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THE NEW YORK HERALD. 4 fos _ WHOLE NO. 6536. - MORNING EDITION—TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1854. PRICE TWO CENTS. — —ee STEAMSHIP FRANKLIN ASHORE, | FOUR DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE, | 24 wens contdcatia! trond of Marvace. served ag a simple votunteer with G'sneral Annes Lervondi, late Minister at War, in the free verps Arrival of Special Mosengers from the | MEWS BE THE PRAMRLIM. | (ri, we. Ma! orm, in the, heginniag of Oe - in Soene of Disaster. MILITARY INSURRECTION IN SPAIN, | gevesome deta yotrdny” He a ached Mera this quarrel, aud long before it of the Rys, Wan troops is regarded both as a retreat ‘Tee Turf. character of pti Bom pein tener eer a ud romp wee of attitude hostile digi UNION COURSE, L. I.—TROTTING, Emperor of Russia persisted in his extravagaut fro. ba garny Reh +3, ‘The patroas of the (rotting course had s rich trent demands, he would unite against him al! the States | Correspondex, ¥¢, from most that al the | Yesterday afternoon. A match race came off be. fs » We proceeded to show that, however | mercial towns of Europe, announces tween g. g. Mark Maguire (formerly kno Ik 60 terrible a contest might ‘bo, it did | governments have *87¢d to forbid the public nego- & &- 'y known as Put. not threaten any of the ewsential interests of civili- | tiation of the Russia @'oan. The Journal Allemand | nam), and 6. g. Huguenot, mile heats, best three im ation, but, on the contrary, was likely to favor | of Frankfort, in an ov pom rnimaeener reba oon five, im barness, for $1,000. Mark Maguire wou, i E. eealt q asengers {ely anded St Te the sense attached to that word in Spain, and not acne,“ gp them, #0 lon the German and the | ces energetic det \wociation against ft — Z : ragna, Abddica jen the ingurrectionary pore, heels ete | and used their fo t se be Lia os aay be diss cere yy? racine ne the heat wearameee a Bde real call, i" ir forces fo ig " ’ . Opposite Morriches, 1. 1. Proposed tion of the Queen. | 0m) ie.’ nf the leaders of the anti-Eepartareiste | fortunate union..on which it 0 ome eet exagge Beth mann has € lained at it only took part in | during the early part of the day, at odds. He move: : ration, be said that the fate of the world the Russian loan, in conseq, ¥e2Ce of its connection accounted a very fast nag by his backers, Entrance of the with O'Dounell in the proclamation iagued to the | bas been steadily maintained in epite of the | with the house at St. Poters, We charged with the | Wm Oocouniel & Wey. lool MA Ny Me ARGLNM, nee Austrians into the is considered an’ a of ihe liberat'| artifices of Russia and the moral debility of | offair. wing : - Princii tendencies of the mavemeat alerigied by Os de- | omp other Power. The meeting at Olmuts last | The executive power of , “mburg, the Dutch [ng Ay the track with s host of backers palities, mand for the re-establishment of the constitution | September, the proposals’ of neutrality, the mission | government, und the Belgian go Ymment, have de- | fromthe Red House and ali Harlem; and the bet- of 1837, which O'Donnell helped to overthrow in | of Count Orloff, and the minor La at the | ¢lared that they will oppose, 60 { wae Capone pen Sng Neceme quite brisk between them and the deai- the same Rochelle. THE LATEST PARTICULARS, a, k&, & a 1843. To give any opinion as to theissue of the ity Courts of Germany, have ail them, apy transaction relative to ussian loan. | xe! ew Very large amounts were We regret to announce that the mail steamahip THE CZAR DOES NOT FLINCH. movement would be rash indeed, ag in no country oot 3 and the fixed Oia on which the | In England the Crown lawyers ha Ye declared that | staked by the parties even. the heats, the ranklin, Captain Wotton, from Havre for New do things happen more opposed to all probability | policy of Europe has been conducted have happily | all Participation in the loan would b \ Considered as | odds changed as frequently as have the prices of York, is ashore near Morriches, Long Island. iachiied mae pe ag, thas, 8 Spain ; precisely | trin dover divisions and intimidation, over | an aot of treason, Inthe face of m bag ralieond seen raion 2p lame ape’. P . cause the court rests laguens Promising Allthe particnlare of the disaster thar we contd |° ANTICIPATED BATTUR ON CRONSTADT. | Pc2y*e,i2e, cou is profigrte, and tho ministers | soporte interests su celioh deeigns.. The founda | itis naslew fo add tha: the new Rue “Anicon, Una | trettcr, aud, alough beaten yentanday wilt ee gather last night are as follows:— rieel ai that to them, the ab be | protocol is he, Sante bear the structure of « | considered. ia itself as an operation Without so- | long, without accident, prove fimselt x’ very fast Early yesterday afternoon, a gentleman arrived put down. if it succeed, and the mére advanced.| European coalition, and Kngland, France, and | lidity, \ nag. He was raised on Long Isiand, and is sald in town by the Long Island train, with the intelli | THE RIGHTS OF NEUTRALS. section of iberala get the upper hand, the wory of | Austria ete now siinal yy advancing against | | According ton letter from Janina, 4 Near ane. | Sota. Nepales. Ha ls vary powertal ine ae cvittbbiniinntpipaiie anish Bourbons is fora ti to come; | the positions seized by Russia one year T , Kui ‘ilen di left Metzovo on the Lith, 7 » : " gence that thirty or forty guna bad been heard off ry ifthe goverament suoceed, we may look out for a | first object of the paticy of this country was to on ing to enter Thessaly. He arrived on t Y¢ {Stl | endurance. Mark Maguiro isa tine, showy, durable: Morriches, in the morning, in the dense fog that | DISCUSSION IN TWE HOUSE OF COMMONS, | coup d'état, and, indeed, for anytaing else that a | vent adivision ofthe continental powers; the sccond | Within a league of Kalabaka, with the « ‘te# of fioeseuaaitinsiee, bite bees by one about his own prevailed, and which ,were supposed to have been frightened and unprincipied government may think | wasto direet iheir united forces against the dis- | Osmen Pasha, com of 2,000 regalars any, ‘4,000 | rate of speed. rary ae be changed ginoe ing fired by a large steamer, as the blowing off of steam , are. proper ty do. turber of the peace of Europe. Those objecta have {| Arnauta, He effected hia march without strik Waa | became the Picea Me. Ievth, a8 8 Sanat . Breadstuis Lower--Cottem Unchanged---- he journais of Madrid of the 29th give the fol- | now both been attained. bow. Aathe Ottoman troops advanced the Gin KS | reapect to the well known newsman, who, like the was heard shout the same time. It was impossible, lowing ‘account of what passed on the day pre It ig unnecessary for ua to enlarge on the great | titi back upon their centre. These details are c’ ‘Y | horse, in indomitable org ex wed and never cean- in consequence of the dense fog, to obtain any in- Consols 93 1-2, vious:— and easential importance of Austria as a member | pit-« by accounts which we have received fr. YW | ing evergy is hard to beat. The horse is well named. formation, in wiko t bude samas Yenterday morning General Dulee, the officer who, in | of this alliance, for the events now occurring | | arissa. The track improves with each succeeding race, and th m in regard exact whereal bears &., &., ae. 1°41, distinguished himself in the palace of the Queen st | in the east of Kurope demonstrate beyond all On the 18th of June the Turkish troops attacke: ‘| Was in capital condition. The weather, too, was ¢ condition of the steamer. The guns were heard the head of the Haltverdiees by his noble resistance to ; possibility of a doubt that Austria isthe natural | the Hellenie volunteers commanded by Hudji Pe- | Well suited for the occasion, and everything passed for at least an hour and a half before the departure pecial measenger from the ji .. | Ye inanteent troops, gave orders to ail the cavalrs of | guardian of the independeace of those provin tros. Alter @ conflict of three hours the Grecks | off satisfactorily. of our informant, and he felt eo sure that ; large SRpsron oa Monten be we Corea oe, invrictue of his cfica os Diretior and Tnapector of rey thes taphly ‘eat ks ay thw Cou Mi mber leg a Sgt ded tre conaierabe and ‘ok the ind tra Bi the fua—Shuto, the dat yi a Cw r 4 u aide ;” hal jer geo: pyhical number ed and woun » on eir gu Vee 14 * steamer bad gone ashore that he deemed it his duty | pers from London of the Sth inst. Chong PR fargo ieaguty Nad mensions, be etied. 1 caltion gives’ her an advantage and Ar teatin baggage were captured. The Greeks took “fight, ver of Hugaenot, not getting his horse squared all to start immediately for New York, to inform the | The Franklin left Southampton onthe sth inst., | ©'Pompell, Ros de Olano, and Messina joined him, aa did | these questions which no other power oan acquire; | ‘ome towards Agrapha, and the rest in the direc: | « be Way tothe quarter, Zhe grey was a couple of undetwriters and obtain all the necessary assslt- | at six o'clock. She btings 160 passengers and 800 | tse Ztigsdler Bohague at the head of hs regimont.” Tue | and that if, instead of adhering to the geaeral poli: | ton of Olympus. k ngihs ip. dont tactic nine, Setonds, Oe. tee rebala then left in the direction of Aleals and jara, | cy of Europe, Austri , 4 sist stretch both horses broke snd the tance. Before he left, however, the people on tho | tons of merchandise. She now lies ashore off Moa- | ith, no doubt the hope of causing the Meoge netieatd designs of Ty ia, a ide Ceaser the pee oe her Bettane Geren ae algae Diastont iat to-day | pr. Wing the best breaker, od ‘Rother lenge shore near where the vessel struck, went to her . there to join them. The Generals issued s proclamation for the Black Sea. nl, nina at the Corfu sta- sorrel to the half mile pole, ge y ie yoday Sead considered dangerous. yy ated Pap rel oeephiy grec hedorrjogenlin wr dedcpotin Re ie etieat ae ete | ston te corvelte Modeste, of cighteen guns. ‘The Io. | (C, \. ‘The grey broke up Estas tom About nine o'clock last night another messoge | A militery ines vob sensor out at Madrid on | Stsbloh the constitution of 1807. They then érew up ee ee Cred tof the continent. These actehinintaeeciak iotaons tn cide aos bhp sorrel collared a Hat etore ae recovered, ak z ped @ document, by whic! jem sed A lent, Ka "he srrived ia town, with fuller and more authentio par- | the 28th ult., headed by Gen. O'Donnell. ‘Tho gar- | to do what their proclamation announces, ‘The Cossotl | strongest reason to congratulate ourselves on the The Rights of Neutrals, shoe, a, Bd fell to pieces. The grey then cut loose ticulars of the disaster. He brought ua the follow- | sicon fraterai of Ministers, on hearing of the insurrection, immediately | Wiseand straightforward policy which has prevailed | In the House of Ocmmot the 4th inst., Mr. J. | from bi ™®, and came home a winner by three or fear s mn fraternized with the insurgents, and Cea. | gesambled at the Ministry of War ood Kan too toe, | at Vienna over all oth iderati er tet piqccctc Seat aime ia 2:42, ing a O'Donnell threatened to attack the palace. Hehad, | situeg as. The Gisccieh to ooad Fret rc ; other c rations. But what | Par..imous moved a resolution that, however, from lengths m8» \ Heat.—Mr. Whelan took chi of Hi note: g permanently pa ig the inference to be drawn from these facts, and | the peculiar circumstances of thia war, @ relaxation | Secona r ange of Hugue- 10. THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. also proposed the abdication of the Queen. Four ~ ans moon dora ble forces have es to | what opinion are we to entertain of those politi- | of t principle that the goods of an euemy in the | not forth © femainder of the race; and although the The ateamsltip Franklin, Wotton, master, from Havre | thousand troops had marched from Madrid to Tole- | {us tootial that nee oe sited ia at | cians who, in absolute and willfal blinduess {othe | ship ‘of a fBiend are lnwful prize may be jnstifi- | grey had \ Vous heat, the New Rochelle party posted for New York; ashore at Morriches, Afty miles west of ari turn to the oapit resolved tore | real dan to which Europe is have | able, to renounce or surrender the right would be | more mone ¥ St even on their favorite. After s now Montauk point, 160 passengers, about 800 tons fine ae —~ lye rapper approved Tutor ajc ok ot hosed a Sade allowed their. padsions to carry them inte aschnva | heen iei et ee the security and honor of the | shoe bad Yh PUuton, the horses came op for the qvods, Hard and dry on the beach, and will most likely news e Con! to the effect ten o'clock in the evening, and the bella of all | bostility to one of the essential allies of their coun- | country. He cited various authorities, amcient and | word, and 4 by Beg Aa A her; but before get- bea total loss, Half the passengers landed and the rest | *P8t @ corps of 25,000 Austrians has entered Mol- | the churches were Tung to announce her return to the try? Suppose the Austrian empire to be dismem- | moderu, from the Consolato del Mare to Chancellor | ting aroun » nee aoe bBo population. Instead of entering by the barrier of San | bered and broken up into the multifarious racea K H rincip! in. | sorrel took tie D ques fanding rapidly; will all be on shore to-night. Thick | Mavia, and that other tyoops are shortly to follow. | Vicente, the royal comtege arrived at the barrier of Ato- | which itis com but aon of which is muiislentiy iecnioesettnmetre sane: at a oe ef Jor | ter pole a len, §th ahead, in forty seconds, The fog; no observation forfour days. Foggy weather, but | Tbe Austrian Commander in-Oblef has proceeded to | cl, which waa the loogest route, and passed through | gtrong or united to form an independent govern. | su enemy in the sip of a Mend sap he coateceien, | continued to et very unstendily, and fall off bait a. alate: th Basta’ F. B. SCHMIDT, the seat of war with instructions to insist upon the | © ‘be the capital, caplnahen Se the garti- | ment of its own, can anything be more evigent than | and the goods of a friend im the ship-of an enemy | dozen lengths down the back stretch, the socret Passenger, of New York. | evacuation of Moldavia. This the Russians ref Villa Vicente“whigh ty u that the barrier opposed by Austria to the spirit of | sre free and ought to be restored; and he proceeded | pasaing the ha {Wf mile pole in 1:13. Huguenot kept The messenger by whom we received the fore- | to do, and it is stated that the Czar, in reply to ie the Queen ¢ entered’ the eke ‘any iy as eae conquest and aggression wouki be away, and | to sbow the reasons upon which, irrespective of au- | at hia work, an rey = meat easily, in 2:404. J » y ed her rlajesty with enthusiasm, and the Queen seemed | that the great military Powers of the continent | thority, these principles were founded, and to which, Third Heat. One hundred to twenty was now going note was Mr.8.B. Topping, of Moriches. | demands of Austria and Prossia, said that he would mauch moved by hor reception.” It appears that at the would thenceforth dictate their own terms tothe | he conteuded, the doctrine that free ships made free | wagered on the c uo poo the pate: the \ Es Progeny eights Dal ows bactd aah ated Ack ptr ged poder aera be de Ardos and ‘Alcala: At ‘thls mises a tteee celateey jeosoutndate a pit and ae ‘those cpg sean soe Hiaheehonut seconded thamaction though he ede voneteth ¢ sorrel passing there im thirty- ight o'clock Riser Sat de Sereth, and i} a erect dye ease ih tact of artillery, and four | convulsed the Austrian empire a few yeara ago we | dissented from the introductory words of the reso- | nine seconds, half sienge in advance. The . hier po? Seco ny eae pg » and, consequently, a collision between the | Picts 77) are leaving Madrid to parsue the | steadily kept in view that condition which we be- | lution, which admitted that ‘a relaxation of the | carried the sorrel o © his feet on the back and @ smooth sea, and at a good landing. About | two Powers is most imminent. The Heraldo, a semi-official journal says: lieved to be the mont essential to the generalinterests | principle im-question might be justifiable from the | and beat him to brs half mile pole (oi ten o'clock the mate of the F. came ashore with a | The Liverpool corn market was unchanged, with | | ‘\The attitude of the population during the whole of | our policy. The independence of Italy, and the | peculiar clroumetances of the war, being of opinion | vards, in 1:18. He seed opened the gap y Russie sorrel i admirable. constitutional cause im Hai are no doubt sub- | that no blow could be more effectual to than | the lower turn, and no boat lod. of passengers, and communicated with | but a moderate business doing, Breadstuffs had en Erery one followed his neual ‘affect ‘the eympathies of | the stoppage of her export trade, which was the | took a fine run up the LWI8e stretch, the grey eame , esterday was : oven; alone, and every blamed the infamous condi which powerful! Mr. Topping, who offered his services in any way | declined—corn 1s., and flour 1s. to 2s. Consol left | of the reve \. steed of ody non peg ‘SSplmmen, and of those who have at heart | great ssurce of the revenues or the great landed | home @ winner on a jog, iw 2:41f. presence = the mate t require. That officer said he wo off on the 4th inst. at 934. > the beat pledge of the maintenance of confidence.” the of those fine countries and the roprictors; and he contended that the relaxation | _ Fourth Heat—The biting again changed, aad neal eae aie Pract ereapard er oo ri be gbed: arrived at Liverpoot at | mZtgnme journal expresses: the ‘belief thet, as | grea of foo institutions, Bat the agitators | 51 the principle, and the uncertainty’as to blookade, | Mark Magnire was the fa revite, at one handref ter a » . uavetp' most of the insurgent soldiers have been been de- | and revolutioniats who attempted to accomplish | had been highly injurious, through the laches and | thirty. e grey took the teed, and wont three ogee ‘ottom-what course he intended to pursue under | 4 A. M., on the 5th inst. ceived, they will soon begin to desert. It adda, | their objects by violence and by the destroctioa of | errors of our authorities, to the interests of British | lengths ahead of the sorrel vo the im the eroumstances. Shortly after, he returned | The three per centa closed on the Paris Bourse “ Chesmomy p pen arriving in the oapital. peer ree were, in a, only pre pari commerce ae Caney forty icone; assert any a ag the with another load of passengers, and informed Mr. | yesterday at 73f. 70c. for the end of the month, and insurrection have ore so | an easy attacks ) - Moreswoaru said, the resolution rai 7 » clove " , much effoct aa have ted on the | they themselves would have been the first victims. | two distinct questions--one a practical question of on the back stretch. ‘ime to half mile pole, . < Topping that the Captain desired him to proceed to | the four and-a-half per cents at 98f. 50c. Btock is Threes basing aissad at 87.40: The effect of the war in Italy and of the insurrec- | political expediency: the other, fa theoretical ques: FR." On the lower turn, the sorrel lapped thegrey, - GRaARaietad bs SeuaE RO teenie Meehan aetna | oe rear ete as Reksieas sacl |'s peaieamaienicmlarsam mene oan ae tet oncmmatommaenen aawedien rien of ie | so el ep ; er accounts men! two Senators, a on was in- | subject new Wi ference to: > | vigorously inform the agent, Mr. Mortimer Livthguton, of | cents were at 37.40, with no business doing. Moreno and Collado, had been arrested on suspicion | consistent with The part she has to play in Europe; | rents.. The expediency of relaxing the rinaigiss near the score, when the broke up, and the Broadway, and the underwriters, that the steamer i cf being concerned in the conspiracy. Twenty-five | andthe events of the past year demonstrate that the goods of an enemy in the ship of a friend | sorrel won by a length, in 2:40, was ashore, and needed immediate assistance. MILITARY INSURRECTION IN SPAIN. battalions were about to be put in movement against | Russia relied on that sense of dependence to para- | might be confiscated had been admitted by Mr. } F'ijth Heat—The succeesin the last heat again made the i enta, and General Lara, Captain General | }yze the opposition of Austria to her schemer. We | Phillimore from the peculiar circumstances of” this | the sorrel the favorite, although the bulk of the Mr. Topping left the steamer at half-past eleven, ‘ “ A Pegg 3 5 a {Paria Correspondence of the London Times, July 3. of Madrid, commanded the force—four batt hold it to be one of the greatest war; but he, (sir William,) de that t! money on the track was in the bande of stakehoid. at which time Captain Wotton had succeeded in ‘The letters oP eee! Madrid correspondent, Msp the line, four pieces of artillery, and ewe be rendered by England and France tot ae sition of OS Ganorabls a ae te ida ers. The horses came up for the word at the landing about one half of his passengers, and was | here yesterday to-day, have not been received, | (others say 600)—sent against O'Doanel. The | interest of Europe to have rescued Austzia from | to confiscate an encmy's goods on board a friend’s | their speed, the sorrel rather ‘‘taagled,” and engaged in getting the remainder ashore, and it was though I know from ior source that they were | Captains General of Navarre, Aragan, and Valencia | that position, by causing her to look once more | ship was eterually maintainable, was indisput- | were started. The sorrel broke up on the turn, be: of those in the vicinity that, unless as- posted at Madrid in the usual manner. I can only | have received orders to advance against the insur- | with confidence to their friendship, by placing her | ably true ; and disputed the validity of the au- | the grey dashed away from him, g aE z 5 F conclude that they have been detained in that | gents, which would show, by the way, that the | in herancient and legitimate station at the head | thorities he had cited, contending that almost | quarter pole over thirty yards, im seconds. sistance was rendered at once, the steamer would be | cspital. In the absence, then, of direct special com- | movement is not so contemptible as the organs of | of Germany, and by enourarag her 10 defend | all the best modern publicists ‘ilscented from. | ‘the wore! broke again’ aid sania the grey 2 total loas. municatioa from 20 near the scene of action, | the Spanish Ministry would affect to mippiee- her rights as one of the States of the | the old authorities, an muppets the rule, “fre | was making the best of his way . Time to the ‘The.place where the F. has gone ashore is about and from so pel reliable a source, I have only The Moniteur publishes the following telegraphic | continent. What were the causes w: encouraged | ships, free goode.” Sir Willium developed and dis- } half, 1 The grey kept at his work, and came ayn west of Mowat Pant boa fees | foe Ve tears Happened | “PE soon Jari | te ens eg" ts | he tea oon ov wake | "Boag a dang? mimes Fabs sd i rete | Fafa ere ete are | wt Erie ered pecan | nee at ame ce Some oes | sie iee PRs | tavaas da gare meh #1 A ° 5 fo t x s ‘rance, it arc] r ene- 5 5 tat apt, ame apy Ser al ew. | ear ict Gea shy | vot Su antec Sams ws Sr | te lebanese | mh cea tat | FN aE MM | ri e 81 A as im jen , (formerly Putnam). ..... We hope the Long Island Railroad will have a suffi- that the men proceeded the rendezvous in the be- Aspoiiline: te a thal: Senioion pe ni, 100s who still reigns at Berlin. year hes passed away, rere ‘was at peace with 0 belligerent power, | W. Shute named s. g. Huguenot... 2 1 2 4 2 cient number of cars on hand for the transportation | lief that they were summoned there for the wana! | pula and the adjaceut islands are placed in a slate of | 904 be finds England armed and in the latter had no right to ask any questions ae to- Lined stato PRN PSA Engl rosecution of hostilitica, France closely allied to | articles on board the ships of sul of the neu- of all the passengers to-day. cavalr: iments were well aware of the purpose | set, An order has gg ol to surround the insur. | fr fr | gents, and to direct the 8 against 1! from all e reat of Eu , Austria emancipated from the | tral sovereign. So far from the principie contended . * » The Franklin left Havre on the 5th of July for for w ich the ‘rere amemblod, viz., that they were points. Itis positively stated Me prcodlt naig ay aires | bondage of the Russian aitenes, ont. tn Prusaian | for by Mr. Phillimore being ‘nulinptably trne, he ant Meo woLeptie: beselania we veal ae New York, with four days later news from Europe. | oF: ce againat e government. When they wore ‘y commenced from the ranka of the insurgents, who, | pation, at least, to repudiate the degrading | insisted that it was demonstrabl » and - | road Companys on Saturday evening, at Syracuse, She arrived off the east end of Long Island on Sun- all on the i, arangued them, | for the most part, were led away from rid by sur- | vacillations of their King. are the resulta | pealed to bilateral treaties c ded between th by which not less than twelve bundred cords ra “aay night, bat, owing to the dense fog, she had to a ended bye ig, Ga eee se eves! ae tear v pretext of a review. Gen. Dalce bas been | of £ ear & ae successful a Fetere and ees tenes cae Portugal. whicts wood were burnt. Tue Standard sums up the ‘ae ing 2 45 Ml i “ ia 3 ;. an ag now come when the direct | tope; from ‘01 5 ra:— YouN®, 3d (Madrid 30th).—The t: ' 4 7 losses as follows: | -feel-her way carefully; and, ss ithas been lately eishag on Lo treed (reg dhcp eee surgente are ood ry yee , Sygene and the in- | action of pontenting armies supersedes these trans- recteeees sae Fond of sania Interoourte, that ‘Two long woodsheds, worth about $2,500; twelve discovered that there are several deep holes on the rom 2 Madrid. ‘The firing has not yet commenced. From the | ®ctions of cabinets, we may confidently affirm that e make free goods, hundred cords of wood, worth about $5,000; and been for come e concealed. The general put = no war was ever commenced invariable du: the last two centuries, althou; Long Taland shore, it is sapposed that the disaster | himself’ at ihtir head, accompanied: by. Geuaral | Sansa uitde of he reyal tivops thelr auccen a certain, | Te War Uae Cver commenced junder circumstances | ra] not alwayabeen obeervea in. practice. Even out Gaaeeaes ers tinal beaten eigen » was cansed by false soundings. Ros de Olano, General Messina, and Brigadier | from the provinces are satisfactory. From an early in those negotiations we have | if reasonable doubts might be enter d upon the | number of eight “cars that stood between fi & | Echague, with the infantry regiment (I belleve MapRww, 2d.—The greatest tranquility «till - | question, the House onght not to pledge iteelf toan oe Frat a Ne es en | tm Commi) HEA Wcmmandd."s | cas ie fren Sarr nS | Ese at he nga a ub iy | Aeron of aeons asa ie mse | Vameg endear meat eS Mackay in 1850, since w! me n | proclamation was 5 in general | tion of Toiedo. his own sense of what was due to his position in the | that there was no bn tae connexion between the | track warped and rendered useless. The whole <ranning regularly between this city and Havre, | terms the sovereignty of the Queen was admitted, The Latest Pas world, and by the evident necessity which dictated | rules “free ships, free goods,” and “ euemy’s | tous ig os ted at $7,000 or $8,000. under command of Capt. Wotton. She ia 2,195 tons ded the reestablishment of the constitution rpedige ‘ that line of policy, to unite his forces to those of | ships,enemy’s goods,” which were placed. in, Mz. Chapin, the contractor for sawing the woed, gister, and isa very strongly built vessel. Her | % 18375 aud a paper, to which these offlcers pat | nteitigence et ay, 4: (lB54. |, | the Western Power-; and we have never ceased postion asa mere verbal antithesis. Sir Wil lost one of his engines, worth about four hundred ree? their signature, declared their intention of that (ne ence from Madrid to the 30th ult. states | to argue that this union was the first condition of | then disenssed the practical quettion, arguing that | Yoiiary. ‘i | - consort, the Humboldt, it wil! be recollected, was | into execution that engagement. I have already 7 was much agitated, snecess to that canse which now comprehends | it was wise and expedient to waive, in fon The insurgents, to the number of 4,000, i Michae} Dolan’s dwelling and barn, worth aheat. | « Jostpear Halifax, on her homeward voyage, in De- | mentioned that the Queen, accompanied by the a ,000, were at | 9)) that ia most precious to mankind. con- | With France, our belligerent rights, anda rule of Ny d 3 cember last. ‘The place of the latter in the line has | Ministers, entered Madrid.’ An order was given tie Campo de Moro, at about a ganshot from the | fidence has not been misplaced, and, al: warfare has been adopted by a mutual | Cigtt hundred dollars, votslly dsestoyed.. tit ee. been filled by the Nashville, and lntterlyby the that the bella of ail the churches should announce | “Genera! Campuzano, Director of the Artille though a numerous class of writers who take » | compromise between the two countries, ing | Said to be fully insured. y 5 her arrival. Instesd of entering by the gate of San NP 4 votesting ing | More contracted view of these subjects, have labored | that the position of Mr. Phillimore were true, the |“ Jacob Wright's dwelling partially. burned.—Laes Union, uatil another steamer, now on the stocks, | Vincente, the most direct way, she entered by the Pree to attack them, although protesting his | a5 zealously as if they bad been i9 the Russian in- | House, he contended, ought not to to thi | sous $200. Fully insured | -cambebuilt. Thisline has been peculiarly anfor- | gate of Atocka, and had consequently to traverse pth me said to have summonea | terest to defeat this f combination, abstract resolution, unless some fit » t } « to) “ James Ryan's dwelling nearly destroyed.—Loes. the city before arriving palace. sow distrust and vindicti lings in place of union { would result from its adoption. None had been | spout s400, insured. tanate; it originally consisted of two fine steamers, | terial Aocounts slate Sat her Maj 7 was the Queen to change her rea Unless she did and good wil the a rake of ged has shown, and the waiving » right, if it existed, was | * eet - and.now it is questionable whether it consists of | ceived with ‘ great Rm ae eM, ‘O'Don. so, he threatened to attack t! A wooden building, owned by the Binghamton town the same | prevailed over et ir consideration, and allied | 00 renunciation or surrender of it. He moved the i badly damaged any; but, as the Yankee character is veryjmuch like aoa to Rave, wit ae pa 0,000 reals, "eae hat: adgices 10 the 2d fastant state that Ls ie tho government of Austria by the oe ties ees oe ape éesenting-to: thew of Feige ey oo fig ng broke, but the eullding an India rubber ball—the harder you knock it down movement. One account mentions that one or two | Madrid is covert® with barricades. The populace pee ol us with ‘te Soachnans of pthedereey In both the course pursued. by the government. in waiving ined vnaafastiane ae Manat haan the higher it bounds up—we havn’t a doubt bat that cers comman: Echague cried out, “ Death to Sartorious.” these rnal polic ¥ s agree the company will soon have two steamers far supe- Re hot wre ir a ‘for trying to phon the fi. aa ane that part of the garrison had frater- bebe apts nee Sailitary a ne wikimeyecioe ie Me itigus ot Bie Wibtoleswertie go of Irish women (widows) who resided rior to the old ones, on the route between here and | regiment from copays ng aera Se Min- | "The abdication off Caan STE Renee respective sovereigns which o marta ihe A Mecwtiten Meow ane 5 Geen end fey | in the upper of Wright's honse, named Mrs. that an engagement took ¢ 4 alliance with os, an eir interna jeaty 4 , a remarkable dis. . Welch, lost almost | place between the insurgents and the Queen's troops and the formation of a regency, of which Narvaez administration or institutions. With these we are | cordancy. He expressed his surprise that Sir Wil- | Mpc er p crmcath on their tenets Tee j j ‘The Franklin is probably insured in Wall atreat, ,and, perhaps, in Boston, Philadelphia and in Eng- ’ tand, on the full value of ship and cargo, worth at . should be a member. ‘| li his interpretation of inter- Sone. on the 30th, that Peondtned ferthfol ad that eeeikg On the other hand, the Pairie declares that the a! eying thn dial Dy agg ‘eis i sation al uses frown teste, ‘instead of jerieles and ad cog pet Not ees eahineseemry tranquility was not disturbed at Madrid. Another pg ten Skyy? telegraph from Spain continues to condition of internal government, if the | commentators, and observed that, if his doctrine | PRS Trobably arigipated from a spark from a. ‘eat balf'a million of dollars. he inturgenta were in front of each other at about | *™°KeRts after having been defeated, have marched | standing armlen are reduced at the peace, and the | belligerent. except with a belligerent. ‘The princi. | locomotive [MTN on, tie soot of tae - m1 5 b like tinder, and before. the hose be- a distant from Madrid ; that the ac. | "PH Toledo. | evil of universst armaments abated’ these happy | Ples of the law of nations, of Sir William had Mi to the company could bring a atresia of we- H to-day. The Te eeesteabiaitenss to the seme by the | ton, Mad see fet, capmmennens bit that "tres patch fro Baroune | Terulte will be mainly due to the influence and | *poken 90 slightingly, were, founded on reason, | nomen wee anderwriters nce e iy , The Monitins contains ad h from Bayonne | Strengh of this f aitanee ta & holding the pub | equity and.convenience, and fortified by authority. | '** °™ a Se, SO stot oP tyvet { the excellent of the former success to the 3 i be four o'clock train yesternay afternoon, and will des- | ¢ D " of the 3d inst., which states that on the 29th alt. i t | patch vessels to her at an early hoor this. morning. | fungal; and that ibe news from the provinces was | 12, een of Stain appeared on the Prado, and was | n\cioms ascend cy which ui SS linea gua | , Comarren ro. hxewan vans Caanan ox Semone -1 4 (pg e | sati .” Another desparch of the 2d, from 1 ps and the populace. ised bey : ir, Bowen moved, as an smendment to Mr.| S IREBBLATE.— named Reiner, Brooklyn City Intelligence. | Madnd, also staten that the grenest tranquility: | , Generals O'Donnell, Hen de Olano, and Messina | Ci#¢d Meyond the boundaries of ber own empire Phillimore’s motion, thie course adopted by her | the Proprietor of a tavern at, the comes of Kost e wovernment, and that the in- | intercourse of nations becomes more unreserved, if | were correct, it would prevent all interference by a tran n Saat i valled ii '. | bave been deprived of their rank, titles and honors, jesty'a G: im concert with that of the oft dal Gmc te reck aing on Satay, | Vicon wan patty, and that the Tamugeats | og A,deetca rom the Spenah Goverameat aCe | 4 wegrophic deapetsh dated. Mambarg, July | Hipere of ie each ef nceoaance wth onad | 1.47 on he hare of eling hea Riana Instant, shows that the total number of deaths | were on their march towards Toledo. A private = states that on the let, at four in the a + | and received by way of Paris, states that on the | principles of policy and public law.” He consider: | ere of tie inebriate to nell him 00 meee . b Ape 2 of which 116 were males and 106 females. | letter states that several battalions of the garri- ARS 29th ult., the Anglo-French fleet was lying before | ed that the principles of maritime law adopted by | Tye enit was ‘noder the act of the . shore mumber $4 died of cholers (veing an in- | son of Madrid had tobe shut up in their barracks | #8 Gronstadt, and that they expected's genera attack | the goverument, by extending the right of neutrals, | Tbe suit was broughe cece The Bee oo 56 ot heme. een, fF ee tien aoe al j to prevent them joining the insurgents. Owing baa acmuaben es Bont 4 ee on the following day. had created a new era in the law of nations. wonie of a Intemgerate person to scgve such no~, it. ‘Thodiseason which wake up the remainder of | to the stoppage of the correspondence generally, | "yc thd is tranaui are to their ay ART ww | tices on an. innkeeper, and fine and im~ are not of a contagious character. Ten cases of | With the exception of the Ministerial accounts, it AUSTRIA AND RUSSIA. Commercial Affairs. prisonmens on conviction of salling the party liqnor.. were reported to tle Board of Health yesterday | which J algo transmit, the intelligence is Our advices by way of Paris from Vienna, dated LONDON MONEY MARKET. 54,7 | after such notice has been given. and two deaths, At the Cholera Hospital there | imperfect and sometimes cpg nay ot B One 4th inst., state t! entry of the Austrian troops . Loxpos, 4 San i Mary Andress, Sophia and Present ten patients, of which fire are conva- cious circumstance, however, is, that thongh | — into Wallachia, is “an accomplished fact.” ‘The English fonds ogain opened hearty ihe clove ot | Andress, the wife, mother amd daughter, of the ia. Since Saturday six have been admittei and Are | several speak of a battle having takeu | TH}; AUSTRIANS IN THE PRINCIPALITIBS. duninens, when some speculative prodaced an | tempe 16m, were and. tom died. place between Alcala de Henares and Torrijan From the London Times, July 8, leaned seeuich left of yat@3% | notice having heen givea the defendant some. or Courssssviox.—The Board of Health, at | le Ardos, aa also of a second action, no definitive | (tis atated in all the last accovute from Germany “antag Roam ain GRR Onis tie were then | weeks since, and to the fact that Andress had. Jerterday morning, advanced the sslaries | result bas been It is said that the | that on Monday, the 3d of July, exactly one year Virwwa, Monday, July 3,194. | seuors at 9814 throughout the greater part of the day, | the honse of Rainer fzequently since the notion -~ fardens (five in oumber) from $1 37 0 | inguryents a severe loss, but no action can | from the day on which bi A ‘the | The Aschduke Albrecht has joined the army. but the last official price was Hs: to i, and ate later | tion, and to his having become drunk there om an take place without a lose on both sides; and if | rrath last year, General Coronini marched at the | General Leinin Adlatus, acts as Governor | hour transactions took place st 0035 to “5; An op! eral * Baooxrry Common Councit.—A meeting of thie tad obtained by the: ' U een, as us, ac’ wan strongly circulated that, owing to the large increase qe ‘ ‘wae beld lest evening, when Alderman Graham | Stat advantage was Queen'stroops, | heed of a column of 25,000 Austrian troops from | of Hungary. : in their stock of bullion, the easier state of the money | The Mayor declared his intention to ond ther . of the rules to offer a resolution | #04 the insurgents dispersed, it is certain that such | Orsova into Wallachia, and that he will immediate- . Re kot, the ateady on of the foreign exchanges, and | “aw in all such cages, so far as it lay in hjs to ‘was {0 the effect that the Board for the tidings would be at once communicated. From | ly be followed, in the course of the week | _Itisbelleved that General Corowiai has this day | market, thesteady sonaRionot the foreign octagon, tor | am io be, defendant, wae to iq of waiting upon the Hon. Millard F . (who | the direction at first said to be taken by the insar- by otha detachments ofthe imperial army sent ta entered Little Wailachia, from Omova, with 4,000 | next. the Rank of England contemplate sn immediate re- the sim of $1,009, to anarer atthe ‘ourt of staying in atreet,) a the oft- | gente—Alcala—it appeared as if they Ag ges execnte the treaty between A’ and the Porte, | men, and that a brigade from Transylvania haa | duction in their rate of discount. Various intr 4 is, we believe, the @rat . cers of the corporation, and welcome to the city. | on towards as in Saragossa they might | and, if i the Russians from the oa thre th bh into Groat Wal- $ Dowever, are Calling duo, arson, whieh are the 41,000, under the law referred, to.aove.— Philadelphia Bul~. ‘ideman Daraard moves a8 amendent that 3 emt, | reasonably hope to find auxiliaries I ig now auld they had seized. The conduct of the Court | Peso dirongh the Tomonch Yass Be aa ce mat 25/000 OOD ef Lxchequscvonda tas | (tin, July Vie Se Te iin aggre Body omy they were Toledo— re- | of Austria in the present crisis, and the final deter- h : - 4 no aanane ¢ the elty to the Bx-President, snd thet the use ot the | treat or not is not stated. It is not , | minaton ofthe Baspercr Eranels Joseph to throw bis | All the troops in RussfasrPoland hava been or- | ote, ad some porvons couaider that these togetter, | Swocenee MURpuR—Oa Rang He «Governor's room: atsigned however that they are on their way to insia to | armies into the field in defence of the of |. with a desire to wait un! ye prospec! of drunken Irishmen, who are oD “petng at ws font by the fleving vote: Ayes —Oreen, | em tee Meter tothe Petseat re have noe | ani into tho Geld ate er neeben dance of | dered to march towards the Galician frontier, and | shail have become still mors certain, will induce at, all road, attempted r ‘who wes driv. yore, Hyon, Oliver, Uamutigns Grohare, | learned that any town’ of impartance, 1adeed that | pa afiord the mast dechiteeridence nemmick we ean | SICvy em masse has been sedered in Polgnd. Hach | srenies slight Gelay,, Wank Stock left of at 207, to. 38; ing into town, ima “a d—d. American® m Campbell—8. The motion was any town, has as “pronounced” for the insur- | appeal toexplain and that syatem of y, | landed proprietoria to wapply 24 men, 12 of whom | to 04; India Bonds, par to 94. premium; Exchequar Bilis, | 4’ nine o’cloek the dead body of an Englishmam,, tived by the same vote. This shows that the Brooklyn | rection. Several refugees, who haye been | as to the re! the continental ate to be armed with sithes. 1s. discount to 2s, premium; and Exchequer Bows, 4 to | named Ashton, who wae known to have ine Common Council does not entertain so high an opinion of | residing in France, have already left for the frontier, | w' we have ha! system Notification of the Convention hetween Austria | \ premium. nied the party, was found near the cemetery. othe Ex-Preeident as some of the oor; eens | for the entering Spain, and of policy, indeed reqeires no defence, atthe and the Porte has beem sent to St. Petersburg. 4 qe ant etties, through which ‘he passed daring his late tour | speak very of imate success | when ithas am country at the Baron Meyendorff iq permitted to. go to Gastein, JyrengsTixe Incrpent—The Sprinfstld Kepwbii- | making arrests, They marched about tw, INCOR NY : | of the movement. Of the associates of General | had of the greatest. poli but must then retize to his estates in Finland. can relates the following singular ciccumstance:—- | from town and succeeded in capturing five “or nix « «Important from Washi 7 | O'Donnell in this affhir 1 ~. say few | since the Grand Allianceof 1913—in concert with | The Ost Deutsele Post has every reason to believe | A few days «ince Joel Rice, of Coneay, discovered | those who had been secu on the road 7, compimy [From the Cincinaati Gazette, July 15.} words, General Rosa de Olano professed to belong } France, in coneert with y— that the Ruesian anewer to the summons has at | a nest of flying squirrels, which be secured for the | with the murdered mag. ay We received last night the following despatch . to the Spanish Tiers Parti, known as the Puritanos. | directing the length arrived. amusement of his children, but o4 descending from On Wednesday tho Coroner's jury « sat om the from one of out truest representatives: | He was’ Minister. of ‘Pablic on | ed to exert strength of thesetunlted Benurx, Jane 29. | the tree, the old one made her sppearance,aad im | body,” and the doctors were directo’ to cut of the é Wasnixarox, July 14, 1854. | Pacheco Cabinet of 1847, which washalf Progresist,, | empires to sof the weak, and tore | It ie stated thai the Prnsdian government has re- | the temerity of her maternal affection, she jumped | man’s head, to see if he was dead | Having sacer- Fees of, oy gd and ganged of oc owl } ppp Let, wns whowes scceoed of Wa - atore the ce oh hon ipa itis hnot Sores te su ceived freme Colonel Manteuffel, who, as is known, | wpon him, crawled wee to “=! Ses ee vy — Gagan so hea wo ane ry od Harbor passed conse, colleagues * negotiat! surr 4 resul war, orto determ' wos sent 5 Tr young ones, and atterapted to take it away. Mr. came blows We carried an dared | tiously the overthrow of the TAA Oia te Oe eS Bt. Petersburg with, « despatch in #0P* | er aainted her claiot bute moment, when sypathy | bead, dslocating his neck, &e" "7 a of the. summona from Austria, information ih. eating a marked coldness on the part of the Court amendment, one ban i thousand doilars to the Only Ave the Vails,and | was a member, and the restoration of Geng .al Nar- | or when the arm of avenging justice will be stay: of Rusia. At the departure of the last courier it | i | Th arrested are to abolishing all tolls on the Louisville Canal. vaez to office, which led to the re establiy,nment of | ed; but we have the right to ‘Cab tp %0 for the agonized dam made a successful sppen e parties pe examined to-morrow and she waa permitsed to gather into ber furry folds | We it was a drany en quarrel, aad hope the Lovie D.Camentit. | the Moi influence. He was 2 gastisan of | this point the efforts of the government have was tot known what answer of that | a little one, whiss she acon deposited im a new | law will be administered str4, order Now then, let the Senate go its duty, and pass , Marvaer. Go Tio tho, secrete Fat crowed wits success, and ab thoy pan Cour, or in what terme ft wold be couched. A | home, return “ak ogain snd agains nill suo bad takea | vent similar outrages jp ature, = Bvoderdokaer the + War for years, ged soderado p ats | design have been fulfilled. A¥ an carly yeriot in) Qorlin, on weil as Vienna, the retecgrece wovemea * them o!! tr ihc hands of tocir captor. af tts Suly Ui \