The New York Herald Newspaper, February 3, 1855, Page 2

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258 WWTERESTING FROM EUROPE, Shovalicr Wikotf, the Bussian War, the London Times and the New York Herald. Whe Condition of the Hngtish Army in the Orimea, THE IRON TRADE, de., &e., eo, Cur London Correspondence. Loypem, Jan. 19, 1655, The State of the War—The English Minisiry—The Peare Wegotiations ai Vienna—Anomalics—Baron Briuck's Meat—Position of Prussia—The Mechanical Power of Bngland—Submarine Tlegraph from Varna to zhe @rimea—Ine Sardinian Treaty—Padre Gaveazti and Young Italu—Mtr. Wikef and Lord Palmerston— Spain—New Constitusion—Miscellaneous, dc. hove of your readers who expected by this mai! to hear ‘of the storming of Sedas{opol are doomed to disappo'nt- ment. Up to the 10th of January, se telegraphs Prince Moeschikoff, nothing importaat had taken place before Sebastopol. We also earn that there bad been a heavy fal of snow, and that frost was setting in. Anything was a relief to the wet and damp. Sickness still pre- yailed in the English camp, and the numer of deaths at the Seatari horpitals was on the increase, Neverthé- dev, there is no rigm of giving up the seige; oa the con- trary, if you glance at the naval and military intelli- gence in the London and Paris papers, you will see daily announcements of the departare of additions} troops and moteriale of war. Quz troope are at last provided with Dots, clothes and medicine, Some considerable sorties have been rmaile by the Rus vans op both the English and French lines. Men are Affled on doth sides ond the Russians are always driven buck with loss, It is not the courage or even the num- ber of the Russians that beate down the allies—they have beep defeated by five miles of swamp and mad. Parlioment moets on Tuesiay next, and I believe there ‘will be a terrible onslaught made upon the government. ‘The Duke of Newcasthe and Sidney Herbert are }ooked upon by many 26 ‘gone coons,”’ Tobe sure they can state that ‘Whey bave gained over Sardivia and 15,000 fiating mon, but the chief accusation against them is want of rasnage ment. The epecial agent of the Times for the distribu- Hon of the patriotic fund has done more good than al the government agents put together. There have been various attacks made upon Miss Nightingale and her eorps of amazons, and quite a newspaper war has en- eaed, All that can be said is that 3 xinder or geatler being never ved. Postosted of beauty, povition, and a Mange fortune, she devotes bor life to the relief of her aut” fering feliow creatures with no ambition for eactiily re- ward. You must not trust various telegraphic oxaounce ments in some of the London morning papers that tho Dombardment of Sebastopol was renewol on the 8th of January. Ozer Pusha bas been to tbe camp of the allies to concert measures for a grav’ movement, Hea ‘ten retorned to inspect his forces at Eupatorla, and bas #0 returned to Varna to ewbark wore men, Admiral Agons, who now commands io stead of Dundas, bas also head interviews ~ith Lord Raglanavo Canrobert, A good @eal iy expected from his energy. I Lave vo dent he will attexapt to force an entrance into Sebaetopul ca the sen side. Tho Puke of Cambridge ie at Malta, aod Prince Mapolevn iv decidedly recalled. It ie & curious fact that while we ik Mot the Emperor of Russia bad ordered bin Amt }'rince Gortachakofi, to accept, without roverve, th pouts orguarantees demanded by the Wostern Powors in the note of the 8th Angustas a bania for negotiatians for peace, and whilst we also learn that the Fngtieh and Wrench governments have sent full powers to their re- aseadore at the court of Aastria to enter ra Fron ins, it ‘# curious, Tsay, that such a mo. mve been selected by the Caar to recom. Neverthebves it ls ao Ho das entered tho Dobrud ther the meeneo hortilities oo the Davube. fecontistable fact and defeated 4 Turkish division very nose of Ccronini, the there. Anstria, by her treaty with Binds herself to repel ty forse any new vet the Daunbian Frinsipalitior. Now aa the Dobrudsebs 4 vo} either Waila:dia or Moldavia, Austria was not bound to attack *he Hc and those who accexe her in ths feustance of breach of faith, are wrong, not that i as oe th ral Porte under Ger av ans, eribo any very hostile sentiments against Russia to the gover: ! Vienua. Bat acoma.ies seem to be tbe erier 0! the day. The Journat de Constan:inople, o tb January, which hag just come to hand, padilenes | Me account of @ poltioal divaer givca by Bacoo de Rrock, the Austrian Interoaocio, to the zivistars of tho | @ttoman Porte, After dicser Baron de Brack proposed | a toast to the Sultan acd hiv valiant army, whoso ¢ ploite ov the Dasube, hesaid, were the admiration of al Barope'— “Thero,”? exclaimed the Internunsio of Aortria, ‘they yanquished the Russiazs 10 every encounter, aod proved te the Court of St. Petersburg that they were ale sonrageourly to defend the rights of Lurkey against weavite ainvition Like the Weuvern Povors,’” ad ied > Bruck, “Austria ts ansfous to Oghtror me 10° ef the rights of Turkey and justice, and whatever mty De the reeult,”’ said be, with inexprersible onergy, Ras wa will cease to be an object of terror, for she wil have waccumbed.”? These wordy produced a deep improseicn en ol? the guests, and the Grand Visier warmly tharied the Interzan¢ 0. Io my last | mentioned the short adiroes of Louis Na- poleon to the Imperial Guard. These Little epeecnes are straws which shew which way the wind blows. Bruck’s mpeech j# looked upon as a decided announcement that Aasiria will rhortly take the offensive ogainst Roveia ‘The Ottoman army is the Crimea is to be ‘ocrensed to 0,000 wen. ‘There are very few mea here who believe in the v1 ty of tue Emperor of Rassia’s protestations, but rat ‘Mink it ie a dodge”? to ga'n tine. Ae regarie Prussia, s State la gettiog mora and divi of 5,000 men fend and bersa- of Generals Duran- i . General ie wi is al yeseeuiiiyy, sueceeé General della Marmora as jeter The Opinione of Turin, of the 16th Inct., states that the departure of the Piedmontese troops for the Crimes will on the 28th February. According to that journal the contingent is to consist of 20, men, 15,000 of whom will embark on that day, and tuo 4,900 othore are to form the reserve. The Piedmontese are brave troops, as al! know who rs remember how they fought in 1848 against the Aus- wians in Lombardy, under the lite Charles Aloert, whore Queen has just followed him to the grave. Young Italy is opposed to this treaty because Austria is a party to it. The sequestration of the property of naturalized Lombarde of Aurtria etitl rankiés in their breast, and this is why Genera! Dabormeda has resigned. Count Cavour acts ae Minister of Foreign Affairs, and as. General de Is Marmors, the actual Minister of War, will take command of the Sardinian artay in the Crimea, Dabormeda will de offered the portfolio of war. The accession of Sardinia to the treaty may be an in- ducement to Austria to take the field against Russia, as it relieves her from the fear of a rising against ber of Maly, headed by Sardinia. Padre Gavazzi, in the name of Young Haly, hae pre- tested eguinst the treaty. Next to the European question, M. Wikofl, of Mise Gamble noioriety, aad whose trial and imprisonment at Genoa must de still remembered, has been ozcupying the attention of the public. He has published a book called “My Courtship and its Consequencer.”” Ja his preface be states that ho was employed by Lord Palmerston, and he publishes letters to prove it frem Mr. Addington, to write io, the Freach and United States press articles to show the liberal and pacific cha- racter of the English government. The Times hay an article on the sabject simply to defend the London prose againet the imputation of newspaptra being tampered with, The London Hapald says that Wikoil was a Rus- sian agent employed to write Russian articles in a New York paper, and iu tact all sorts of stories are raid about him. You wilidoubdtless k20w mors about him than] do; butat tae prosent moment be iv the theme of con versation, and a question will doudtiess bo put in tae Hoase by some moinber on the subject. The winter har, at Inst, eet ‘mw bere. and frost. The season ie a dul one. Thers will bs mo Italian Opera, The Queen will live io compars've retirement, Coarles Kean has made @ bit in Delavigae’s! (Louie XL,” arrangea for the Eoglish etoge by Bourcicault. ‘The play is admirably got up. We bayo s20W Chcvalier “Nichom” atlas Wikom, Lord Paiv merston and the London Press, [From the London Times, Jan. 16.] A strasge story bes been broaghs to ligutia tho course of “be lost week, strikicgly Woztrative, iz true, of the ssgacity of the Foreign Office iu ita deat ings Pith the press, Jord Palmerston, it is said— sud otong documentary evidence 14 produced in suppor! of the aeseztica—ia the course of the ysar 1850 hired the sexvioss of a ceraia person, who, ia return for bie pay, “was to make koown clearig throvch tre mediom of the Frenob and the Uaied Ssates’ press the liberal, and essecialy the pacific, chazacter of the ; olicy of Der Wajosty’s goveramens” Tre words qio‘ed term partof a lever said bo be addressed by Mr. A. U. Addington, in the name of Lod Palmerston, to che auther of a Little book named My “Coustsbip accila Cousequencea” This euihor iv said to ba one Nivboff, We ara, for ovr owo part, extirely igaoraut of the ciroumstances of ibis a8, ard copy our im jorwation ay to “the fate at second hand, warty {com @ weekly, and in a levs degrea from an cogtemporary. Wo fina is stated ugos the hority of the Jatter journal shat this man Nishoff Russian agent, emoioyed to write Rowsian ari io the Naw YoaR Husted. Por some reaan thin wertuy porn! @ Sbased to give Fatia factioa to Lia ayers, or shey ceawud to hove cccesion for hia services. Dug uctice was givea to ma by Mr. Addisgtom what a6 She cud of Jase, vis @xgagemest wih the Buogiish Foreiga Mice was to he consider:d an tarmisated: acd i wae brought So a oonciasion accordingly. | may be aH well io state that Nicholl, soe Rasgisa gent op Ove sutnority, is by another slated to da a citives of the United Sistes. [sé is added, from his wn 6 count, that he was seotencad by & crimtaal art st Genoa te fitteen months imprevamsnt or gosnd2) us Ontrage upon alady. "ast o awsortione re fur tro Nicroff, tse Rasstaa agent, may we by uirch, masaralizod in Acc toa, she agertor the Brites Pocetza Offic, the Ruzsiex spy, the hero of sbe criminal oatrags ab Geuos, sae correspondent of Me HU. Agdiagtoa, ard ths author ef Conctenip aud ig Cosa nencer.” That ramebie work we have not a9 yet rerneed, and, until beter atvised, shall refran trum #0 doing, for we sre 40s altogether without sircwd saspicion vhat—in fact, we have labely *d over the edifying m: moire of P. T. Barnum, sen estatioat with many sUrHace, TaaDy pivtioularities of passe. ft would ba well it tue name hay been so prominanily Piso Th tho : 228 and fai whose ronht forward shonid give a forms) denial to Loe snibenticite of the letter, woieh at lowe’ wits : y ie produss his ognoture aiiached. A private man may 2 desvise a calnany—s public servant maat iezit We should 101 have 1 thy of aay serious re pel av a kod of text for a between the govern meat asd prese. We confeas ws sre sensitive for of our order? and vrond of cur yoostioe. no more dieam of confoucding the limits of puvis duty ud private courtesy in ont owa caie or ia our presents = ‘a ‘han we should if employed in s Atste offlee, or charged with the responsi bilities of judicial decision. What can ts sigaity msn who doves big tims aad ayliiy * joornsten, is called, whether the door of this or that grandes be onsned to bim cr againss him? Yue mistake lire in exsgeer nelions of Lndividaal dig ¢ know no rea ay ike Marqula ay should ¢° himeelf any trouble to secure the pri more into # mets. She hae already, toa cartain extent, Dest her position ax @ great power in Europe; she has de- ated to Join the teaste af 82 54 Dygneber, 6a) if Seee not take care she will loo hor in@uenee at the Ges map @onfederation, which was equal, {{ aot greater than | fat of Austria. She bas refused to moviliz fe compliance with the wish of Anstria virtue of the treaty between the two Prussia demands to participate in the peace confe at Vienns, oo the ground that cs ihe revision of ¢ twoaty of 1841 is to be diecassed, and she wasn porty to ‘that treaty, rhe bas a right to attend. This right will be denied to her, Colonel de ¥ vane = vanes to Boris, having failel fn hie mission to Vienna. The misrion of Baron Usedom to Londen i alto s faiture—so wach so that be doos uot go on to Paris, ‘A sharp note from M. Drowyn de WHuys, the French Misister of Foreign Affairs, pointing out ike absurdity oy Prassia hoping to form a separate troaty with the Westera Powore, soitied the qusstion of the misvion to f Whilst peace negotiations eoldiers of the belligerent powers will redouble the.r Sorte to cat each cthers throats in the Crimes. England is bringing now all her mechanical fo ‘ee field, You are already aware that Messrs Firassy have rent out (i'eto bar gone with them) a boly ef vavvies to make o Balatlaya railroad, The Eoglith gevernmeat have now rent Cutan electric cable to es fedlish 4 end-merine telegraph between Va the Grimes, The telegraphic wires between Varos aod Bucha gest are prog‘essing rapidly, thsy are dy in activity Between Bucharest and Vienos, ani between Vieona aad go that wembail shortly be in da sation with the Crimes. The cable is eu porebo. Portad!s telegrapbe, and wire to weain Jing is sent out in abundance for the use of tao @ommanders:in- Chie! ; G@irietaias Day was epent ae jollily as every mia could em the bleak heights of Sebastopol. ‘ f aad phampudding were got wanting. Invalidy conta to errive in town. Lord Cardigan, whoo pmuiate 1 the oe 6. dented charge of the Light Brigade st Balaklava, dined with the Queen at Windsor yerterday. A Balntlave smeda) ie loudly claimed by the men who sarvive that fearful charge. Teudjoin you the main points of the treaty be! ween ‘the Western Powers and Sardinia -—~ the first article the Sardinian 0 te the treaty of the 24. 0f Decomby + to the treaty signed on the 10th of April a England, France ‘and Tarkey. 2. 15,000 Bardinian soldie-s are to bo sent te the theatre of war, under the commant of General Delle who are to form part of the army of lord 8. The ex) attending their embarta- to the Crimes, are to be paid by the Aloan of 50,000,000f., in three per to Piedmont by Mngland. &, troops, once landed in the Orimea, «7s to be main- ee Tee eapplied with ommanition and provisions orrernaeat embarkation of our 15. r fhe Crimes sa enty take place a: Seton. was at firet to assume the 2 Gent after his recent illness, he has resigns: it to the ‘Meaister of War, Genera) Della Marmora The expedi- canta) | ee Late to aod commuci- med in gutta jola on to ea adheres, mot | | \ ay | ship of @ Politi al writer more \fsa be the case cf an ausnor whe Bad written & succas ful comedy, or of an advocate who hei wsds 4 good é rauce at the bar, The vesi alviig #e van erve -**h8 more frritab’e amore onr b:# have a loftier honor Sf scarves » Let them feei asaurec that U, pome of untiriog aad well dirae-S eutrgg— a2 homorabié calling followed, 2? eater f then that of the maa who, W one thought of tre pleagare or d svlessare of living mau, undeterred by avprebensisa, aud oveluted by greed or ambit!}p, fe ail trata and 92 devoren Se rad to 9 Aally dissoeien Af ooh, afiaite ic the columns of the jieadiog jourase | in these islands. We may venvure to say Seat wo know a8 weil as moet won the sdvantages Gra vbecks of such a carzer. We ven fosl as b mpathy with theee wno sre ready 60 pro aod the ciguity of their calling and their own saif e+ pect at the feet of great men ss ve do wits the $3 aad igaorance of the ‘esi saligh- § of the usoer ¢ ‘a a. od claesee, ae in all otherr, will ba found every va iety of ix tellect ara character, bas we should be maca sur ieed it any public writer who was drava oe turally ints their society —who Lad re cived the @dacation ana conducted pimseif with ‘he simple von maa, and anasuming manmere of ap Bagi | neltrer cnerpiag favor por olvactish! ©.J0§ Well vended courtesy—did not mest wiih such 9 rose, tion as is commonly preromed. Oa the other baat, it Is not to be denied that the very worst specimens of the upper classes in their reiations wiih vas rese ae generally thoes men from wiom # higher Tegres of intelligence, a greater ex derlence of Dau- kind, and a sounder knowledge of $26 eocisl oosicion of the country, might hare been expected. Aw, the npoer classenof Eagleod, aa it hes avpeare’ us from masy ridicnions stories which have come to our Knowledge, men Wh? have povRe wlulsieral office are predesiy those who ba 6 m6} mistake | she character of their “‘sgca‘a ia the prese.’ may be perm'itécd to ony & word Don this 2a njeot, for certainly for ore antarer who Incoctky a" Jae door of the Foreign Office, or of say athe: office of State, with an offer of tis previous services, tao ad Creas thematlves—we grona over our recolievtons | to the offtie of The Himss, Inpoint of fact, ao cordisg to our experience, the general mic ia to eadeavor, in the Ora} i Te & luorative | en meat be and some wandering Greek or Irishman jost oommenciug life, has vinee us thst he carries the Osb.aewe of Bar his coat pocket, the next move isto try bie emooib tongue in Downing street. general We should etronsly recommend siaene of Beate and other ghitassese to loak with the gravest suspicion upos aay gentiomsa who tells him that fora given som he can open to him the columae of any newspaper. if in toeir immer | on Sor ho bighsr motive is aa w te ert a the question faa Ne %, oe AM gh 8 the atagmt= seen 1% the question Rew ciodes point of yier—to evoil thel ova | market, which would be the infallib’e and speedy | result . Men tolk about a newspaper | being cheng soln bus now they ara i Tankless hissnesd even while they way it. No» 7 i é Hes i 5g regard tothe present war, are echoed from every quarter of the States, and we therefore make u9 apology for seriously callivg the attention of a nation united to us by 60 many ties to the libels om her character and her hovor which every steamer brings to us from Aworica, in the shape of commente and hopes with regard to tha present state and future prospects of the war with Rus. sia. The Americans have frequently shown themselves acutely and even morbidly sensitive to Paropean opinion, ead can hardly view with indiflereuve the very serious apjury which the conductore of their presa are daly in- fifeting upon them. Our American cont is of opinion—first, that Russia has prevailed in the war hitherto; secondly, that she will prevail in it; and, for wake of the ° Ele she should prevaul; the triumph of Rus We will not waste time in ar- going whether Russia, wo finds hersslf compelled to ac- cept conditions greacly more stringeat than those io which @ itie while ago she would not even deign to re- torn am answer, amet with her repablican apologists, and is either satisfied with the past or confident of the fsture, These are matters of opinion, and a3 euch, however perverse and distorted, are no objects for cen- eure. But we would gravely putdt to the sense of the American vation whether the succes of Russia in the preenh stroggie would really by to them that great ms- teria) advamtage which they are taught to eve. Th may be quite true that the exer, ang, without & friend in this hemisphere, holds out, s¢ the LD pkrazes it, “the right hand of feltowship”? to the other; that Russia is theenemy of Bogland; and ‘amd, in an honor- able and oople sense, a rival as as coadjutor to the United States, ‘The Gear may be prepared to tempt A’ rica, fer aught we know, with commercial advantage: ‘Be may represent hizself ay ready 10 employ an Acaori- can engineer to Jay down an electric telegraph, to buy iron for railroads whenever he finds money to make them and cannot iron from Englaad, and 10 use Amezican steam ye it any means By, can xeach him through the blockade of the allies, We cay grant all these, and these are literally all the considerations which our contemporary ean urge 40 suppor: the monstrous ropesition of a community of interests betworn the Jnited States avd Ruetia. The answer is not difficult. of American citizens in Russia, en’ itself ofiers 80 wide a field for enterprise and exertion that che wish of a patriot sbonid rather be that the genius and iatelligesce of ite inhabitants ehoald continne to be employsd in subduing i to the Yorposes Of man than thet such valuabloq-al'- tier shou'd bo attracted to foreign Jacdy LetSso!laud or Switzerland send out her sone in search of foreign gold, America bas room upon her omple breast for all ber chiltren, Aa for sapplyiug 2he Czar Fith Averl ean-buitt ships of war, a2 loug 44 we remain masters of the ora it will be impoustblo, acd when wo have los that mastory it will be wupertiious, Railways and telezraphs are not the works of @ nation utabie to ralre inorey by Joan, possessing double the popolatios aud ba! yewue of the united kingdoms, at war with all tbo world, and driven lo the utmost extremily io find supp'ies for every day 22 it passes by. The HEKALD talks of com- merce, but comm:-ree is between countries whose natural products are different, aud not between those which, Posersing 60 many natural featuros in common, are Tatner ma se by natore for competition than interchange, Rustin is to take American iron. When? Dur ng war, when the blockade will keep it out, cr after peace, when the Engl'sbiron vill andersellit? There reraaing nothiag, tbes, but the 'kincly feelings’? of the Cvar to hie re- pudi'can friends, and the “right haod of fellowhp” which he proffers to their grasp, hot with tre !ife-blood of republican Poland and democra ic Hungary. But, farther, af Raseia wine, Koglana loses in a much gr-ater proportion, for it is far easier to destroy thas to transfer commercial prosyerity, and Londen wight cease to be the mrreantile capital of the world without trans- ferring that hocor cither to Bt Petersburg or to New Yorr. The commerce of Russia would cot be pure gain, but would be obtained at the expense ef the commerce of England; that is to say, America would cxouasge coatomers of boundless wealth for eastomers without capital dbliged to borrow the very funds required to curtivate the ground—eustomers whose laws ara oqualty administered for others, with whom bribery nile bace- facet on the judgment seat—a Iand whose institutions are stable aed fized fora land whieh mast pses ous day from #layery tanarchy, aud from anarchy to revoin view Bot, enppose the predictions of the Hrtaco fal- Mled, and its wishes gratified. Suppose uated oa- rope too weak for the tarbaric mivlt of Russia, Tarney overvbelwed, Pruvtia absorbed, Austria medietived, and Fraucé and buglund, if spared ior & while, ‘occupying towards the Czar a pouitioa guch ag Saxony, Wartomberg or Bavarla—wou state of things be beneficial to the Unitod State! they feel confident tirat they could nde out a « which so many gallant #bips had teea vrected? they pe abie, 9i and consequently it ria, and our humiliation. Wolk Je-handed, 40 rol! back a Powor tlusued wito the copquest of co maby Valiant hosts, aud so many ancient nations? Would “the right hau of feliunscip” be held out, and the rame kindly feeling be exten sei to them, as tbat sbich now works 60 powerfully oo repab. lean sensibilities? Let them kucw vheraselves bette if ever the dreacs of univer oul be real- ized again in Europe, and seei to realize itieli in Ame rien, the state of the Usion would irresintibly sugges te the fortunate despot tne saue gare an Macedow eure ployed towards Greecs. What field for uis on a King, master of countless armies and cou rea, Cortre better than thirty ropubiic 2 faail federal organisation, aud separated by every wo- tive of interest aud passion tzat can agitate and pervert the human mind? True, we may be told there ix the gesérous fesliag of patrictivm, the noble abborren.e of tyranny, tue ryw- pathy with right and justice, the repugnance to wropz and violence, which would weld these tragaents into one compact mars, and tea h every Stata to forget selfish and personal cons derations ina manly #traggie for the ermpe good. Alas! wh ¢ thie spirit to be found? Not, assuredly, io the pages of tho: var American co’emperzries who, without pretecsiing be able to Justify the quarrel of tae Czar, or to eonsrovers tho ver- dict which the conscience of united Bucope has recorded against him, cannot repross the.r aspizatious fu cess, because, hace as are his onds and vile ae are bis means, y livyo—as we have saows, most falsely and absurdtr—tha? some con's of by the overthrew o: Eyrcpe—the destruction of arts the retura of a devpsr Carkness than Goth or Vandal drought upon the Roman world, For they, at least, were superior im valor and virtua to the race wl-h they conquerad, but Russia bricgs nm with ber to oom- peasate for the ruin of the e: Her barbarism .6 more corrupt slavish hosts Wes vallont than our free citizens. Surely these thicgs ought to woigh for somathlag with @ nation that boasts to be the saylum Of isegdom sad {he depos ‘div Ligher aod Hobler destinias of bu- manity, not lof ifineling and pherry cobvier alone that m to live,” says Sidney Suita, * but for those great principles agaist which noo argament aa be fistened 49, principles which gio to every power a dou. ble power atove their functions aol their oifices, which aro the books, the arts, Lhe acadesu.os that teach, lift up, and nours’ the world psacipted (Tam quite #4 a whatl say) above cash, perior 9 cotton higher “asa surrency—wathout hice itin betterto ale thas te live.’ {Frou tte Loadon Curouicle, Jaw. 16.) Woile Gis fsuing fortunes are exteiliog upon the Czar their urual coosequences in the coldness of friends and the defection of alies, t must be cor mal! consolation to the mnd of the Autocr t to learn that in ona country, at al) events, he bes partizace who bike him only the better for Lin distr Isolated in Europe, ho is eure of sympathy, if cot of elp, from the far West. Taere ia a hand of fellownh' rototed cut to h'm ‘rom acrosa the Atlantic. Extremes indeed weet, as we 60 often told. Copstitutional soversigns of every shade ou the Europe: nticens are one by ono compellal to the league against the great despot and azgreseor, but some counectes by frends remain to him still, »ho will loa with compla. ceucy upon his minlesda and pardon even bis ill Juck, to repattic of America, the scodel The mace, it offered io a very 4 avow: Ruswan bn p peror, merely for the sake what tuey ean get out of sim, it in their oll hart to nargain tue way ‘to greatnes#, ortionally amd individually. Accustomed in earlier periods to ol tava tm ry from the red meo in barter for binnsets aad br Ftill cannot forgo a chance of improving the w or troubles of otuer people into the opportunity fe ofitable “deal? for themselves, lo say aothl former transactions, at Oregon younaary, io or California, they have taive) posseavion of & large alice of Mexico, bought irom .te distracted and im- verished owners at the small peice of tea million dol- | ey At the prevent moment they have fixed greed: eyes on Cuda, Kesnecting tae means Gwnorship they are perfoct oa “Jone tar’? be out addei to their baaner, They are eqnally rea iy to purchase, if Spain be poor amd williag to sell; OF So annex shoud! sLe dois arbed and weak, But one thing IH pre'etermi vos’, through whatever process the property changers “an | ira future Auericas ietore will Lave gu @ Loo btet poseibio bargain, Towerds tao Russion Ruperor the attitade of our re- pudtican cour'na is much the «ame, Taey look on bia asa customer whom they sro quite prepares to uy or sell of “ewap'’—to ‘do tumness,’ ia short, of any character he chooses, 40 long as they cae but real- ize cometh ng handsome ous of it. If he wishes to sell his North Américan evtates, they have the dollars rea- am to esarein several lithie are at hie disporal ia several parts of @ cim in roturn ali the ait aad = the commercial invercourse aad per- foual sympathies can afiort. Our Cratentiontis eet ee the New Yor« Hen- ALD, enumerates some of the leems for which America fw anxious to deat ins very business-iike way. Russia, oe itis ig @ vart 7! Whore operant points are by in ale many thousand hic it is the enlightens wieh of the Emperor to abbra ‘viate by establishing a network of railwa: tric hee oy me Now, telegraphs and ratroads much iron, atd as the native metal is too aoft, asd \b- British trade svhere could Nicbolas bay the ara No douht it was wit tobe hig Majesty laiely Mrded ip. Shaffoer--a ‘States’ mae ing St, Potereburg for the par tele except in Awer rospect before him th | Festities’? to a certain wo preenire— when v4) a rise of Se cee ‘the construction Empire, ‘own. In what waters porignte we ars not told, widition of screw enhance the effisiency of never lost shelter of the land bat- wever, the trig , and must have his solved ce aot vessels i EE a f H th i Pelpetinting SOS “annexation.” In dij Jan- frases the Russian boundary has 4 80 as com] the riyer Amour, which emptiva tteelf into ‘the North ic Ocean. The new territory thus sided to the is as “large as the New England States,” ‘th forages deemed unprofitable, bas just been disco’ to constitute a ‘splendid tea coun- ay which the generous Emperor has declared himself ing t> “throw open imerican trade ’’ To the north of tractare the fur regions of Kamtechatka, where, adds the Heratp with enthusiasm, ‘'the atvan- tages of trade are scarcely inferior to those recently ac- fete bh arkcosing: japan. z There is better s:il! behind, hina a ane, “willingness, an eagerness,” port not only mericea iron Var Amrican Guterprise into Russia, Nicholas, it would seem, has shown big! ae grant- ed “facilities” to other Americans besides Mr. Shaffuer and the celebrated Dr. She. 0 Moet republicans are tting into favor in St. wsburg. LD fin that a? wide Peapey ne ate io 9 domi- pions of hie Imperial je for pbymicians, engingers, Spasbeplenegel woenttnaherss trons ‘the United States. And as Bapiad snd French are distarded, who can say ‘nt that icans may hereafter su) their places as goveraesses and tutors, aud be wed to initiate the ingenuoun youth of Russia into the mysterion of to- bacco chewing, whittling, and gin aling? ranger things have happened. This wor iméeed, as our con- temporary « obs , be the means of ‘spreading for the firet: tise s Hberal influence among his opie.” On all sides the Henanp finds reasons for believing that it would be ‘‘imcompatible republicaniam’—or our dollar-making— with eur like; with the cause of @ present quarrel they have nothing to do; commercial intercourre will be beneticial to both countries, and—‘the Emporor is the enemy of cur immediate rival.” Altogether, ap Russia is destine1 to supremacy, there is no occasion for Americano to quarrel with “her, erpecially if they can so contrive that in “ working out her destiny, Ruse. shall assist America in realizing her own,’? 4 We are far from delioving that a line of policy, salfish and sordid as that bere indicated, will find an echo either in Cabinet of Washington or among the better portion of the United States pubtic. Nevershelems, the princi- ples thes enunsiated have epread widely among large elassee of the transatlantic community, and have pro- Quoed, among other rerutts, an actual vow of the Foreign Affairs Comunittee in the House of Representatives, recou- ending Presideat Pierce to offer a forinal inodiation in the dispute between the European beliigerent Powers. Such me*iation could only operate in the intercat. of Russia, and, if offered, would doubtless be rejected by the British govezement. Thare ia in tho States a numer ous, and, we fear, incroasing section of the population whd ostentatiously proclaim their utter indifference to the concerns of other parts of the world. America for the Americans is their motio, and thoir professioa a total carclessnes# for aught Pesides. They would look on unmoved ttough Napelecn’s prophecy were realized in an extended sense, and the Ubristian world became éiviced into. republican and Cossack, with the Atluo tic rolling between. Against principles #o deg:aded, which would isolate America from the commanity of nations, and render her unwort>y to participate in’ the abe would not sympathise in the struggiss pe. wo trust that public opimion throughout the States with cre Yong, be ronued.. America has dove tov roush for the benelit of the worlil, and played too active 4 part in its deetinies, now to declare hereel! indifferent about right and wrong, aggression ana resistance, dos. potism and freedom, merely hecause separated by a few thoasand giles of water from the scene of conilict. No high minded and gecrous nation can witness without emotion the wat maiatained in the aawe of justice aguinst ambition, [a wratever part of tho world it may bo carried op. We wi not do our American relatives so rouch wrong as to belbove tt porsible that they esa waich the issue of the great strugyle now pending im Eorope, with no higher fesling thon a desica to reap for themeetves some pediar’# profits out of the combatants Tersblc Condition of the Enagiish Army in tne Crimea, {From ths London Times, Jan. 14 } These are not the daya for a mere personal, factions, or otzer peculiartriumph, The atiempt to «: ot any- ‘thing like credit or *'capital,”? ao it is cailed, out of the disastrous state of thisgs in the Crimea, and the general w agement of the war, would be atracet os bad as the trace of the wretehes who prow! over the battle- field, or the beact, for the spoils of the slain or the wreeked. Fe in indeed, without much indesoram, tase an Sonor th es been forced on us—-factens. on us, by ourrtysis and oppoucnts. For weeks aud wsek4 were we expostd toa storm of abuse from all sides for wha’ was calied our interested or pplteful misroprusente- ticns of the state of things a! the seat of var. Some wri ters coolly assured the pudlic tae whole ab ig) tion, and that the vilesus compl'cat.ou of fatal aeglec described in our colusous wae of home taanufacture, 6 trath betog toat ail was going on ver smoothly end com‘oriably ander the paternal rate of Tort Raglan, bie veteraucoieaguer, and youth(ul aides-de-camp. hon thix conki xo longer be maintained, one or two jourcas amitted to > but threw the blaine wholly and solely on ihe adseksistration at home. Vor our part, wo bave done oor Lest to dereribe the state of things just ay itis, Jeaving all the parties concerged to settle the re- spovsiviity among Wemselves as well ae they can, ouly Gx og a culprit bere and there, when the matter seemed to be Drought heme; and this, after ail, is what ail our conte; pe seem ee ave a and. fp. Here they Are, and wot only the ub provincial pewapa- ‘inde—Engiish, Irish, Beatele-ansiig whet all dong, “tabisg the bread ous of our athe,’ if indeed sti question of political eap'tal, ang Legend confrtaing, but actually going Leyond eve: rytring W@ Have said. Bet who any longer denien the sufferings ard loracs of our army, or can deny them? They sre eoufessed, with we knew not what excuses, by the Coamander.in- Chiet, They are confessed by the generals of sie etal, From the very men in command of the army—ibs mon whose aileged inertnes pacity aad bliadness Lave been the theme o! masy acomplaint, come letters to ther frends deseriting the state tf things much as ‘t is descrived py tar corporal or che private soliier, the mere unit in system. Somehow or other, everybody v from without, and seems the a Lelplers speczatax of @ frightful catastrophe. Kyory- ly complaias, Isis “I complain, you complain,” aad #80 op through all the numbers and persons, The uni- vervality of che complaint is {*# worst, feature, for while ery: admity the terriblo tate of thiogs, ond there is no argument upon ft, the expedition seems flounder in a Serbo- pias of der that dol) Cimme. despair, vian sky’ which the ancients ascribed to the acene this calamity. The army and ite macagers at home and dream rather than Jive, in aay waX!og or active neane of the word, el, and see, and hear; speatcund intend, do nothing. It lowest to the highwt. & writing from ibe Crimea eays of the ps, sbeobeteld despair, becom rechlouo, cease to p their food, go into hospital, and div.’’ Hergis a p oi the Crimean divease is ite siceplest form—is the per- son of the poor soldier just come fromfnglacd. Next Sollowa, in the same @ picture of 4; in another ‘a @utborities charged wich that hitherto the good hing wt Balaklava m.ght in London, #0 gearly imposible is it to Lrace- ort them to thy camp. That itie po overyvouy knows By this time, There is everything ja the world at Balaklava. ie there duriag De- comber were sie upon ship loads; and io them greal janted. ory eae, 1. Nobody can say what there is not at Bald&xlava, for there, we Deileve, are stil to be found all the thousands of packages sent from ihis country, and never heard of agaic. Bus army, \ik@@ scan .0 & dream, has not | the wating w od energy to siretch out ite hand aad sfiectually grasp the wealth with no its reach. it complains, it moans (narticulately and helplesily, lke @ der cklosofor@, If it doos more, then comes of the Crimean disorder. I consists in has somehow are always on the point of being execation, bul something, semebody, somo ofi- we seok ent, indefinitely portpours them. Tne e atborty we bave quoted bu¢ crawn up a | plan for the transport of goode from Balaklava to camp. It bas received the approval of the Quarter Sastes-Goneral, Dut at tbe vegivalog of yeas it was slulonly a plan, Of ccnrse, nothing done withou: @ plan; but it dove occur to us that at she date men'ioned a considerable number of the ‘‘nay- vies” bad landed with the materiale for their railway. | Has that sold avsistance, too, dwiadled into a ‘plan,’ to be paseed from office fo offlac, an! to be desided on when youcg officers Baye become ol, and olf officers oung/ Why bas there been oo transport all this time? Vby cid we lead in the Czimea without wagons, or any regular epetom for the gomveyauoe of baggage? The apology is, that in this country of Ransom and Crosekill a committee of old generals bave been antting for mosths to decide om the best form of carts, and tist nothing aan he Seen arene ihe sean’ of the army from co; esruction till they have mate report. ¥ ‘hile the jald the generals dy from this halplosens i. b ad feel, and complain, but do » cives point blank to the. re retven it ik to . Theli “inl yah ii pt nol Nb cedee 4 'the fetter in Tues ey ai ei Inmedia’ Saitama after not oom loetion of the middie Zo Ker and ‘ab ore ounded ‘ancared for on the Svan they Soho Im tbe mond, tad only bed tuey ficd in at the camp, Seutari, o Ce and the in’ of dered by it, have been vated to an ex’ rome pote ne ela hat, ‘Srto tala with tea 5 on the that was tea e acgar enough in the bc »pital rtore cort of the goverament. In fact, there war nd from that time to this there hae been none, ex what wo have supplied from the | fend, or the poor suiftrere coukd tuy at an extravagant forts, 1 poor creatures would ‘be without these Nor can we believe that, if nearly F whea the comm tion be- camp wae in’ or ren- dered difficult, Lerd and his staff resolve} to saeaeee it by 2 road tweed a stand cae, weer and wee weathers, woul SEae Vocd Seedtesa to its prevent state, wi is about as bad as if it been a huo- hich ‘peparat dred miles from its supplies or shut up in besis; Bago will not be suprome, butit is very apt te prevail; and the comparat've strength of human will goes far to determine the isaue of war. Fortune is jade that some would represent her, She is to ‘wooed and won, but by no feeble or irresolute hand It we wish for success we must first resolve to ket no thing we can sap stand in its way—no favor, no fear, no sinister motive—above all, no friends; and tien, Ye we have sacrificed all we have, we at least desorve ‘succeed, The French Loan. Pal Jan, 18—5:30 A. M. The Moniteur announces that sum total of the spbecrgtions to the National Loan amouats to 2,175,- 177,000 persons took part in the loan. Al- jerla, Corsica, and the offers to subscribe of some of Gepartments during the last few days are not com- prised in thie amount. ‘the its furnished 126,000 subscribers, the su sf whom give a capital of 177,000,000f. At Paris there were 61,000 subscribers, with a copita!l of 1,398,000,000f, Tas foreiga subscriptions are comprised. | Fngland provided a Mette of 160,000,0.0f., and Germany, Bel- gium, Switzerland, &e., a ‘similar amount. ‘The Iron Trade of Greal Britain. From the U'rcular of Naylor, Vickars & Co. During the past year there have been considerab!s fluctuetions ia the prices of manufactured fron, and tha Pokition and prospects of the iron trade have undergone @ decided change. The year began with an advance of 20s, per ton, werranted by a previous advanceon ali the raw materials employed in the manufacture, and an immense influx of orders from all quarters, which considerably exceeded the capabilities of production, The advance ell responded to in America, and the trade con od in #0 prosperous a condition, the demand so ely in excess of the make until July, that in la that month a further advance of 20s, per ton was de- clared The makers were, so to say, compelled to taxe this step to keep pace with the ever rising price of the Taw material; buz those adverse induences which thon threatened the presperity of the trade, and made the ad- vance a decision of questionable policy, soon developed the gravity and tho magnitude of thew character. Ia America, the financial sure, which, instead of pass- ing away ae wae hoped from month to meath, soon took the nature of a commercial crisis, and caused a growing stagnation of trade. In this bc Hite war, with its prospective great demands upon resources of the community, sud its eflect of diverting capital from the ‘usual necessities of trade nto other channels, co-ope- rated to cause ee one movement {a the iron trade. In the United States the a¢ vance of last July was never responded to, and aicady im August and September, some of the inferior brands of irom, and particularl; sheets and plates, receded in consequence; aad althoug no alteration wae declared at the October quarter, pricas were not sustained, and the waat of orders was ferious- ly felt, Ty ar has clored gloomily. A vast amount of capi- tal has been expended throughout the iron districts in Putting up new furnaces and new works, with a viow to adapt the po wera of produesion to the great demand in the early part of last year; and now that most of these works bave began their operations, og are reuy to do so, the demand haa entirely passed away, and is n even sufficient to keep the old works well employed. ‘This refers particclarly to those manufacturer’ wlo have principaliy depended for their sales upon the American market—thove engaged im the hore and continental trades being stu moderately employe At the quartsriy moetings of the iron makers, held iast week, a reductios of £2 per ton was agreed upun, in the hope that thie deo ine woals call forth orders. W@ sabjoin a statement of ihe total oxports of fron, &e., from this pert to tbe United States end Canada also their distribation acwong the various ports of dest:n- ation, for she years 1854 and 1868; alsva table of Scotch manafactured iron from Glangow ‘to the United Slates and British North Awerica, during 1854. Comparative View of the Kxports of Manufactured Iron, ee. ; from Ltverpoot during t yard anet 1803. 1404. Decrease. tac. Exporte from Liverpool uns. Jims. Lome, Sone, to the U 8,........, 301,075 232,420 69,25 — Exports from Taverpool to frit. . Americ. 25,999 82,728 — 4,721 ry ea dna Total axporte 27,674 263,148 Thus showing a ef 69.250 tons in the exports to the Usited States, and sn focrense of 4,729 tons vo brit- ish North Awerica, duriag the year 384, against 1854, Leports from Laverpool w the United States, 1893-4. New York. Boston. ‘W853, 1803 n Tons. 28,024 Description. Roda, bere & bolts, , Hoops ant bends Shests and plates Rais, : 27,£22 22,882 17/235 89,625 243,056 a United States, —— 1854. 7853. Deacreption dare & bolts Rod eae 901,67 nae factured Iron from Glasgow to United States during 1654. “the year, re 16s. per ton in November, and Closed to-day per ton for No. 1 American brands, nnd 66s. 6. per ton for mixed Nos, othe: good brands in Glasgow. The stocks in Glasgow were estimated — Tons. 852 deseenen cee es 50,000 Slat Lecember, 1853 245,000 ver, 1854, 122.190)000 a decreaso of 118,000 tone during the past year, or 420,900 toas duriag the past two years. Tho exports cf Scotch pig iron to the United States were, duriog— 1863. 1354. Tone. New York.......5 . oceee C4878 BOAO, nar seecesscvrveeees Philadelptia Balt'more New Orleans... snnees fam Francisco. Sundry ports.... Total . 6.0. er eseeeee eek b5,647 118,873 Showi: Aa desrease cf 41,074 tons during 1854, as com- pared ‘with 1853 There bas been little fluctuation during the year in tin plates, The manufactare was not remunerative, the make has been considerably decreased. In our frst comparative table we bave given the estimated weight of the exports of ti i terne plates during 1453 4. Wehere sudjoin a statement showing the total nomber of boxes exported to the United Btates and Canada during the period, with the increase and decrease to the porte #jecified:— 1963. 1854. Decreare, Increase Boxes, Bowes. Boxes, Bocet. To New York...... 439,040 249,583 90,66 ~ To Philade’phia,... 26,718 14,019 15,696 To New Orleans... 36,451 30,204 5,417 To morekCheton 256% 3777 ~ Ponton........., SN1G2 47/27 = LL. A880 90\400 - cove 559,140 472,340 111,070 30,470 tease in’ the your 1654, of 40,800 boxes, Compared wits the preceding ye Copper yellow metal hay: dering the whole of 186 Daraprut Ramroap Accroger—A Taam oF Cant CowPLeracy Wreckaa—Si —None Ku1.e0,—A dreacfal railroad acollest took Lietep morning, about 11 o'clock, on the Ohio aad Railway, near North Bend. We learn that ie UE express train, devine oy city at LLo’clock, Frank cond ani a ye ry! the juctor, tho Fate of twenty was thrown track by the break- ‘over ani be- ity of whom were more jarette, Jam, 31, | The Know Nothin, -_ a '. VOL. xx. _ Our Richmond Correspondence. Ricauonp, Jan. 27, 1855. The Progress of the Canvass—The Advocacy of Henry'4. Wise on the Stump—The Struggle— Atsvice to the North ern Know Nothings. It isamup bill track that our friendef Accomae is travelling: Jordan grews rougher and reugher as be proceeds, Every step that he takes involves him in new troubles._.Not content with having declared war against, the Know,Nothings, and then turued and gavea back handed blow to Pius IX., who stood behind him, patting him 6n the shoulder, confidentially and encoursgingly whispering, ‘Go it”’—not content with hitting his pious backer @ lick in the chops, which has caused all the Pope's friends to ory out—‘‘Call you this backing your friends?’’—not content with raising up enemies by the thousand im his own party, among the old Jackson men, the mized basis men,and the disaffected Letcher men, this political Guy Fawkes bas just started a new mine, full of” all sorts of explosive materials, in the very vaulta of the democratic strongholds of Virginia. Thisis anew and magnificent project of a grand State free schoo! syatem, ta which he has volunteered to pledge himself before the people, mind, heart, soul and body, brains and wits. If there ip one thing under the face of heaven which the Planters of Eastern Virginia abominaté more than any other, it is thie mammoth free school system, which is to tax them for the benefit of what they considerone of ‘the greatest humbugs on the face of theearth, This de- monstration of Guy Fawkes has caused the very pillare of the democracy here to quake and stagger like the lege ofadrunken man. I have heard one of the most ardent. and intelligent democrats in the State declare that, after this free school business, he could not and would not support Henry A, Wise, whor under other circumsiances, he would have supported. And this sen- timent, 1 have no doubt, is that of many others. The best use that can be made of Honry A, Wise is to send him, carefully secured, to the allied armies in the Cri- mea. If he could not blow up Sebastopol they might a well give it upas a bad job. The friends of Wise, and Wise himself, make great com- Plaints that his opponents don’; nominate some man to go out and canvass the State with Wise, and meet bim before the people. Well, what’s he use of that? The strongest adversary that Wise can possibly haveis with ¥ him, and thet adversary is himeelf, Wise hay never been able to answer Wise since he first took the stump in this campaign. Wise and Wise are continually put- ting licks into each other’s breadbasket, pulling each other’s nore, kicking each other’s posteriors, and grap- pling each other's umbilical cord ia a manner that would disgrace such scientific bruisers as Tom Hyer and Yan- kee Sullivan. Wise has several times swallowed W whole in the course of this canvass, and at one time nothing but the heels ot one Wise can be sticking out of the muuth of ihe other, and £0 vice versa. What's the use, thes, of introducing ancther advereary of Wise? Let the two Wises fight it out with, each other, and when they have settled each other's hash, atresh bruiser can be put in the ring, ‘This beating the air and fighi.ng tho ghost of Know Nothivgism isn’t exactly the sortof entertainment Wise a eres when he twok the fisld. But his eppoments not obliged to consult his tastes in this matter. If h finds it an uncoratortable thing to be fightinga ghost, ta be haunted everywhere by a ghost, to cons stantly invited to Phillippi by a ghest, he hae no one to blame for it but himself, He first evoked the ghost from its comfortable piice im Hades; he called it all manner of hard names, and now thut tue pale shadow haa ‘‘siruck more terror” to his soul than a hundred cendi¢ates with flesh and blood, ha ought to submit to his fate without complaining. Let the Roman Catholics everywhere bear in-ming this declaration of Heary A. Wise—*1 hate the Pope, ‘every inch of him; no man hates the Pepe worse than Ido.” That declaration sits uncomfortably upon the tomach of the Roman Catholics of this jon. They, lo. no. know whet Henry A. Wise bas to do with the Pope, nor what reason he for any sueb declaration. even d t ray bey have the Pope. ‘They oniy ask his Holiness to mind nis own business, and not attempt to govern people who are not in his baill- wick. But bere is Wise, whooponly declares his hatred of him, who says that he hates every ineh of hia; wha hates him from the crows of his head to his big toe, and who, when be hairs a man, would do him ali manner of mischief thet any honorable caemy might. Hating tha Pope, every inch ¢f him—hatiog him worse than tha Kuow Nothings, Wise would of course, if he could, do~ pose Pius JX. ut once trom both his témy and = ai power, and put vim down immediately to @ level with, all the little Protestant Popes, us he calls the Protestant: ministers—those excellent aus relf deuying mea, whose autiority does notextenc beyond a , aad whose political influence, in Wise’s estimation, ig not worth ss toch of anu Now is’ot this a pretty dechat States to this new demonstration by one of the principal lieutenants of the administra 2 What Archbithop Hughes toit? W. Pius IX.? that if Wise has been placed prematarely on th dar of Cathou: Saints, his name should be immed stricken off. The Kaow Nothings are increasiag ia Virginia witle marvellous rapidity, They will soon number 4 majority cfall the voters of the fommouwealth, They wil be able to elect their own ticket without reference to vithes of the other parties. I expect that the old po! an the birds who scent the carcass of spoils afar off, w: s00n be among the Know Noth.ngs iu flocks. Bat it’s na use. The Know Nothings have set their faces, like fiint, against all these ravenous old birds of prey. They = as well build their obscene nests in some other tree. ere is Lat one danger to the complete and over~ whelmi triumph of Know Nothingism in Virgisia and! the South, and I should be derelict in duty as a faithful chronicler of events if 1 failed to mention it. This dan- £ arises from the abolition developements among tha’ now Nothings of Massachusetts and elsewhere. If, Know Nothingiem in the North doos not disembarras@ itself of abolitionem, it is a dead cock in the pit in Vir- jimia and the South. Upon westone will have ta written this tascription: “If-s9 soon I’m done for, wouder what I was b gun fort” Wout is Know Nothing- irm to us in comparison with the rights and institutions guaranteed to up by the coustitation? We hate aboli-+ tonism « good deal more than Wise hates Pius IX. Wa would rather a thousand times that Wise should be elected, and that every foreigaer should vote the mo- ment he lands ‘rom a sbip, than aid in any org suization whieh, instead of beirg American, is to be made sec~ tional Let Kuow Nothingism keep clear of abolition- ism, or else, after having gone up like # rocket, it will come cown bit hk. OW SOMETHING. Theatres and Exhtbitions. Baoapway Tucitke,—this establishment is crowle® nightly by fash onabie sudiences, en are procured | VIRAL PASEENGERS INTERES | | Me. KE. Q Hoop, the machiaist of Buckle in advance, so much is ati spectacle of “Cinderella” admired, It ae be presented again this evening, and pro’ pareve ing this week, The farce of “ Bona Fide Travel iers’’ concludes thi jusements. Bowery Txatre.—This evening {s announced last appearance of Mr.G. C. Charles, the Irish comes Cha: representative of Yankea v1 of “ OurGal,” nes nphD. Man,” and the drema of the Wilderness.’’ the bi the ‘Game Cock of Burton's THeatae —Three very good pierces arc an- nounced by Manager Burton for this cvoming. Phe fired] is the new comedictta of the ‘ Balance of Comfort.’ rr next is the saves pia ar of Res" "9 jurton as Megrim; conc! jece is pa lar drama of *‘ Woman’s Life, Wite niatae Mother. WAtLack’s THeaTee.—This house is night filled and select audiences—the comedy ot ‘ Tern yantry’’ is the atiractive [eature—it is we! played throughout, all of the emiuent performers o! th theater appearing im the piece. The admired come’; of the tite” concludes the entertainments of th evening. # Amenican McreuM.—Shakspero’s tragedy of ‘‘ Mas beth,” with J. R. Scott as Macbeth, and Miss Le Brun Lady Macbeth, is selected for the afternoon performance end in the evening, Mr. Scott appears as Witham ‘1 “Black Eyed Sosan.”” The “Double Bedded Room’ concludes the amusements, Cmevs—Merrorouran Tarates.—There will be tw equestrian es formanee pen, Ce men} —one in ing—they consist of a variety of beautiful feats in ripg. Woon's Mixerneis.—The | is much the CKLEY's SereNspERS.~ This popular band are in a it succers—the inarrumental pisces are ¢: pital, and Gs vurteoquen are admired by every one. Hore Cnars es ome jan Opera Tromy are still ing at Hope Chapel —' programme 0) t's Sele resi fail to draw a good house, Op akes his benefit to night—st is hoped his fries their duty. Charles Carroll's Grandson. 10 THE BDITOR OF THE NEW YORE HERALD. A Washington correspondent alludes in your paper 4 the Ist inet. to « bill im Congress for the ‘‘relief q Hon: will do | Chocles Carroll, a grandson of Charies Carroll, of Carro! ton, for arrest and false imprisonment, asa 4 : | from the United States army. I beg ave, fo state the be a tT 1 ia ADE. removal is "be refasal commanding him to disband the fe | fected with his regiment.—Boston

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