. Kean; Fer- | ters of a former centary, with all the gravity | of the great German Courts, to avert the outbreak | of apy fuccessful foreign intervention than the | pathian mountains. Oltenitza, as well as Bucharest, anged her mind, dinand, A. Wigan ; Caliban, Webster; Trinculo, | becoming the grand saloons of the Tuileries, is what | of the war by throwing their weight Into the scale; | actual military strength ot Rusia. ‘The moral | de situated in one of the valleys watered by the Jenny Lind has ere io Pe pel ial ona — Py ent Bartley ; Miranda, Miss Heath. | ig altogetber new to them, and s dread lest in gach | but it is fair to recollect that England and France | power which Roses possesses and wields over a very | Ardgich and the Jalomnitza, twelve leagues "from dees uot Come Vo sing — re watioee tarer performance for the season, and we | 4 position they should become obnoxious to the mk- | have not yet finally committed themselves by acts. | isrge portion of the Christian subjects of the Sultan, | the capital of Wallacbia. Bucharest is covered pounced. The great case, Lumley vs. Gye, in which | D 4, bg ~~ satistied with their | ing fire of their own “charivari,” is said tobe the | Otber Powers may naturatly wait until events | ig therecret of her strength, and the main instru- | the centre of the Russian army, which is m Lumiey claims £30,000 damages for the loss of Wag- Stee ee with his tat Pnglish tenor, Mr. | reason why the success of these fétes bas not hitherto | have proved war to be upavoidable; and they | went of her policy in Turkey. Neither the fleets | weakened, in order to reinforce the right wing, ma- ' ices, comes off next week. Gye qill open ed fi ripe ae ele has re- | corresponded with the efforts which have been made | may then, in order to prevent its continuance, deter- | nor the armies of France and England cn cope with | nvavring'on the side of Kalefat, more than forty ee a ead Woomaann he sins Bt a rece ar ext | to give them éclat. But the most strenuous endea | Wine to render the stronger side irresistible. The | +his interval ally of Russia. We are on the eve of a | leagues trom the capital ; the left wing occupies the C. vent Garden Opera House in March. Bt triftin, 4 remcnnendidh OF ae per pight. ar, ey vors are bag exerted that the 19th and 28tn shail boat Proseia ih — Ha ong fierce war for tbe defence of Tarklsh sovereignty evvirc a of Galatz, tort ve leagues one Ie is drawing good houses at the Hay- e rove worthy of the occasion. in when operations J and the terri'orial integrity of the Ottoman empire. | Omer Pacha, therefore, w 50,000 men makes a Mies Coahenan nd Y* | Smith's Mont Blane is still the rage, and Mr. Charles | "rhe" Emperor and. fm visited the Theatre | North of Germany will rejoice at any humiliation in- | Wat i¢ we should find. when in the midst of I, that | acs on Buchurest, the two wings ‘of the Russians mare. po ag fg in me Riper oll Br Test night. The performances wore ‘Les | flict on the flag which has ao loog mecseed the in- | the great ilk of the Christian population of Turkey | will have aga mat them uot only” the dieadvantage ot London is quite fall now, and the parks offers gay ke nisipg in public th oe ae se ny bead Fentines Govennee” and rhe act comedy by M. | dependence of the country; bnt it is possible that warts open revolt against us, tt on behalf of od being at a distance if they wh to march to the re- aud lively appearance. been starring at Brighton. On Monday) @ new | Scribe, called “ Mon Etoile.” M. Bressant made his | there ore still believers ta the cmnipotence of the | .ig7 ‘The latest intelligence brings accounts of a (or- | ef of the capital, but they will have to croes all the > pr Boome then le “5 44 ot] to be pro” | debut in the former piece. Czar, who will only be converted when the Western | midable conspiracy against the Turkish government, | ic¢ermediate rivers. Omer Pacha has already given ALDRAMARL® STREST, imal duced at the Olympic, with Messrs. Wigan, Emery | Prince Jerome is making preparations on a large | fieets are dominant in the North as well as in the | which is said to bave been incited by Russian agents, | -trong proofs of bis superior tact in his late opera- Friday, Feb. 10, 1854. and Robson, and Mesdames P. Horton and Wigaa ia | scale for a summer palace at Havre; large bodies of | Hat. Of the good will of the Cabinet of Berlia we | hut the etrength of which is undoubtedly derived from | ‘ious. It is not from numbers, but from his tactics, ‘Lhe New Crystal’ Palace at Sydenham— Maritime the principal parts. Mr. E. L. Davenport Miss | ‘workmen are constantly em; 5 have already abundant proofs, and circumstances | the secret sympathy and co-operation of the Chris- | thut Turkey has been able to ve on the Danube crertiiinge Dhidditirtide: Vereen, Conan te, Oe a; 4 extremity of the Rae | may soon occur which will call forth its active co- | tians. This conspiracy has been discovered by the | » position which bas neutralized all the efforts of Loves of & of England—PrinceGortscha- | in Mr. W. R. Markwell's tragedy of “ Louis XI. ground extending | operation. Rarely has #0 just a cause coincided with | Turkish police to extend to Bulgaria, Janina, Salo- | P: ‘nce Gortschakoff. His movement on Bucharest, koff—Russian Intrigwes in Paris—The Tele- | Ever yours, pea Don Carsar. de-la-Reine, three or four tents have been | £0 visible a preponderance of strength, and the re- | nica, Smyrna, and the principal islands in the | under the above circumstances, very pro- * graph in France—Town Gossip—The Theatres, Our Paris Correspondence. erected, and near them have been built ovens made | sult of the impending conflict is only doubtful in 80 | Archipelago. A Greek Brtest been arrested at | bable, ard the next deepatches will doubtless bring $e. Panis, Thursday, Feb. 9, 1854. of brick. In them is being baked at present a sort | far as all future events are uncertain. Widdin, and forty-four Christians of position and | us accounts of some signal success gained by Omer pA ‘ “ dd 1’ ae... | of household bread for the soldiers, of such a deacrip- From the London (lobe, Feb. 10} influence at Constantinople are implicated as chiefs | Pacha. That magnificent fairy-structure—the New | The War Question—Grand Conclave of the Minis- for campaign pur | We earcely repeat the caution. which we | and leaders of a seotet’ society spread throughout {From the Parle Oonstitutionnel, Fab. 8 | Crystal Palace at Sydenham—which in beauty ters, Marshals and other Military Chiefs of come in turn by | have so often given, not to lay too much stresson | the Ottoman dominions, and organized in concert The Constitutronnel terminates its remarks on the lendid buildiog in Hyde Park, i i in the use of these | reports from the East merely because they are re- | with and for the purpose of promoting the designs | relations of Russia with the neighboring States. Im far exceeds the sp! 1s , France, Presided over by the Emperor—Abstract ¥ on exhibition of the world’s indus- ‘ piers made was , for | cent, and not toadmit the supposition that tne course | of Russia. Four out of the forty-four conspirators | the present article it alludes chiefly to Sweden ‘which contained an 7 Be Refeny's Reich The Eyictine of Oe ; who ap- | of afvirs con be twisted by any sudden caprice or | arrested at Constantinople are said to be Denmark, showing the interest that they have in the try in 1851, is fast approaching completion. The | Fyench Army About to be Raised to 550,000 aceident, such as might satisfy an Alexander Dumas | officers, and one of them a Rassian postmaster | success of an attempt to lower the of Rusia, Egyptian, Italian, Minecite, and other courts, are Men — Passage of British Sailors Through just been made by the em- | ond 1) readers of his romance, but such as seldom | general, formerly employed in the Levant. The lead- | snd the probability that there is of their endeavoring state ly gi idea of their thetr Barriere St. is. A | happen im real life, and never, it may be said, in the | ers of such a conspirazy may be captured and crush- | to profit by the first favorable opportnnity to recover pow ina that fairly gives an Franceon Way tothe Seat of War—Another ye ai t States. The ‘ . i in; and with a | the terr ‘and influence which they bave lost. covered cart came 1}, driver of which stated | action of announcement that Me: | ed, but the'secret societies still rema itory fuvare grandeur. The geological ae em “- Grand Ball at the Twileries—Scraps of Court that he bad nothiny 1 declare, but one of the em- | bemed at Pacha tad eee ne, Russian army on the sonth aide of the Danabe, it is The Constuntionnel goes horvage © than it has ever wondrons resuscitat.on of Adamite ) 8 io News — Military Ovens—Di. rr Ne es on looking into the vehicle found lying in the | try, to laced by Riza Pacha, has given rise | by no means improbable that the great e | done since the commencement! yo sss Progress; and Reflonten though still in Metal. ud sg eicapeleshteed Bottom of it nies large cannon balls sonora to movers constrogtive interpretations of “that act, Greek Church Christians would at once bey he on the Eastern question ; for it expresses an ‘4 w shells. These, as well as the driver—who says that | as indicating that the Porte is qilling to | conspirators into insurrectioniats on behalf of , | that if there be war hetween Russia and the twe roagh, are suffieiently marked out to show what | We seem at length to have arrived at one of those | he found them, and was bringing them to Paris to | effect s compromise with Russis. The reason | in the event of any signal victory of the Russian | Western Powers, the latter will not confine tuey will be, when compieted and adorned with the | strange eventfal epochs when tne mind instinctively | eel! for old iron—were taken before the commissary | for this construction is, thet Mehemet Ali | army over that of Turkey. What, in such a case, | selves to the protection of Constantinople, but will jure of summer. We kno’ to reflect on of police. was regarded as head of the war party, and Riza | would be the position of France and England? These | endeavor to restore the different nationalities which werd yw that every exertion | pauses the probabilities of the fature— jay five hundred and forty Germans. men, | Pacha ‘ly was attached to the jan in- | are no imaginary difficulties; for the fact of such a | [tursia bas put down. It says : mods r! esterd: i Ross i 3 R ; — is being wri to hasten on the prepa- | whether the sunny beams of fortune will shed forth | women and children, lett for Havre, by the railway, | terest; bot easy nolation {s, that some | conspiracy as bas been detected in Bulgaria and at } “I awarshould break out between Russia and the is while rations for {ge Ee ae been announced by the | their genial, life-stirring rays, or whether, with coy or | to embark for new -ombity d ~ beets oy eh degree of Samoan ee is still possible in the | Constantinople, he HE remibostions oe the Miron Bape they a AN a as Pre napagers that they pared to open i she will li in those shady in the cabinet de toilette e juise de la Grange, | saccesston ot ultan’s Ministers, and while perso- hole of Bur ce) ves ¢ danger is | tvemse! saving Constantinople; * 24—the Queen's birthdej oan ishoped chee anny sous he toile itive lov hog rue des Saussaies. It was caused by @ muslin dress | nal competition for power gives advantages alter- b real one, and may meet an the moment actoai war | prevent the recurrence of stroilar perturbations of the ym where, A gs es to disport having accidentally caught fire from a candle, and it | nately to one or the other, there are well understood | is fairly commenced on Turkish territory. We are | security of civilized nations, snd will tase their pre- royalty will take a part in the opening ceremonial, | herself. The mingled yarn of diplomacy has, in fact, ' spread with such rapidity that before it conid be ex- | resscns of immediate force for the transfer. ‘he zeal | rusbing blindly and impetuously into a terrible sirug- | cautions for the future. This wili be easily accom ‘The prevalence of easterly winds is always ex- | been run off to ite last thread; or if some stray | toguieed damage to the amount of 6,000 francs | of Mehemea A.i for prosecuting the waris undoubt- | gle, neither the chances nor the cost of which bave | plished, when, with their cannon they shall M4 disastrous: ping, especially those slapped from wheel was done. ed. He was allted with the Ulema , who treat | been calculated; and already we see in this partial | snapped the factitious bonds which hold a fistomtan And recreant filament hae slipped from the wheel, | "", ‘very remarkable discovery has just been an- | ed the war as a teligions question: but It ls, well | revelation of the ‘disaffection of the Chris- | Fetercgeneous elements of the Russian empire. Hager engaged in the coal and coasting service, which are | it is henceforth entwined in the fingers of these weird that his admi a or vi shall then see revive the nationatt- a nounced to the Academy of Sciences by M. Dumas. | known that iminiatrative c fg not equal | tian lation of Turkey, the smouldering symp- | for vengeance, we we nevg, too well provided with hands. The last month, | sisters in whose hands the dire behests of fate are | He stated that M. Saint Cinir Deville had succeeded | to his zeal. If Riza Pasha was ly favorable to | toms of that universal of the Mahommedan | ties whi the Womsian yoke, lise bowed down, but heroic wever, has been more disastrous than any period | deposited. in obtaining from clay a metal as white and brilliant | the Russian {ofluence, it might be from a sympathy | yoke which our fleets and armies cannot >. nas not destroyed. , proad of ber as silver, as malleable as , and as light as glass. | with the absolute and character which Rus- but which be found more formidable | struggles and long sufferings; the Crimes, nown within the last sixteen years, and upwards of | From Eugland and France the Russian Envoys | {t istusable at » mendes gold Sevdarina sian proceedings bree ign tn thet quarter * to the ee. than all the military pow: wae e the influence of the Mascovite policy the native , moderate temperatare. 600 losses of vessels have been reported at Lioyd’s, | have departed, The mission of Count Orloff, the | go not affect it, and it is called “dumioum,” Te but we believe we are correct in saying that amongst | er and resources of the Czar. popalation hag diminished one ball in Stty years; Axy i