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. NO. 48, NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1855. 319 i¢ @ arbor in oar @ick. “AD the deaths and i of the Southeastern Railway. The Lord Mayor | SEWARD WIRE W | city, a motice for Taylor useting to be at tao Ongt- AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. | fem imaue ue!atngy tuo | set us npr in tetre’ Sum tania, | suet eens tt DERE WORMRRS ico fe ovina nari, hg hae ie Sadan arcecni hole army, from the brigediers to the except the desths and wounds from battle, are, lke | | small number of persons were present, bat, his guaran | Oe aes Eieotaes nate anata ean Bean saa of Lords Derby, Aber % 4 tof profession, | the deaths and siekneas in our re- | Royel Highness was received with a cordiality which CAMPAIGN OF 18438, } ue po bere sad {From the London Timee, Feb. 2.] pag yp thrown oa teroms Sei copies tm the premat tate ioe Sues bare Boon vocy gratifying to bia tngs, The ioe Dass ‘The whigs of Albany are requested to met this oven Eh Be reson: jewcastle yy medical science, may be removed edeers whic! station ; ‘ C ¢ Capitol, for the pur; comm saygbresume 16 is intended, in the way ot consolation | Whole medical wy iy iergam. extent in ordinary climates, even in | continued until after be had taken bis dopartare. | Taylor and Fillmore vs, Taylor and Butler, na Seslae attelacssetiog (oo tenineen 2d , or rather of for wht | ized and and the commis- | the field and in the presence of an enemy; for the lor and Butler meeting at Charleston, 3. 0 are called “the improved accounts from toe Cri | sariat ag utterly unequal ¢o the pressure art of preserving life has, since the Peainsular cam- Spain. Y, Aug. 26, 1848 ¥ mes," jhat we were favored with a rather lively | toon it. Mi. Bernal Osborne’ denounces paigns, made as much progress as the manufacture | FREE TRADE DenaTr—saLe or cuvncu rxoraety | How the Trouble at Albany was Quieted all, the Arpus saya, was displayed oa the Bem feane in tbe Lords last night. Hitherto there has | conatitution of she staff, and. declares that there | berms, and, if skilfully our army will nev- PROPOSED. ing Journal's bulletin—-the Knickerbocker, the Hopress, been a great deal of shyness as to all vulgar festivi- will be no effectual reform in the ‘army which does | er n endure the morta ty from disease that 90 | (Madrid (Jan. 25) Correspondence of London Times.) by Doctor Thurlow Weed, and oa the entrance to the Post (fice, &e, 1 qospitalities, and that sort of thiog. Tae | not commence with the Horse Gaaris- Sir George - one ite efficiency once in the Peninsala, My letter of this morniug informed you that tue ee. bee. ko. Reo. Sky MOtATE Christmas helydeys have been observed as a per- Grey adopts the apo of “ioexperience,” | and again, after the lapse of more than forty years, of our new Finance Minister, Senor Madoz, ” ” “s pe. Enastus Baooxs, petual Sazdsy—no county balls, no grand dingera, notwittatanding the fact of the selection of generals | in the Crimea.” In tne opinions here expressed we | bad been hailed bs the Cortez with accla- Mr. Bnooxs he'd that this proved the wetting and latteriy, as if happened, not even fox hunting. | 15 manege the expedition having rested chiefly on | entirely concur. That all cesualtirs whould bees | matin. The crisis is 40 it for Spain, tha: I Tisstatinamnean was called by those cousected with the Journal Pw prtig doubtless, are omepe for example, | their “experience,” to the exciusion of activity, | caped except those of actual conflict is, of course, | have it worth while to send you the follow. gem wr ys nga a tae Tink Eeaiaeeine Cold as rg GUETEPH reports only 14 degrees of | genius, aad even ‘success. Some time since the | not to be imagined; ut that, at ay rate, a the ob, | 3D more important of his speech:— rom the Tweuty #ixth. Im cogiaus . ‘These were the epecial order, to-day, on motion of tion, Mr. Broo} 1 change there, the C derin Chief undoubtedly particular contemporary that had been the moat | ject at which we should aim, and to which we may Gentlemen I need not tell you how mach it has Mr. Cresby. That Seaator was sbaeut, but the floor other proustuent lender in the ‘Sliver er a forward to impute scme ridiculous motive to undoubtedly approximate. cost me to quit the president's chair, to which I was fay ranks :— will-00- now 16 the time to extract some of the | accounts of the war, iteelt even surpassed vain ite | We tay eaee wep further, and say that the | called by the confience and sympathies of my rol. | Wae taken by Senator Dickinscn, who brieily recapi eee, 1858 ity; and this was done by Lord | \. noerible and ” | leases in the Crimea b b lesguce. It was there I hoped to pasa my political tulated the charge brought by Mr. Brooks, that tue Derby last aigat. We can cnly suppose that his iord- | hig cfs he onsen tin. dean tact ot bee | tie er fied to be ‘considered. avaidabte, | Ide: for it was thete, rather than ou the mlaisterial | “Albany met Re sue riasdsot Me torard, ia de. ship ia resily in somewhat better spirits sa tothe | 10.5. "We look round in vain. for any man who will | We have asserted more than once, snd we affirm | bench, that I feit confident of being serviceable to | 80 controlled by the frien S aean'd Inter ormed me that they {rar than most men are. He rowily does not think | pow venture to persuade us that this is only the | ngain, that oot only has nothing happened which | My country. Bat, gentlemen, for me it was no | fence of the charge, Mr. Brooks had real a letor vite etna a meeting at the, Journat other niet the compaige tastuily and irretrievably misma- | Di vhimure of @ disordered imagination. Is there | was nct to be foreseen, but much whl was to be | gnestion of personal convenience, but one of patriot: | frem ex President Fillmore. To that letter Mr vital the Capitol that evening. to denounce Gen Tey waged, or toe accoupts “horrible and heart-rend- Be vi who can wake as from this hideous dream, | apprehended bas not occurred. Mr. Sidney Herbert | itm, or rather, of courage. On Sanday, at six in ths | Di-kinaon had ove to read in return, and when the jor acd 4 me to go immediately and do whet ( ing.” Op tois supposition alone is it exp icable | yng tow us the British army in the Crimea not 90 be nha inthe debate, that “when we talked of | eveniug, | was called tothe Dake of Victoria, who | two thus brought into contradiction were knowa,he couln to prevent it. [ In reply to your note of thik date, 1 have te too Saturday evening, the 26th day of Auguat, aide of Heoadway, Delavan House, w at to the Journal offica, that he can afford to amuse their lordabips with offered me the portfolio of Fiance. My firatemo- | ¥%6 not afraid to leave the question of veracity. and there found Messrs. Weed and Dawson in their ede “the picture of an interior,” raise a smile at the Yphally nchange om Sos whioh. pega te len | Naps oy teeath the ie sap te eee tion Wen to rete it, but when the ‘Civil Governor _ AbwANY, Feb 14, 1456. pa coy Arar qneed ee ne one Ba Very prope: and natural remarks of the late Pie | since? Well, torthe t of credality fn this ua- | add founa that serous losses might be au on | of Madrid and the Captain General of New Castile | ,, Hon A. 8. Dicxivsoy—Dear Sity—The letter from ex into the room, | remarked to them boih—wl undarstaad muiet on tte ishors of his colleagues, ard tink M2 | polieving age, there is ome man—one on'y—who | thatelement.”” But such an appeal was not deco: | toldme that they had just disvove ed a Carlint coa | P?*silent ! the purpore ‘of topugatoy the sccurecy of _ Mt, Dawson replied “Yes."" 4 then suggested if they hae por att yl a Ea ne ge haan still believes in the War Department, the Medical | rously made to oover the shortcomings of men. Un. | SPuscy, my hesitation wasconquered. I coasented V4) ereren «toa public mecting held in this city in HOt better postpone It until Monday, by which time pa i 5 aware ofa king ot perversity in human nature—s poe iomen band Hae cuss (Be a ‘Official, tron species of >¢-action against the more imperious ap- | fr, Andrew Smith down to the halfiozen gucces- | we have been providentially pi peals to our sympathy. 1s is not precisaly kaowa | sive narbormasters of Balaklava. violence. Every versel and transport, we believe, of | tlemsn, J have tae beliet that this couatry may ba Pith what partivular sentiment Neto fiddled when |" “qre Chancellor of the Exchequer is the ore man | every description, which hassailed trom these shores | Reverned with resolution and honesty. We have Rome barat; but that it is possib'e to be gay under | fyithful fourd in an unbelieving age. With the eye | forBulakiavs, has reached ita destiration in safety, | the iproct:of 1k in:therifeat Sat <Reace CARE ! jeg: Kerio, pies ta that, tion. Limmediately left the oflice. Yours teuly the catastrophe of a great army ‘reezing to deat | of faith, and on the strength of ‘some unknown | ard, if its cargo hasbeen lost to the army, it hus aot found the necessary resources up to the meeting of | Vii’ Te Ln ne erekind Me. I will warccly ventare | Hon. Enawrus Bows, JAMES KIDD we may sce by the example of last night. We | githmetical persuasion, be a sees thirty thoasand | been through the tempest or the waves, Even the | the Cortes. I say nothing of Senor Sevillano, for | fo ogy aay Al 2 ced Win Mr. Dickinson further advosated the position a4 admit tha; the habit is incurable in the | wel) found, well clothed, well fed British soldiers on | Prince, aa in well known, might bave Isnaed every | b¢ bas bat passed ucrovs the stage. Laughter.) | on™ cucday, the 2d of August, IS9, the telegraph | hagtioncge ile haa nothing to say about the vara comervative chief. He can always laugh, and | tre heights of Sebastopol contending for the plea- | bale Cf her stores. As to the rigors of the | But, gentlemen, there is also another condition, | ynoouneed t al T had accepted » South — gity of Mr. Fillmore, but he ventured to say that ae does always be Doubtless, “his own tu- | sare of a turn in the trenches, or a promenade to and | climate, they have hitherto beea below what might | Which is, that every one here shows putrictism; and | Carolina acm! ent, which placed him on man in this country who knew Mr. Weed would neral Oration, wi he comes to pronounce from Balaklava, laden, for variet: ’s wake, with bi pave been anticipated, and the very last telegraphic T make, therefore, an energetic appeal to all my | a ticket with General Butler, matead of Mr, Fillmore, for doubt his veracity one moment. He challenged the it, will be diversified by as many good things | cuits, thizteen-inch ahells, casks of rum,and sections | despatch reotived from the Crimea descrives the | colleagues, from the Marquis d’ Albaiaa (Orense) to | Vice rsident Senator fiom the Sixth (fr. Brooks) to pablia egy Spent a pper dean tice wooden, houses. Yet even Mr. Giadstone, all- | weather, on the 224 of Jannary, as + very fine and tbe. partisans of talon Groarcae, Cite, Misa whintin the city ot New York, cf oproacats ‘cr Geteeat | both letters in hia speech. He anould do so bimaolt, » <allold. | hoping, all-belleving as he is—even he admits that | temperate.” It is not the atmosphere toat we | ; ts *s Taylor, by which meeting his nomination was repu but he did not believe that Senator would have tae Indeed, the present occasion is uot altogether 49 | there is much inthe arrangsments that calls | have suffered, but from the want of the c’mmon | Situation.) ‘Ihe day before yesterday, on entering | E4741’ wiry then making to get up s kindred. me ma guanumity to. Senator from the Bixth way rty”” wi P piesa Ne er nan re | pan too for amendment, and toat in some important particu- | necesraries of food, ciothing, fuel, and shelter; in | 0 my functions, I found in the Treasury litéle more | Ainany. The © lettera from ( coubtedly the command of the elements pertains to | With eagerness, determined to do wha: I have dome | jie st 144s, though written, a ' averred, to ¥i Posy, that | sll my iife— resist absolutiam, anc epeud my blood | qhucttuth of siscocy heir | inthe cause of liberty. (Continued cheers.) Gea- | rendér that portion o Relieved by Mr Fill has heretotere forh I will now fortify history with facts in relati joate sid have been r 4 a to history more thaa apocryphal letter from a confidence which and ‘the truth or falaty h no mortal power, but this we may truly sa; heen rotected frou” ing the call for Thia was ia Me 1, with bis approba to go int ig caucus whenever his party Derby. there fa ke mortalit been than four hundred thousand reals (acout £4,000). G 1 had o if He had to relate how her Majesty had given him prey oe Oe amen ML aacare Nat Sieh | sp laheerdmoairn poh al phe nee tra Ali the public revenues have decreased since tne pear inley had ‘reorived letters might fob tic Hal 4 pote dey wie A from Ith her commission to forma ministry, and how that ” ‘moors, exposed i revolution. The indirect taxes have uced » Ke., that 2 ” Q he had doue his very best to form one, and had not rtanimicdte Tduatetennaain wha pase Be ty ronatire op op ad expos pee GS almcet “nothing. The duty oa salt He the | there was so much discontent among our friends that pier talon ne reed Rb cr ynod succeeded—how that one more opportunity bad 0c: | gon for it as the Chancellor of the Exchequer. | tractive to contend with, or tue French would be | roperties have bt only in- | an outbreak against General Taylor could not be log Senator from the Fifteenth (Mr. Z. Clark) claim rope! in vaia, and Lora Derby was oes fo e8 When he says that there 1s still an effective British | in as bad plight as ourselves. Cur communica: | es eee ee ene feed 8 list of s0- Wee Ta nat chase Vacieisoats womi, 4 pros, 1 | bim? He could not sey where he dtd belong. foe want of axed Di rincipies, cnt bvergthing force of 30,000 men in the Crimea, and that the ma- | tions have not been interrupted by sea, for Feng D : E | a h Mr. Fi , whom | He alluded to the campaign of 1444—to the offorts : pegement has been as good as could be, he offers eo | could be more secure, however ‘ | November the salt auty bas yielded only four han Seercee tse ‘om : "we cxibeeed petal ‘olicitude | of Mr. Seward, of Iieuteuant Governor Itsymoad, except a gift of eloquence, which kaows xo times | fiat a contradiction to the whole world that, for the | paceage between shore and bore. We have not | died and odd reals, instead of fifty thousand.) I ov uit wey telegraph intelligence. { remarked th. in behalf of the whig nominees.to the shock the Ror seasons, and, in the fatal facility of speaking on | mere sake of truth, it becomes necessary to inquire, | Been overpowered by the inexnauetible I wish you to know our extire position. It is neces: | the feeling previously exiting against General Taylor | whig party received when Mr. Clay's Alabama lo at eas oe oe Noe ee eae cae Be with Mr. Roebuck, what is the condition of the | exe my, for we have repulsed all his and we ary you should know that the floating debt, waica | would now be so much aggravated thats popular move- | ter came out, dampening the ardor of the whign of - | British army in the Bast? 4 ‘ Up tion of an vacontro!led humor, it"is that Lord Derb: admiasi because month mount up to nearly seven hundred milions, | meeting immedi is wholly incapable of comprehend tne present arg heat bye read that mong = Toy pe if ores. smply: ‘our pre dacscy) yay age sna compe @rotonged seniation.) Tre moment is not ve come of our own frien what will become of me. He has read me out of the situation, acd feeling i¢ as he oe todo. Tne | case for inquiry. It is the fact thatthe managa- | Our statements on this subject, long denied and me to lay before you my plans for financial oper | ‘ion whig party, and now I read him out, and will ask ¢ Aberdeen admixistration has fallen simply aad | ment of the war has broken down, not in this or | cccasionally censured, have now been confessed by | aticne. [shall oon tell you all my ideas,even what | S0vite. | In wl character should be compro: , the Senator from the Fifth (Mr, Spencer) will re solely because it did not ahow sufficient energy, | that de t only, not temporarily, accidentally, | ministers themeelves, and by the sem- | relates to our customs’ tariff. (Loug interrnption, | inivd Ot OO y Pro | ceive him into his party? (Mr. 9. sald ho wae in- [org > doo resolution, and firmness in the coa- | or partially, but hout, unitormly, from first to | tenes of the House of Commons. Mr. Stafford, too, eeieetns body premees Tecollected that the minister | As the day boat {rom New York was due, we walked | clined to receive bim.] es. B.’ went on. $9. charac. of the war. It has been responsible for the isst even the very date. Never was there so | gave an example of manly candor in asserting with- | Was 8 deputy for Catalonia, a province eminently | towards the landing, near which we met boys with the terize the political course of the Senator from the a ont rei , A ; | - de ement of the wees and that Fevers ae eg hat | anvaried a tory of failure, excepting only when it t reserve that “ but for the effeais of this journal | Protectionist.) Asa deputy, I ama Catalan; bat = morning papers: but fe contained no additional infor- ‘T wenty-sixth (Mir. Dickinson). oj byeee oh ntan broken down. Needless is i sc gn wh | came to the rough uninformed of man with | the horrors of our army’s situation would never have | 8# Winistor, lama ard. We will examine this mation: " then renewed the suggestion et a esting map. Wea be (Mr. B.) to square nis course by suck ” ’ uj wl ne y 1, 10) K- ? Was moat to biame, the Harl, or the Duke, or the | man, The picture of the camp, the trenches, the | been revealed, and, never being revealed, would ff question, and you may rest satisfied that, look- | before one could be called by our opponent ‘ atuie? Why, Bir, it was difficult to tell from the hole Cabinet, or Lord Raglan. oF his staff; the | road, the harbor, the transports, the hospitals, and | never have been remedied even to the extent that | 10g at the state of the coantry, I will go as far ax | "move repeated, that if this wan done, his track which cirection the Senator was taxing— British people look tothe government atthome, and | even'the arrangements at home, ss given not only | they bad been.” ‘The same sceaker, himeelf an eye- | 8DY man in the path of commercial freedom. But, “ going South or coming back.” Mr. B. would wal- ati! re: masters of our position. We havesaf- | BOW exceeds five hundred millions of reale, willin a | ment was inevitable, [thought it advisable to call a | the State and ly, which should be under the control " = Oe eitecearee w Mr. Bxooxs—The Senator is alarmed aa te that he di ‘a; government to do the work, or to give | gentlemen, there is a q2es'ion more important than | Arie’ s hold movement, to F : . Weed’ 4 wayinthone wi ridge Thista tbe a gonad | ptesrtedecribe wane tans il tn tame | bret attache of tease dita tet tat etait ution Toe propery Sea | ese! sides mot cries gamle Mai abi Me Wal ter at, Dicom of complaint against the goverament, which has | Yes, at the last date, within ‘this fortnight, ali | sively ot the puerile Teppeebonsiea that in telling | esclesiastical mortmain. (Yes, yes.) On that my | whole responsibility of that movement should be mins. Mr, Dicnixson disclaimed reading the Benstoe not indeed cone much, but need have done nothing, | tha evils, and more still, than have heen deplored | the truth to England we might be telling too much | opinion is completely fixed. I'am for ita immedi- | " We then separated—Mr. Fillmore going to the Boston from the Bixth out of the whig party. He had reed could it only have pointed to the flags of the allies | gs the fruitful source of disaster since the tothe Czar. The Czar, it is manifest, must already t@, ita absolate sale. (Immense applause trom the on the walls of Sebastopol. Lord Aberdeen, toere- | of the campaign, have increased. How ahould | know st lenat as moch ss any correspondence from | chamber snd the public galleries.) I have nothing fore, is quite in the right to remind the impatient | it be otherwise when Balaklava, the real basis of | the Crimea could possibly tell him, and the true re | more 10 add at prerent. I bave spoken with the «. F., whom he @: prepare resolutions, before seven o'clock pected, and I tocall himself out. He (Mr. D.) could not read him out, aor 4 speakers, & x keep hum cut, for we :esd, A le the lamp holds ublicot wnat his government has done apart from dirs pond Btaflord observed, coal Well known franknees of my character, and you | Uimere returned to my ofice. He taquired if I bad The vilest einer maa) operations of the siege. Nothing was more | srmy had, tl the otegr day, HOt, bere visted, for | Or aC Me Deca oe ae Teer anceal May be nave that the god faith of my acta will al, | reeled ted at eter ienr ine ae he eat totkeece! | Mr. D. went on at wome length. ite had n> doubt Pim ise aga | Sa ene atau ome A | Seen, orm ets ea | Eee come wm we ceo my | Se lat ts mee, |p eng Md aa f Fequex 0 go. iaamediat co and . the skill, and the uence of the Chancellor mat the last date Wes niobor bescayy stil! actually ex: | inekon fos sg meer oy goer} et athe | 7 " | deliver bi ¢. aving received no auch mearoge error. All men attimes were mistaken. Ho hat ° 1 fo eo On ' SRR echoes: 8 ihe sawonried nce and | nosed to the danger of @ catsstropbe that in one | fcrm. Had the press held back from“ that Reten i, rae? Thad i ‘all for a meeting at the Capitol himeelf been, sad Sec: i} always glad to acknow.odge 1 th d to him tal d hati At this inclement season of the year it is the alm | He suggested modifications, whieh were adopted, wad ibe iad acertaled ear agsin. You faithfully disc! WT ehet Wonk Gace beca the Sinae mediates to Hena comfort with peaiare: in thea, provided it became, necessary to aubealt resolu will, of course, be puzzled to kaow waat there is ta of Sardinia, and cemented our relations with the | the eceve of nocturnal orgies, and a fire broke out | consequence? The nation would have been left in | bre’ Kabab oor Rend hewed ovata: ond Madire eatt"| tracheed’® Date wie om tee Neainning vaterrton! 1 thin that is'germain to the Lemon slaves, and Empetor of tle Ereach. It was not less proper, | on board the Star of the South, which was laden , ignorance of what the Emperor Nicholas, we may ove htfired'with velvet, Hommes anos'the plain deems | tat uo ction, 1a the form of ressluti sto be #0amJ, unless the squeezing fact may be in that nor was it with leas truth, that Lord Aberdeen | with gunpowder. At the last date lint and other be very sure, would have substantially learct, sat |e ring bts Hk alamo ges tiga Leg banda of , tabea ifit could be Y to antici. line. spoke in terms of high praise of the Duke of New- | medical storcs sent out to Scatari, and anxiously | litte sdvantage of information would have been | Simrent witha | pate a host that we You will notice that Mr. Weed not only refutes Castle's aesiauity and talent, auforvunately defeated expected there, were overshooting their matk and cn the enemy's side. Our soldiers would have been We have spoken of bodies with braces, which con. | (20h). fall a aly. Lin. fully the amertions contained in the letter from ex- by the want of those higher qualities demanded by | aaging to the confusion of Balskava. At the last | Jett withont the euccors which these reports nave | tinue to be mach in favor. Upoma plain dress they | Willem Parmenn vlath tine até, Ergot Humphrey of President Fillinore, but he frankly to tae Pe a re eg ey date, soldiers were still doing dety in tue trenches, | secured Locate — condition would have beea | ehould be ot moire antique velvet, or plush ribbons, | psies to come wet wesit seuaens saiete tor Ad RN cae Accel uae ae poy en . | a ‘ | %i Pe {ter the excited feel he Hasentary sentence which has ‘pronounced the late ety ef ey ig me eae tee | to tee eke phe tila Li onginciny mn tee cna cleer muslin body. or are charming when made | sion to reliable wpeakers. and that alter the excited (eel. 4 response made, ls now the questica, ent brougat | instant would a tile forever, pot oaly the fate of the | nacred and imperative duty,” which by Mr. Austria into the position of an ally, given us already | ghips, sailors, soldiers and material in the port or | Staficrd’sowm testimony, it “has, upon the whole, an actual coxtingent of great value fromthe Kiag the tome, but the whole expedition. Tne ships were tf di { velvet or taffetas. For very full dresathey may | ng liad bec adjourament, with » view ' Cabinet wanting, ani summoned some one else to other covering for their limbs than the trousers they | public has ccmpelled extraordinary effortato remedy}, a it whi to full know berate results uld pe 4 mot, then, is there any thing more to be said? take its place. Yet Lord Derby has thought fit to fret landed ie, and in some cases with not even | the evils complained of, the sufferings of the troops | Reaicsteanes Wiss sompesesie: wrath at moved. mo Are there not more letters to spring up from thia wholly out af sight the dismasaatseene in tre these, but only bis suit bags roughly tied roaud their | bave been materially alleviated by private benevo- flowers placed very back on tue head, ahould match Shortly after seven o'clock we parted, Mr. Fi mre fo lanting? Lhope there are, for { coafess to « relide Timea, to forget it, to, dismiss it alike from the lege,’ With the best markets for wood and chsrcoal | lence, the measures of government bave been quick- | those on toe dies 7 ing to bis lodgings, and I proceeded to the Cap.tol. The for these reminiscences that we are gathering from thoughts of his head and the feelings of his heart, | inthe world close at hand, and with coaleasily ened, the government iteel( is at last to be remodel | ' Geme of the rithon braces reach to the middle of eased by HB. Haswol aud Lewis Beas. | the memories of the ackuowle/ged and apacknowt for the aoie purpose of treating this asa mere Mio’ | worked and inexhaustible, within two days’ sai, | led for the avoidance of futare mismanagement, aQd | the skirt at the waist at the front; they are dais SL ab vy fentleman wowing, at the right tune, @¢ ged leacers ip the brivliamt skirmishes and hard ‘imeriai catastrophe, the downtall of a coalitioa cabi- | tre army was without fael; soldiers were subsisting | the Emperor of Russia is taught tnat we have learnt ed with» large bow of ribbons, aod meet ut the field fights of the campaigns of ‘49, “44, and ‘44 Al ed meetiog therefore, went « net, deme, to the credit os the statesmen com i P iat pes only to t tl ta x X } i Mere. ifs Let us, like Oliver Twist, hold up our platters (or promised fats Sabah ea 13 bap, aot bi ae for many days together on their taw rationsand cur misfortunes on!v to suymount them by reso! waist; at the back with a long Louis X{I. bow; on with the b gment we had beon ab! ' steam trans; were lying idie for want of coal ticnand wisdom. Which of these courses waa the ¢) i with Tace. | question : ie mote. 85 .ord Derby much nearer power ie was before. | at tre cost of one handted pounds each per | better or the more becoming isa question which we pi, epemape y ena, neriow aeion iihit: When the appointment of a committee had been or Ot the iwo we hardly koow which is least to bs | diem. Bo far from fortane baing to blame, the win- corfidently leave to the jadgmert of the country. ‘The aleeves ase trimmed with ribbons to matc:. dered, the chairman sent a gentleman to ask {rom mea Know Nothing Disclosures. admired —the vacillations which left Lord Jonn Ras- | ter bad been a mild one forthe Crimea. But every | | Plain velvet, which is no lon suggestion of names. | answered that, in making his VIOLENT PROCERDINOS AT THK AYMACUA: Ghane a agi) Ue. } ivet, ger worn for eveaing, ‘ only ins; t HOU t ood a what feult fod, if Say. ten fone tt | Sree yas Bhs te ee eeihits Ye nice oe | Arrival of His Royal Highness the Ouke of | 18 Pay ny ge walking cone. Moire gg } spend ayion men" iheig-pedy retry ‘veusanae eon cee pipers: hehe ormmanare lace to as yalty gery ed evils of the hospital at Scutari were unamended, and | His Royal Highnest the Duke of Cambridge land- employed at tbe present time, bugles are quite ia lojuent and effective spesch, which was followes by hat te or the rivouity whice cle vee eiitine Shieh pnd no prepsration was made for the immense ac:ession —¢ et Dover from the Crimea yesterday. Itwasan- favor aca! especially upon velvet. They aremuch | characteristic one from Joba A. Coller, Esq. Appropri fh held Oo different, whotly incapable of deviding wi 1 | of new cases immediately to be exvected. Allthis deretood that the Princess Alice steampackes, be- vaed, , mixed with passementerie and embroi- | ste resolutions were adopted with enthusiasn—the Nip fageeet ter comes oot the best in the Cabinent disruption. time our gallant allies were only suffering the ave: | longing to the Dover Royal Mail and Continental der. Basquines continue to be much al. | crisis wa pansed—the whig party reassured and united, 4 by the It is trae that Lord Derby does jast incline, as tar a rage amount of misery, sickness and deata anavoid- | Stesm Packet Company, had heen despatched to thoes b with a me variations ; for example, they On Tuesday, the Bvening Journal contained @ frank Grand Council of the * he city of the jest will permit, or as far as he can be consider. | able in every campaign. Sach auniformity of dis- | Caisis, under the command of Castain Smithett, imes made with broad plaite—two behind and of; 'o onlah so ws Syracune. I presented my eredeutiale at the ed serious at all,in favor of the duke, but then he ter on the one bat such ive free- y ith senior evidently thinks the joke considerably eahanced by pre hin sd gy Ree Mae ictead, and expressly to convey the noble and gallant Duke to cneoneach side. With velvet dresses a trimmiog Mr. Fillmor these shores; aud jong before the f bis Ros of laced on t' ri ond was introduced toa gumber o the ciroumstance that the chief sufferer is the one | such lightround the tents of the Freuchcould not | Highness expected arrival; the Perak ee | etn RORY Geinaee . which Gack of toe Oreo bectctars,” Mid oe sen raged ts ea this shrewd jolene ee Tea’ cable rn al ag | ipg quays were crowded with persons anxious to An elegant dinner dreas.—Cap of white lace, with | guided things to a happy result, and his gratitude for ® my Council you entrosted ino ob’ lim: nage whose name at tl ‘ide. ia fe magnanimity which shielded bis name and character. trick, has done so with 80 very bad a case. Pet- | quire into the ressons of a contrast which we hare | teen tb Ateaphry couneene with Mas ebgtieany Beck 1808 3 poe (ape ig mpeg bow of wile | _ Hut the New York Expres, and intrel journala, hos. | 100 {82 bape, we shall be told that we exaggerate the | no right to ascribe to s miracle. The House of | but glorious stroggle that has been waged in the ribbon with long ends. Dress of taffetas, with plain plot, made that mestiag the oosasion of po go euser B ae ae a Menten Commons has decided om that inquiry by acrush- | Crimes. Tne royal standard floated from the Ad- body and two basques—the bot’om one quite plaia ; ither p aired aa te, matkoewaetet ee Galeaia 0 the edmiulenition, tnd ase thoan ont by ® ing mojority, that will at least bring whole | miraity Pier and other spots in the town; and such the top rather narrower, and gatvered, trimmed @ ment) and my M uaber of our € I was conducted to the ma roon assembled, being siding oficer, Mr. Barker, of New York, said \ Galore proceeding to business, | would a. opportunity of there bely sured om that pe & and feeling to bear on the velf. It was charged by those claiming majority of two to one, we have been told wee a etietaas Fe io want farther conse, | Cemonstrations as the short notice would allow to the bottom with velvet ribbon. On the front and apecial frienda, ax a acheme to ruin be made were to be observed. A guard of honor top of the body, and on theedge of the plain ne, | him. These wholesale accusations had no spparent effect h perso! that we exaggerated os feeling. evga n jBigel | quencea we forbear now to anticipate. of the Staffordshire Miltis, under the com- ata howe of pe: ar ribbon. Braces of wide velvet’ upon Mr. Fillmore, who, at aggestion bad written | ht! I toes be turnirg out ah ag oboe , ani Boe ni . a of Mejor Inge, was in attendance, btsides the drawn in at the waist, but left quite wide at the & letter to Gen. Taylor, advising him of the dangers, past bad not recely hesitate to say on country Lode rie | Mortality of the Enghsh Army at Sebastopol. Mr. W. H. Payn, the members of the corpo- sboulder. and preseat, growing out of his published letters. This grave nel eg gs ObRo etedas Seouied. wire From the London Times, Feb. 1.) | and ether local authorities; Captatn Herrick, Toilette de bal.—A drees of white taffotes, with mg lM ay yd aves macoe: 6 15 aoe pee, seo night’ It | When the dreadful mortality of our army in the | Colocel Streatfield, the commandant of the double skirt. At the bottom of each are checks | 7? ia athennd Ghoveentiton, Chal sions ee are ny let ee more | Crimes was brought under discussion on Friday Colorel Cator, of the Keat Militaa Artil- | tormed with Pnariow blue velvet, which reach to Thon another, audwill not think the internal {euds | 1st, Mr.Sidney Herbert took the opportanity of | ery; t itten before he fully realized his party obligations Latham, Foreign Consul, &c. On the second skirt; and on that to within twelveinches | tad that oters not intended for publication, hat placed er diseory Ayton even the | referring to the losses experienced in the Peninalar | the wrival of the Princcss ‘Alice at the place of of the waist. second akirt 1s raised at the side him in'a false position and that with a better yew of ofa just or ‘a beeen ogy B sped rvative | War, spparently with the impression that such dis- | Jandio ptain Herrick, Colonel Streatficld, Col. with a bunch of blue velvet bows and long ends. his relations to the whig party le would mimediatel humor Lary pon ling in sae aad its | aatere Were rendered more ex usable by precedent. Cator, Mojor Inge, the Mayor, and some of themen- The hort sleeves entirely covered with veivet in write for publication a second letter to his kinsman, chief. ges marker ate: Fron wan to | We fear, however, that it would be pf tosearca | bers of the corporation, proceeded on board, and checks. Braces of white teffetas, trimmed with . h_ would, a9 be hoped, rel war with “ gma By ‘of the right man it is | Vem the annals of those exhausting campaigns for sbortly afterwards his Royal Highness appeared narrow velvet in checks, to match tae skirt. g Ah Mage dee ee do its work. nef sake 4 many scraples, but | 8°y such list of invalidings or casualties as are now | upcn the deck. The interchange of civilities be- In speaking of the bonnets, the following will be poe ea teaen odie eye tag Se ee ee cat raanee Gin not invite | Periodically reported trom the East. In @ docu. | tween bis Royal Highness and the gentlemen assem- {cund amongst the most recherché :—a bonnet of ““{i'Tih.\ mir whilenitting om altermoon wth Me. Fil tabla ge pod army, vindicat. | ment now before us, and to which we shall make | bled was the signal tora sbout from the multitude drab t, trimmed with feathers of the same to the solema dat: bE ogy he within bounds, | farther reference below, it is stated that, wereas who bad now congregated, end amid vociferous colcr, twisted to form a wreath round the crown; in |e. stain ing our boxor, ine ping Russia ’ | the mean strength of the British force inthe Pe | cheers, the booming of a royal sainte from the drop the front be separated by an agrafe of velvet; — the efor that ia aa incurable jeater. vineula amounted, in officers and men, to 54,572, | redcubt, and the etra'ns of military music, the gal- | irside a scarlet cactus, with long velvet leaves on tha: m Contrast between the Military Systems of | the deaths in that force daring the forty-one months aut Duke set foot agaiu upon the soi! of England. one side, and on the other a bow of acarlet ribbon, England and France. committed aa allence ageinat y ai promise ia ed priors. Upwa aa dotag, a, aud the repenting members were rein mber of bo the rher Legislature, was Invited upom core of the meeting, awl iatre Proceeding lo do ng: ending the 25th of May, 1814, were 65,525, of | Notwithstanding the extreme severity of the weather mixed with black blond. A bonnet of violet satin, —. °! mm J voted for (From tne London Times, 30 J which number 9948 occurred in the battle or from 8 great number of ladies had assembled, and their entirely covered with spotted black tulle—on eaca S lorgubted to Fay tor Poy 4 mech a It would tax the best read historica| student to | wounds. It further ap) that of the 61,511 | greeting formed not the least interesting of the de- ride, tufts of violet feathers, shaded to black; the 1; ng, deawa up by Mr. Collier, which did eanaes thea te can pectnce @ more complete care of political collapse | men, exclusive of cers, composing the mcnsteationa that were so generally displayed. tulle, which covers the front, is finished by oh een justice, But, Mr. F. contiued, facts and circumstances m, binsing, stamping their bi lows, h me to my knowledge wh onged, and | ha 0 extending thelr arma @itis an that which it is England’s ill fate, sore cost, | army, about 225 in every 1,000 were, on an average, | A yee cone bad been provided to carry his of narrow black lace; a wreath of double Regal Hy crying out with countemamees flusbed had almost said, foul dishonor, to witness upon the sick list, ard their mortality was at bue' Birmingnam’s Ship Hotel, but with biack velvet foilage, is piaced on each side of this’ day. ‘The vast p ‘of that naval uod mili. | the amnual rate of' 161 in 1,000. ‘Taking these figures bis Rya) Highnees proceeded on foot towards that the face. ie tary organization which we have been nursing so as trustworthy, we shall find that less than a quar. | ¢ttablshment, acc: mpanied by the Mayor and other A bonnet of back plain velvet, with no trimming, =» sedulously deeply in ebted for these forty years, at the cost of ter of the whole force would usually be in hospital, | authorities, and followed by a large crowd of per- | except two be«» formed on each side by barbes of " : ‘ mation £15 000,000 ri ear, has gone ithe touch atthe or Vpeom 3 the — Aen words at a pagimnens sons, who Ne to pp cheering ve Ledbod ‘ilgh. ed mi a middie of sock tI ornament of jet. t tae eae ss oho .. noe 4 thro b at m if isin hatically and at | 1.000 strong, wou! able, gerer: speaking, to vers bad arr steps of thel hotel. jour | the edge of the front, a lace, about a quarter ** (0) 0" oe : n Stee keowteege teat | rune othe } nae ete uproar nn tee areetlieatl al ceguanten” for Eng: | bring epee of 700 bayouets ints the fleld.”'We | Duke of Cambridge was accompanied by the follow: ci u yard deep, forming & fall inside the front; 2° “2 Selick af unt aaleuiiea labour’ oie 2 The presiding oft oot control those present, end declared the meeting adjourned for ome hour. There wes still what it had forty years ago, and four | bave doubts whether the actual resulta did real! ing members of staff :—The Hon. Colonel Mac: bunches of moss roses, with velvet foliage. pon Soe it a cater, ieeeetions; and | correspond with these deductions, but anquestous- dcnald, Colonel Tyrwhitt, and Dr. Gibson, his Royal We have Jately seen an elegant teert of a novel generous :ace, no enemy from within or witn- | bly such invaliding aa is now trom the | Highness Spepeieies, vessiee in attendance upow form, called the talip sleeve; it is tight at the top, out can with impunity provoke, and which will die | Crimes was never heard of in Wellington's army. bis Royal Highness. The Duke having been ushered and finishes in two friils, having the arance of it surrenders its soil, ite rights, or its honor. | It is related aa a memorable circumstance calculated into one of the State apartments of Ship Hotel, 4 double sleeve. The edges are cut in deep scalloce Scourge mise pony r,t | fos eeSag eset Ratore nesac ae | tees woke Mie i sect i impostare—our mi- | most di inter A cause, ig residents @ town, pro: ir very m elegance ve, which in fiery arene es ae | when, after the moet blood y 6 ‘on record, the mus. for the Purpose of offering his Royal Highness an destined to be quite a favorite, In the fallest reliance on the native energies of | ter ot a particular regiment was called, only three ad0rees, congratalatory of his retura to England. Velvet mant es, embroidered silk and bugles, the British people, and kaowio, that they need no privates snd one drummer answered to their names. Thr y were very courteously received by the gallant are made in many forms; am: mnt graceful fair aises, and want the truth, the hole truth, But this was the renult of such a battle as hadacarcely | Duke; and the Town Clerk, Mr. T. B. Bass, then is one of small size, not reac lower than the and ing but the truth, we say that the Britisn | ever been known for obstinacy and carnage; the | proceeded to read the tollowing:— waist, but terminated by a deep flounce of velvet, tititated’aud ma is an utter | regiment in question had suffered by a oe May it please your Grace—We, the mayor, aldermen, at the bottom of which is a lace. The velvet and whew form where | wes stems ined my collar, but, by the | ftieods, | was saved (rom in stopped ere But never was anything more rapid than the pre- fo to my hotel amd aot at the place, but leare the city im the Grat Having 90 other burmese to attend we, I more then unlocked an escru tthe copy of a letter which he said be bad m | | ; jure. this mome: individual soldier is all | and it is added, thet many men who had been taken «2nd burgesses of Dover hasten to testify our unfeigaed flounce is covered nother of lace to match that py A yo tig Se | Cr lost im the eonfusion, Lecaped efter the victory | gistifcation at the sate return of your Royal Highuere | onthe edger Tele sosnte although light and ele ¥:0t Conti feel the smallest In the absolute wreck ot | and rejoined their at is once more. Look, | ‘0 your native country after the arduous and dangerous ~gart In appearance, is well suited to this season of the system the man comes out greater than ever. | however, at the ee from Sebastopol, and it Seay wieied roma ia Hf gh poten of the year, as the velvet flounce quite covers the ence a. But never did opinion, atter braving it out ana | will be seen that, t any such ravages Of the | ti suse which has fore time deprived her Majesty of 91208 ; Wosanoros Copmmn, Fortuary 15.— Nentiesp—Jee blustering so \ong, give way so suddenly. As it has | sword, these terribie figures find a lel im the | your Royal Highness’s presence Gs the MUL we torment | Taylor in response OOF | eee Ga toe y 12 . mentions “ey been our meiancholy task to pablish the intelligence | cousequences, substantially Bf hardabip | Ty pray that Mh may please Almighty Godtics you may | TM COMMON Souoots or Panusytv axis —We Mr, Hiilmore » letter aad the Club p te. The folio from the seat of war, #0 it has tallen to ust> draw | alone. Our own cor dent circumstantially re- svon be restored to health, xo that our beloved Queen have been fayored with a copy of the aanual re eut ite disastrous import. As we happened to be tied ‘te that on the 7th of January the 63d Regiment | snd country may again enjoy the advantage of the port of the rintendent of the Common Schools neither t> gcvernment nor to party, we did this more | Lad only seven men fit i oe and the 46th only | valuable services of your Royal Highness, and that our | of Penney! It occupies @ pamphlet of 155 keenly than our jess fettered contem- | thirty; astrong gg hod the 90th \ ey y result was, that wf after day, tillabout | ¢ighty or ninety men) had reduced ry may be encouraged by your brave and glorious pages, and is replete with usefal information. na few “ape We compile from it the following facts. They e. wher, by Glew were charged with tra- | days to fourteen file; and that the Fusileer Guards | The address waa followed by loud cheering; at the reter to the school year which terminated Juce |, coe, dam Castanet, by Moe 5 yours, 10% the 4 Sie ae ces ree Xspeail ion for some | could only produce on parade 210 men, ae | conclusion of which, 1853, being the date-ot the last official recapitala- A aflord bien greet pleasure - Moore's br im % vay — bd ao Se 4 oe petty reason or other. Here and trere we were | and sergeants incinded, out of 1,562 sent from His Rovat Hiouness replied to the following tion: hs ane! indeated) my U a's eb. Pateey O'Rattiey. by art, oat Pe even threatened with the production o! letters from first to last. This statement is corroborated by effet: Who'e number of school districta 1631 his for the si ry’ ” the army that could prove 2 state of things totally many other accounts, and, though it may be | Mr. Mayor and Gentlemen—I thank you for the grati- | Whole number of schools AT Dur ch tunaing hee beow di from that which was pictured in these co- | difficult to ascertain exactly the efficient strength fication you liave rendered me in presenting me with the Whole pamber of male teaccers 7500 lone lomns. Would, indeed, that it were in the power of | ot the army st any particular od, there can | present address. assure you that any inconvenience | Whole number ot female 40 bee ingle hres milen Jockey ries vith the follow ng rewult Club purse B29 post « y, , * avybody to eet the public right, and to convict us of | be no doubt about tke enerat act, The most ich I have experienced in the Crimes, | Average salaries of male teachers per mouth # above females y Margrave, out of (he damm of Jee 19% 7 exceeding the trath in this miserable affair. Would | startling of the statemen' bout the bra: i203 cna pt Mr, Vowler's gr. « Livia Arthur, by Gienent, dam Hine that aay one could really recail tolife the noble army | firmed, indeed, by a letter from an cl is to Wad; aad my 2), 89 PTO teen's ae Meas, ty Gia , that inoded ‘ant antama in the Crimea, the | lished, and in which the writer said pak Cie Tee ee ane oo cnege 714.286 too me at length fear, my MrT. Moore Hens y, vy Ciena, arm Ws rude burial p:t, from the damp ground ot the hospi- | “Imagine the trightfal mortality in the poor 63d; | thing but « soldiers’ igo. Led om as they have ib progrere, ahyecte aod rewults they came out more than 1,000 streng, and they tern by their indomitable courage, these troops have t ‘odigiee of valor; and I esn assure you lows do not exist in the world than the ting the battles of Britain im the Cri ery Lay oy their power to ountry Mr. Mayor aod cea (Loud cheers.) bm Kilen Kraus, by Here, dan Atlewte 6 on Ss i+ came oT 4! the conclusion of 0 Mr Alton's Shadow, sad Mr Forrester, «eich wan won by Bina f Would aome one could fill the emaciaie: | course, teke into account re that sat them agaiast azd in the batteries; nor ts it to be understood that | neg —%, a ry p aigg pda d ha o have uy the adveut man who was ve us the | died. Many are, no doubt, in i—we hope. this agreeable manner. On the contrary, the | recover—and some are now convalescent in Hodes is no the result, after all, ia terrible beyond Royal ena eft for Lowe 3 however, is not So Ging to be ap- the 2 P.M. train of Tallwey, | rLAtBCR OF Tum Kaxren—We are infsrmed thet the be carried along of verscit the ane will paler ao ew Very truly, yours, Fuceow weep relation to the progress of tae Having :¢ad the shove, the Henstor from the eter: — Inquirer, Feb. Ls. ‘Twenty-e'xth yielded the floor to Mr. Brooks, who A match 1800 Wee Gumoeneed te take (0) savin, \6O mike bente, betwee Mr Jone yy ae a! taapisiel Rages Soh br Retkeeee aes ae 5 oF « aed tors mate U7 brokea down, but a) +o a pesled to in matters like this, and prin- accompanied to the railway aon aivndinouiemn Goats ie be, Seles Sone, ween wudiealy one ennouneed prog fi « pol to ailence, or are only too eager to join Serer nh is Gow io tee seuss te vtioh oe who received him on . | able. "The ahsp was commenced in 1"2l, and was nearly had paid lariet snd comemventiy the rece would ast ivy universal ery of reprebation. ferred—being no other than the last quarterly return ‘uperintendent of the station, | ready for launching whee work was suaprated. Im the | cone of Tt. was bat the day, we repeat, that we | of the deaths and marriages, made by the Re- stall with ah | #1 straumship bill of the first version of ibe present Com To make up (or the disappan\meat, thre horses were seemed to stand alone in our accounts from the gistrar In this document it is remarked Taft Dover amid’ Unel cnsere, | £105, am Sf propriation was mais to complete her, with entared tor the passe of 820 fon estan’ mubdie horces, Crimes. How stand we now? ord Jou aswel | tea the'detbe,in'an sverage” year, amoae 54,000 arrived in London last even prey mpd pep ne ee a | Soe Bente, 5 eaten weights, which fewulted os fet ee ee te eee Somes (eee pO Ey es oat caipa lo Gis tony te thd wee alcuys covaltoret of | Dace Revenrm, Ais’, Fob. M6, 1866. | Mr. Commer emtered b. . Hisdow a « end Stee de peng cee Cr tee ery Bridge station the Duke was re- | Superior model, ‘The Bester te s-doubis deck or thgun | Dean ux —te repiy to your aot of thaday, 1 woull | Mr Mapped sb. m aye month ago be would have prediction of | to the be 446, or aboat 41 '” ames Chairman, Me. Tew | frigate of about 299) Wwas—/rrneer's (1) 1) Ohre | atate that ! saw Mr Unwere of the Joe pareet Mr Wrasse & ata such dentin, produced by « distance of seven | and that of the same samber aboat 977 would GPOA tae’ tu pee nit, fb ee eee