The New York Herald Newspaper, May 5, 1855, Page 2

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2 i NEW YORK HBRALD, SATURDAY, MAY Seocaive the latest {atelligencs, are utterly without infor- In France the gross cl for the army, during moation to-day, and feel cercain tha: private tetegraphic | eurrent year, is estimated at 340,000,100 wen earamea. desparches must have boca suppressed. Tue remurc is | £13,600,6v0, for whieh eum a military force, com bok she touched all empires and all kingdoms, Not obvious that tieneral Caurore-<’e despstch, cecapyiag | 878.911 men, and 90.000 horses, be kept on a war | only had Frence and England a ri: did Ger- but four Hoes of the Moniteur, is extrecely’ jejune and | footng. Under the besd of marine and colonies the | many bend beneath the weight of the “vats ae Gate unsatisfactory, comsivering that it protesss to giva tae | cutiay ts computed at 123,650,000 trancs, or something | upon her, bu Greece, Italy, Spain, Egypt, and all ealy reauits knowa @! five days’ contiauoug bomoard- | lers than £,000,000 sterling. Im addition it should be | the themselves by the ment, Iam enabled to stat» that the Momiteur one | rewembered that in the distribution of charges a large | same Liow in their security and inde] prodigy, have given orders for a devout thankagiving to the Immeculate Conception during three days, to com: mence cn Monéay next. The Pope’s cogmatics] definition will thus have an- other celebration, in addition te that of last week, when the Immaculate Conception was introjucei into the Easter fireworks. The girandola was estirely in cha- racter with the great ecclesiastical event of the season. | i i t : et 3 fi as to prevest ing toeir charge to the public; white it a lacs again rem delled !ast night after it hal bsen settled for | murs of pensions and allowances, annuities to members | carcumstarce! Europe had shut {ts eyes to this in- Ipnumerable fire baloons, in thi ‘tae. if the pexaisions system had beam the press. Noboty a: Speceemeus mah the mun te | sth Legion of Honor, and other provisions which re- | vasion of the north. In 1828 France and Bogiand, bura- the congregation of prelates given up, & jer adsition ove bees’ wade, wi these things are managed supposes taat the puo- | place rm the French rystem the sums voted for balf-pay, | ing the Turkieh fleet at Navarino, destroyed the force temple, column, end statue of the ‘Immacolat the pressure of who yout tare been tully counter- Vished despatch attributed to General Cearobert is a | Greenwich and Chelsea Hos: }, aud other ‘ineffective | which protected the west. At that ‘we goughs an forth with the inecription ‘Vidimus gloriam ejus.”? balanced by the good gained. textual copy of the ons seat by him. I am'told toathe | services,’ by the House of , are carried to the | ally at St. 4 of there an ad- As the topic of the Pope’s escape engrosses all conver. adds an ex; of his opinion that he will ‘not 5e | account of the Minister of the Interior. By so much, | verrary of our influence and of our civilization, In 1840 sation bere, soit has engros: all m; and 1 therefore Have the consideration of other subjects until my next letter. duction of 64, to 1 per to 3d. per bushel on wheat. At English Copyright Law. Fe ice elec he Bekeaey eat | Zing, ete cate oan pew oe chequer, ex- Eis ‘Quarterly Bre a cheerful in tone. The trapractions in flour and to effectually muzzle the press and prevent the circula. tion of intelligezce, Tnese clauses are:— able to the positions takea,”” Waat these positions | therefore, must toe French estimate be augmented in | Evglend, Prussia, and Aust leaving asice the Cabinet are isleftin a Rate of doubt. The despatcn says:— | order to justify a comparison with ourown. But even | of the bison tak foe Rooms By “After having twics ¢rivea the enemy from their stroog | after maxing ample allowance for these items of charge, | cion. Sel opal, closed to every in * ion on the left, we remain masters of them.’’ Does | it will appear tnat the whole military expenditure of | in ita inact ort the activity of ita Geotyarda mean the left of the allies or the left of the Rus- | France falls within £20,000,000 annudlly in the present | arsenals, did not appear to any one aga menace. It was sans! In the first case the success gainal, mast have | Hime of war, while that of England is expected to exceed | forgotten that as far back as 1605 a fleet left that point Deen on the quarantine side. In the second, the posi- | £43,000,000'! with 12,000 men on board, landed them in Italy, and tions taken must have Seen those which adjoin and pro- ‘The general statement of the French Exchequer exhi- | brought the Russians and French in contact in the Me- tect the Malakoff Tower, But the importance of tois | bits a gross outlay under every department of about | diterramean. Yet tbat was a warving worthy of record, jition 1s so well known that the Moniteur would not, | £¢4,000,0000 sterling, cr a littie more than the sum | for 1! proved that Russia from the creeks ofthe Euxine, And be it enacted, that the proprietors of every news- Ris presumable, have failed to call attention to the | which Sir G. C. Lews expects to raise in England from | by the domination of the Straits, could reach to the en- paper pe for the purpose of protection against pira- fact had we gained any material advantage on thit side. | the taxes bequeathed by his predecessor in office. The | trance of the Adriatic. cy, be entitled toa copyright in every original article, Besides, whea s general speaks of “the left,”” he is uaaal- | interest of debt in France occasions acharge of only | Some years later Russia, having to struggle against ing She Black fen again? Four letter, paragraph, ermancn ications “snl composition Jy understood to mesn Lis own left. I have been pri | 464,000,(00 franes, or about £18,000,000 sterling. Our | France united to austria, defined her invading policy | {he maritime Powers, Franee, Hngland, and Tarkey. | which shall be for the first time published in news vately informed that the gngegemante alluded to id in | own debte of every description entail’ a charge of £27,- | much more precisely by the object she pursued and by | Such & See aoe wissld Sues Sp icoseey $00 '1.'yazer: reality take place on th wine position, aui I | 260,000, On other hand, the French Treasury the means which she employed. The plan of that poicy | Hack fea and to oye tan Pha prycoin cea the | — And be it further enacted, that if any person shall, i gannot Dut fear that the ambiguity noticed im the Moni. | charged with a multitude of payments which on this | is a revelation in iteelt. We borrow it from an authentic | Shores of the Crimea to the entrance o phorus. | within 24 hours after the frst publication of any origi- | have its influence on prices. At present it is tal. On the other hand, there is aru- | side of the Channel are defrayed out of local taxation; | decument receatly publisbed in the memoirs of states: | | What Russia ha {hat she cannot recover by | nal article, letter, paragraph, communicstion, and com- | could be desired by the farmer. but vegetation is that tome very 08 moms bes 8 arrived, ani that it | ana the public palance at iso comin eon pery bots of | man, Admiral | Tichakoff to whem oa Peapere: serait East, What abe Mavtaniemcte tamien gst Apel pecdepe fookeeg h Cp ag dd ol ate Ko month iebind last year, and should anything oce1 is not pul in 1 rt imperor may an- | expenditure and revenue, that are incu receive! ave tke fol g instructions under » b 4 » ° - | injure the ‘crop, we msy expect @ mai meupee them fon tne fest time to the Boulogne nae I pe aceount of the communes, The gross total, on fie ” fluence in the affairs of the world. She would fiad, if | munication or composition, or of any material part “ ents wig quarter supply of this de |. The quotati white ae lls, 3d. to 128. per 480 Ibs. id. to 428, 6d. There isa sheht feeling in favor of an improved d mand for breadstuffs, and the weather will now o vance, The uncertainty, however, of political affai wish th sices, ie thus fictitious); mentee; but the net tute conduct of Austria, which has just allied | needs be. @ coalition of all states to restrain her ambi- | hereof, or any colorable abridgement or alteration of probands ou; oa, eral de tha the pmrnh eacired ‘for: ani ply iteelf with Franeo, obliges Russia to employ creed means in | tlon; but no one wishes to humiliate her Waat is | the ame, such person shall ioe every such offence forfeit prevents any spacoletyy ingliag, ond weet euaeat PRINCE GORTSCHAKOFP’S ADDRESS TO THE RUSSIAN | Seryicoq")—-ali war expenses inclusive—in Ieen than ous. | ite Dower to disconsert tho hostile intentions of ¢hose two | ankeld from her Europe has the right, and it is ita duty, |» gum of not legs than &, nor exereding £30. Seca Ne lersbe wal tats — SOLDIERS. cwers, The wost important is to turn to our account tho exact ‘she gran’ e peace of the world is ss. He Tribune ha’ Danube, large 4m Austrian journal pudlishien the following order, | half the ager gute cemanied by our own Chancallt of | military genius of tho Siavonio peonle, as Servie, Bosnit, | sured, tile object of the allied Powers attained. “Ifshe | coy teteene there Cebllinn tar aes oe Livermoctin: | Vessels have beem taken'up to load corn; this we com. the Exchequer. Must it be added to this disparagiog addressed by Prince Giortachakoll to the garrison of Se- | Contrast that, while the Committee of the Corps Legiaiatit Bastopol, on bis arrival on the 20th of Marct:— : > claim to have ‘ reconquered the military and political Eoloters '— Hig Majesty has delgned to appoint me to | trenonderance in Kurope”” at the cost of the enhanced | wit refuses, war will continue and decide it. Se. | read of New York, to prevent the entire British prow ig ay fesling and more ch ‘At the moment we write these grove solutions are, from publishing even a “colorable abri?gement” of the ing prepared and discussed at the Vieona Conferences, | American news, within 24 hours. under the above pen- bi ny np hoe pee ee ‘with ovr operatic h the proveediugs of tual govern’ he command of the rea 1nd iand forces in the Crimea, | 2 : Riso bn excellent sean foralarmiag Austr where M. Drouyn de l’Huys and Lord Join Russel nave | alties for eve SasaGh A taamnthaliie teen te tb Brave warriorg all using proud ofyourberoiccourage, | {bait bave nothing to nhow for our moucy'vut a compro. | “iyerien toner hile lene, and, Gonueqnently, for wetk: | faben, with the authority of thelr charactor and post. | 'x-editor of the Quarterly Fee de eee i oe and our great Emperor Nicholas on his deathow’, | ‘ised administration and discredited departments? troope would form imposing militia, not only to pro- | t#D, the expreasicn of the common thought of their The Very Latest. ” 1108, ; “Deminick’s’? and “Gurneys”” are held tarped his last looks towards you with gratitude. His vide against the hostile (Bre bi ‘of Austzia, but to effect governmenty, ‘he coma. must col @watt the ie Very ‘but at present do not attract buyers. successor, his majesty the reigning Emperor Alexanter ——— Tnarked diversion upon the right wing of the French pos: result of that decisive trial. It may say that peace wiil ‘THE BOMBARDMENT OF SEBASTOFOL. Scuse tafation Sanka Kapa eoOh ke he tel eee es I, ban dvigned to express himvelf xg follows, in letters | THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF ENG. | tion and to civows sure menreot striking a lowe i de concluded, if it is possible with honor'to the flags of Marsuriixs, Sunday, April 22,1855. | best brands support previous quotations. addressec to me on the 3a and 7th of March:—“Tell the LAND—VACILLATION OF LORD PALMER- rection of Nissa or Sophia, The object of the diversi France and England ana security for theif influence and Drave defenders of Sebastopol, in the name of ourim-| LrOW. spiel Azance mal be tooceuny Bernie. Dalmatia Cron | that war, if it should eontinue willbe necessary for the | | Your correspondent writes from Balaklava under date venead Go ie te serene ek octets Te moertal benefactor, that the Empror Nicholas was erond [From the London Chronicle, April 23} ciute of the Adriatic, more especially on Triesto,griume, | Object Proposed by the allied governments and from | of the Oth of April, 8 P. Thort midéley, dds. 6d to Ada, ca. with an’ comerd of them. and that he thought of them on his deathoed, ‘The minixters appear to be scrambling though the B yy t »lish there, according to op: | Which nothing can turn them aside. ‘The alhes commenced the bombardment this morning | tendency. ‘and sent them, through me, the expression of hie last and cordial gratitude. ‘ell our brave soldiers that I thank them in his name, and that I am_ perfectly conviced they were ‘always worthy of his pa- terval solicitude ” Soldiers, the most difficult time is ever The roads are better, travsports of every de scription arrive easily, and consideraple reinforcements sent to your support are on the way. In tating session, with no otrer object but to gain tims. They | perturi ekan feavend ta rane es garee get gabe Peery ts ape rtd Levy | during a storm of wind and rain very unfavorable to the | _ Laxp hss advanced 1s. per cwt.. with sales of 254 e seemingl; sei 1 being only a provisional go spe Sapee a tons, at 468. a 468. 6d. ; fering Teroment, mani‘ecting all the vacilationtn polio, and | y\eneaictlsned eh Sasi tidal yatetaaeat® Pon | WYALY zesotiated with Austria to allow her policy toex- | Russens, the veck bave been withdrawn, and. holders "sow al the executive week ness, of those secmsioes instita- | must employ every possibl to oxalt the Slave popu- pony ey price fhm vi Ao; paytecrees all bsg toty r= The Russians, surprised,responied slowly,the Flagstaf’ | 47s. a 48%. 7 tions. Considering the past prestige of Lord Palmeraton, | lations, to bring ‘ti to i i Sasa Sas brea noone = t thee cob pris mid unve tema ce ie soa fd doi Hee hs donee: Hhesvection of wsiavs | bonest act of the Emperor Francis Joseph. But the and Garden batteries excepted. TALLOW has advanced 2s. a 3s. per owt., with sales at much difficulty in forming an aiministration, such as it | kinedom, pecuniary rewards for the influential men | lied Powers know that if Austria does not succeed in | These doubled their fire up to noon, whes the superi- ha Rom; Ais $8. 0:4! 40.)/o ‘sania tbalbts ‘oglish fleot,and to make evei 1 0 . Indeed, perhaps it is saying too mach to | *™oDe them, deccrations and suitable titles for the chiefs | this noble effort of her European patriotism, she will ority was on our cide. tron bark: command of this srmy I am convinsed that, with | SPPaMte smplate whole. No one has over sven a | *24trcops ‘Finally, you may add to those meaus any other | peht resolutely with them, In limiting their demand to 4 : God's bie success will Gnally crown ourefforts, acd | fPii Clo tig eee ane Rett kame | fou mmay deem expediant ‘togain them over most conforma | the very conditions accopie’ by the Vienna Cabinet in | _ At three o'clock the fire of the Mamelon was silenea, | Corrox.—The market has not been active, but p that we will certainly justify the hopes of our august wovereiga Adjutant General Osten Sacken, who directed the defence of Sabsstopol with ao mach honor, ani his companion, the brave Admiral NachimoiT resume to day 4 fired Roun are steady, and good stapled middling qualities are, i tome lord or oiber may even yet come arrasgling in, to | "Such were the views of Russia as far bask as 1812, not | the treaty of the £4 of Vecember they have gained to | and only four guns were fred from the Round Tour. Saything” dearer ‘Sales for. the week, 40,590 bales,’ fill some post, superior or subordinate, the long negla only against France, but against Austria. This incen- tie rane gees ag fay ty Ace rivernba ly ¢ ‘The Redan continued to fire six guns. Witch 36,110 were American. of whose duties had caused it to be forgotten. Itis a | diary plan could not have left the archives of St. Petera- pet iy of peace, lin Sepaneeteg hae wees nee ‘The French have silenced the Flagstaff Battery. r ae mneeforth be only a fact ia common to the thre Pow- BARING BROTHERS & CO.’8 CIRCULAR. heir former functions. = GORTSOHAKOFF.” | Sher'Mahete's ministers >? The gentlemen who ail ce | creas Goole cet moment $0 show to Europe, td | ors who signed that treaty. ‘Tho solidarity of their in- | The Joss of the allies is fusignifisant. Bas Loxpox, april 20—5 P. M. THE EMPEROR OF THE FRENGH TO TAKE | the present moment the high offices of State—are they | rest that every one must have to put finally a barrier to | terests and of their eogagements would unite them in | The rain bas ceased, and the night is fine. the Colonie} 0202,® fair amount of business transacted COMMAND OF PAE ALLIED ARUY, | the ministers of the crown, or only the sutellites of Lord | a policy which completely justified by its means and ob- pe Ly oh Eereged Deppobes a pem origualr prbeag Vurwswa, Saturday, April 21—5 P.M. | Week. Sugarta neve pareoes daring the pa , [Fro the London Herald, April 13.) pr riche by party is the mechinery of the British Heirs of Peter the rent che ptd evar Ror esta atcen’ | triumphed over avery rerlstance, ‘ Perfectly authentic advices have this afternoon been | stuffs dull Money ahundant. Consola leave off 8034 a Te eins ae Ot the Penenerati | cometitution. Without it our representative system and | stentinople by the Black Sea, Austria, surrounded, em- | , France and England may, therefore, congrstulate | received from Balaklava. 076d., being ec nalh oe sege for the account. “Dollars da eure an honocatl plese tie Empsror of the Preach will | the functions of the sovereign become a moctery. Itis | traced on ail widen by the powerful arm of Russia, ae pos pir oe coor reayry (02 | the bombardment was continued with great energy up gone perigee Mid. per oz, Bar allver Ge. 0% ibe bape ae] Palneditens Se ene Bisiosns: that seeming discord come the harmovy and the vigor of | Hungary, open to its action by the Danube, would be | *trength. Their adbesion to an hovorable and possible ‘The fire of the allies had done considerable damage; 5 londuras at an: ‘ he support of Austria in ‘ in | Were all bought y from 3s, 8d, a 38. 11d, for mid. to fait rh . act on which bave made English legisiation tue aimira- | given up to all the excitements of its remembrances, | Peace, baving as consequence t! PI but the Russians display extreme activity and courage in Pare cuber Sistinguisted pariies necessary to such & cna | tion of the civilized world, and have iusgired so many | Ihe Adriatic, exposed to the brusque atiack of a “lave | ® Becessary Bnd: legitimate war, ie an sct counselled by | | rairing the injured works. Hemi teradac a ere a econo bn oa ea et “St | nations with the desire to imitate us in this respect. It | coalition, would cease to be the mart and bulwark of | Wisdom, and which will be approved by public opinion. | | TT Ag! 0 rity of the artillery of the allies | silver at Ss. 74 Perey pene: ack, with 1 Doudtless the matural reluctance of the French Minis. | #8 the implied c:ndition of the acceptance of office by a | the Austrian empire, and the key of the Gulfot Trieste | 1 One word more, ip conelusion. It is, perhaps, » nove te fact of the superiority of the ry of Corrm.—The inqtry for eolory sorte of Planta try to represent the imporisl authority in the absence of | Pfemier that he shall have a policy. Oaly in very rare | would pass by a surprise from Vienna to 3t Petersburg. | ®Dd_ bald thing to _— peg ta pap te diplomatic | is satisfactorily established. Ceylon continues, andthe nwecer rete tio the Emperor mutt sovner, them auvioun to teteie hts | istances—such as those of William Pitt at the outset ‘here ix therefore nothing more legitimate, more | Conduct of a war, w lathe aor ia ae ting and 20g0- | Several French mines have been fired, and have done | comprising 410 casherajor named, et a at aucti Tee and responsiblity ia Preoce ‘at the ‘proseat | Of his mipisterisl career, and of SirRobert Peel, when he | necesssry, and more just before Goi and univer. | tations sre Fen Ne aad ae Ca re Rotthe pines’ it at an advaDe of da in yor ewte or a Fie, and it might be weged by them shat the imtemote | wade hia first courageous stand against the Whigs, in | sal conscience, than this resistance of which the | the mcment to speak the Lathan a ‘etek ere on ylon, & cghesleac# pect 5 er Faraye rapes wors faael pine abo af Crain | Hein permived to amtatenpas ogtrasta wit the | two iva. goveramanty "the Wart pare tae ne. | 0M cane or te weak. WH tht and tongth | “Xows from Bucharest mentions the acvat of 15,000 | Za6* Abs aD earn of nw leper old Napoleon frou Lurope than even by a comparativecom, | CUtY of forming an a¢mivistration not to have 8 ma- | nal in the month of April, 1854 England and | on thelr side, it Turkish troops at Kamiesch Bay, and that Omer Pasha | and 102 bales long berry ‘tly cola af Sim a8 will soon follow with other reinforcements. Fast India partly sold at 858. 775. In fi : : im the House of Commons. A ministry holding | France drew the sword in the cause of every other promise with Russia; but the Emperor thinks other. | omy “ i loating earge wide: office on sufferance will never command the respsct | Stute. Thair arm es and fleets were the avant-gardes of The Austrians in the Princlpallties, ¥ 8, Saturday, April 21, 1855. we Lere cea fe Mert 2 hy salen baled Date} 14 office even without the | tre of war they had the right to expect they would be | OUTRAGE BY AN AUSTRIAN OFFIORR AT KRAJOVA— | rho following despatch was received at St. Petersburg ing 187,597 ae, 12th instat, comp: the country A ministry with a clearly dotined | Europe, Having the honor of arriving first oa the thea- 01 OPERATIONS IN THE BALTIC. scheme of goverument may bags at Amsterdai ot! 5 confiJence of Parliament, if it shall appsar tothe sove- | followed there, and they confidently awaited Austria THE CITIZENS RETALIATE— SOME HUNDREDS KILL- f with dog the foribentions of Rene Uroseiadt, sensbacs, | reign and to the people at large, that at novery distant | and Prussia at’ this rendenvous of the equilibrium and | ED- THE AUSTRIANS DRIVEN Ynom THE orry, | 02 Friday, from Prince Gortschakoff, dated Sebastopol, | Kotterdam, have gone off with Helsingfore, Reve), Wilbor and other fortresses on the | PéFiod it will conquer repugnances and command public | of the independenee of European order. A private letter gives an accouat of the trouble in | April 15:— ‘Corx—The dulnees in the mart Baltic Nits bees provisioned for eighteen months, and a a si * ac painistey ieee ee @ present or a isan Res ae ae goer ‘tyes meen bere carey Mr ers aph us The bembardment has con'inued since the 9th. The urure policy is an anomaly whioh never was contem- | selves in the solidarity of the interests for the defence of ‘n Austrian officer, on the saw ata win- Spine inden with rocks, have been sank at the entrances | Hated by the framers of ovr constitution; nor is itia | which France and Eoriond. wore about to fightin the | dow s lady whore beauty attrasted. him, ani he forta, | Samege Cone is immediately repatred, in such « manuer atatrecgth of the army concentrated | ¢ nature of things that it can command the confidence | protocols signed at Vienna they rvecguized the rights of | with entered the bouse and demanded admittaues to her | that on the 16th Sebastopol was almost in the same con- | Doe Ereriot tasks Boulinacar Henk a f the nation, either now or nereafter. vrkey: they rejected the advances of the Czar, who, | apariment. The lady called for assistance to exptl the | dition of defence as on the 9h. ry c provinces. Most of the British ad- | © I-welooe Dishes state otatieiees? dlagpooantn iniiie. | ae y, 'y reject 0 ui sold. Jn foreign there was very little 3 t daring to avk their support, contined himself co pro- | intruder, Her husband came, and addressed the Aus. garrison, 7 Yancra, squadron were in, the Great, Belt, detatood bY | relation with forcign nations, we are at a loes to know in | pore to them resignation and. neutrality; they wavtod | tr'en bud too civilly;--"Whet de you wanthere? To | _ THe 1088 mols Larva nana. c eM deer dat a rr pata wardly angie 96.342 4 Smee ee i eee ° | what reapect the gentlemen composing the min‘stry of | themselves by a treaty for the guarantee of German | not know you. You are not bilieted in my house, and | fire (feu d’enfer) to which it is exposed, must be con- | 7etundul. | Ty day thera was her lly say tt ye doing, an Twelve ships of the line, with four steamers, under | Lord Palmerston can be called the ministers of the corm | interests; they placed their armies on a war footing, | the la¢y you are insulting is my wife.” tidered as very small, as the service of the batteries is | $o0-\ed 70s. a 768, per quarter. Americacet” 40% Adwiral Puncas, had come up and anchored at Kiel, at —still leas, how they can be regarded as wargwiony her and they invited the German Con’ederation to follaw Wittout a word, the Austrian drew his sword and confidence of the people. The week just past has allord. | thelr example; but, while preparing themselves for | stabbed the hueband to the heart. covesee Uy saree Deren? pata bier i Corrox—S imi leas of thie Laat ac vices ed pretty strong ev.cence of the real state of the feelioga | action, tvetwo great German Powers healtated to act, | Much excitement ensued, Some of the bystanders | Nothing worthy of mention has taken place on any | Cyt7on-—sales for the week. 1,7) bales, atu pria HE VIENNA CONFERENOE—POSITION oF | Alike of the sovereign and her subjects. it it be object- | 1t was not courage which they wanted—for governments | went to Jo¢ge a formal compiaint with the police. others | other point of the Crimes. Gays quotation for mid. Orleans was 634. per \7eee me ‘AUS RE 14 on - <r ‘eae bes to ve Vhber| of = con- eee bave ne responsivility of the hcuor = ‘eter of do gisele ce os — weblehaal cay at Kalafat, “4 Kamuesca, April 10—Noon. ates Corrsr without change. ‘ voo0 St. * " stitution, not supposed to have opinioas oa State ir country at heart are never deficient ia that; t 0 lost no time ending to 4 boa] {From the London Tags, April 20.) affairs, the rev'y is ovviows—that this may be a vory | they wanted wes confiderce Co-interestedin the causes | infantry anda equadron of cavalry aud artillery. baptveonrm saerenetnc hed ates tani firth ge rere ot pe mae TA ayy hd aia eet, good rule when the sovereign has a minister with ® | of tre war, they were uncertain of its object. It was | A crowd proceeded to the Austrian General to demand | been destroyed. bonght in at 26s. Camphor—60 boxes broughtte ‘The porition and policy of Austria at this conjuncture | gefnite poliny, om which he stands or falts before the | that object which it war neceesary to define, so as to | the arrest of the offeider. The Gencral’s reply was [BY TELEGRAPH FROM LONDON TO LIVERPOOL] 808.0 81s. Shellac, of 1,735 ptge. offered, about ™ axe, undoubiedy, the most obscure element iu the af | people, But in tue absence of such a constitutional | leave them no catee tor hesitation or distrast. brief, but to the point—* Go to the devil; I won't punish Loxpon, April 28-134 P. M. . " ei q faire of Europe, and we purposely a2stain from foraing | adviser, or when the post of counsellor is usurped by a | The Fmperor, in opening the legislative session of 1854, | my soldiers for such fellows ax you.’ This brutal reply ‘s . found buyers from 43s a 48s, 6d. for mJ. to good Mivy aroused the indignation of the people. All the stores General Conrobert telegraphs on the 17th as follows :— | orange, block from 32s. 6d. a 46s. 6d. ickailver, any precipitate judgmeni of tho coarse wnich the Court | faingant, ihe King or Queen for the tina being becomes | said in bis epecch:— te ; ‘ ‘ts were clesed, and ‘the citizens assembled in the streets, | The fire continues unabated, chiefly by the artillery; | 1°¢- 418 11d. Saffron, 249. Tarkey opium, 18s. a a of Vieoos msy eventually adopt, Cautious to ex:ens, | im ‘iw le, onsi- iderate in all its movements, and expowed toacan’ | ple for thelr neglect ivi sect eee Miomaien Hict of interests such ao no other European Power has | the crown and the people—judging from the demonstr: \nows that France has no 10 deal with, the Austrian government has no easy task | tions of the past week—are unanimous as to the or: «ply wishes to resist dangerous outbursts; to perform. The slow pregress of the all-ei forces ia | which the country ought to tase at a crisis of great | ) roud openly to declare that tne time of conquests their operations against Sebastopol, the appirent ex- | peril, thatsome authority is necessary which shall call | jevocably past, for it is not by extending tae limits Daustion of our military resources in tae course of the | to account minister who systematically evades 64. Sefllower—815 bales Benga) at puis sale m ‘ ‘Death to the austrians! they are but one Cee cee We eet eer ta eras wat, ORS | but the engineers are operating, and have established us oi trom {i0e. «124, 60. for malddling, with low to gd Bs $8s opie of Huckatesy (the French) much nearer to the place. A general riot ensued, and the citizens, armed with | Another report says the lose of life has been very great | pqftgit.— The market has been vain dae : stichs, iron bars and axes, attacked and put to death . f had held, and i ~/ re- | \taterritory that a nation can henceforth become ho- | «very Austrians they met, "The Austrians, on thelr aide, | © both sides. A counell of war had been held, andit | not be bought to-day under £46. Of 1,050 bales zrenizement. “o nd I Minter campaign, the coatinued in*riguss of Prassia io | sponsibility, and abuftles out of parkamentary punisa- | cred and powerful; it is by placing itself at the head of | turned out end attacked the people, killing forty per. | ¥&# ecled to continue the fire for a week lohger, and | at suction, only about 100 found buyers, from £34 6s. the Germame ‘Diet, ant possibly the oath of the in| shtme ny vor" inoue art of Uelays Fenerous ideas, by making everywhere to prevail the | rons in the fret charge. At thiy juncture. toe national | then make the assault, Saws veld ae very fal preeeou Sia Tee ete # Nicholas, have all contributed to modify in soma | "Where fe thé cine? foreign policy of the country | + mpire of right and justice. varmes avd the Rouman soldiers a THE VIENNA CONFERENCES, ETC. ordivary to middliog’ 660 ‘bales Bombay ‘were m peé rn? porition of the Cabinet of Vieona sinse the } at the present moment? 1» it to be found in the public | ' ‘That solema declaration left no doubt upon the char. | ‘rians, and sfter a fierce fight drove them at the poiat of pe Satay Widatse, Avett $2 pieaplptediy srr Coy amfermrnrersng: Sosy treaty of ihe 24 of December was signed, nearly sive | acts of the accredited acslsers of {he fr9"n? Har:ly. | eeterof the war; italloned no distrust of te intentions | he bayonet out of the city, where they yet remaia en. Se NY re Ee ate Ss Fes tale bt caches were sooetiy Cpieed OF Mila months ago. Rather must we look for it in the hearty aséyn?2, cf the governments of France and England. Taunus, | camped in the fiek Official statements return 247 At the conference held yesterday the Russian Pleni~ ide. 6a, a £17 for middling to good. with dine from £: But, on the other hand all thé great polltical motives | the Queen and the nation together, of the crowned ripré. | When Gereany had the question put to us how far we | billed on both side potentiaries rejected the last proposition of England | £18 10s., and from £11 10s. a £13 16s. forcommon which ied Austria to contract that alliance are still in tative of Lies, on shose objects in coming here | ntenced to go, it was easy for M. D'rouyn de l’Huys, in ‘The excitement continues, and the citizens had not re- : Tall force and operation. Count Suot has repeatedly de- | simudisuni Cue tp cimulate the tamong energies of the | concert with Lard Clarencen, to reply in the noms of | « pened therrstores. They Cemand justice, and ure about | ®®4 France, relative to the limitation of the Russian ST et ee ee ee ees elared in his official notes that the restoration of peace | minister, to whom the people haaty acclamation confided | he Emperor in his memcrable note to M. de Bourque- | to send a deputation to Constantinople to seek it from | naval forces in the Black Sea. &th proximo proceed slowly, and amount so far d iw an odject of paramount nevessity to Austria, but that | the task of making their will known to the world, and of | ney, in formulating the general conditions upon which | the Sultan, Ne Lord Jobn Russell's departure is now fixed for to. | §o2roxime slowly, ani to 8, ahe cou)d not hope to obtain it either by # system of | puiting into execution their warlike resolve. Tne apathy | the allied Powers would consent to treat tor the restora- Italy. morrow evening. Inox,—There is no change of importance to noti neutrality or by the exertions and sacrifices of two | of Lord Palmerston in these respects is inexplicable. | tion of peace. Those conditions comprise what is con- NARROW ESOAFE OF THE POPE FROM DEATH— ‘Viena, SATURDAY, Aprif'21, 1655, We quote rails, £6 te, 6d, 026 128, 60; rer otber powers; and the discussions of the iast few days | Has he expended all bis fire in revolutionary speech- | ventiopally uncerstood by the “Four guarantees.” Renveried qua armanebiea ode | om ee TENNA, » April 21, Free os ponte te Waleds ineeh iea: 40 Le mast more than ever have convinced that Minister that | making, ail bis diplomatis energy iit petty intrigues to | | Germany, however, would rot come to a decision re eb nto rd ate a J fie met Pe a0 ne ee es Tt | numbers om the Clyde. 3t is by the active co operation of Austria alone tha’ | embroil foreign nations in quarrel? Was his boast while notes and counter-notes were exchanged between RPT) DOGMA. aftirm at the allies stat ere! inal con- ‘Larp fj 60s. for We peace is now to be speedily obtained. The conditions | vigor as @ foreign mivister: no better than a syste. | Viera, Berlin, and 8'. Petersburg, wer coutinued ana | [Rome (April 14) Correspondence of London News.) steady; no sellers under for Western en which the Ottoman ewpire and the rest of Europe | matic betrayal of “oppressed nationslities,” or s | éeveloped iteelf in the Crimea; France and Fnglani | _ ‘Ike day before yesterday His Holiness was as nearly | ditions regarding the third point, whien were adopted keg Th siderable activity in con be permanently secured from the aggressions of | series of cunning mancuyrea to open new markets | fought before Sebastopol for the common cause, and | &# portible crushed to death, in the monastery of St. | by Austria, These conditions refer to the reduction of | 3 Tet this eda sold Nacting Gnream Mareooees Russia have been fully aad repeatedly discussed at | forcotton? In ordicary times the pnolic might put | they lavished their blood for the independence ‘and equi ae extra ‘muros, where he had been dining with & | tbe Russian fleet in the Black Sea. It is still stated that buyers at adw@ncing rates. pels bo8 Vienna. Austria bas recorded her entire concurrence ia | up with this kind of ministerial sbam, as th-y bave | librium of Kurope. Finally Austria asked us if we woald ct party of cardinals and prelates, besides the digai | 7 4 5452 Russell will leave Vienna on Monday. ., and the finer descriptions of Azov 61s. a ‘the views of the Western Powers; for, in tact, 1f tooss | contemptuou-ly submitted “to so many before; bat we | stil consent to treat upon the basis of the four guaran- | taries of his household, and the French and Austrian weted, Frefent 9 eanditions were successtally oppose or evaded by Kus- | gre at the prevent moment in a dificulty far more. seri- | tees The hesitation was ong in the councils of the two | generals commanding at Rome and Ancona, De Montreal Panis, Sunday Evening, April 22—8 o'clock, | Fee Geluered. Om the spot there is a steady 4 sia, Austria herself knows that she would be the prin- | oug than seems on the surface ot things. This is mo | allied Powers It appeared to them that, after such glo- | #»d Hoyos. The accident occurred ss fol'ows:—The | The Emperor and Emprees have just arrived. Tix steady, Straits, 106s, o 107s. ; Banca, 110 cipal, if not the first victim. time for clever trifiers, or mere adepts in Parliamentary | riove efforts and such sad sacritices, after having gained —— paving for some time entertained a. strong wish to ‘A telegraphic despatch from Viemns, dated 224 inst, | a 111s. . But, lastly—and this is the most important point of | or diplomatic intrigue. The country cemands a states: | two victories, at Alma and Inkermano, when their ar- | Visit the Alexandrine basitica and catacombs recently > ’ sexs in good demand, but very Kttle offeri all—ap Austiis pisced herseif in a position of sntago- | man, grand in purpose and strong in will. We can no | mies wera benieging cebastopol, and when their fleets | discovered, about seven miles from Rome, on the Coaszo | say nan Re Rope mp tied caheane nism towards Ruesia, and as her relations with Prassia | longer live on traditions, or trast our national fortunes | occupied the Black cea, they had the right toexact more. | ¢#tate. belonging to the Propaganda College, fixed upon The conference held yesterday lasted four hours and | a¢ 35, 9d. degenerated into an acrimonious aitercatioa, sne thought | to exploded reputations. But the interest of an alliance with Austcia for peace as | Thursday, the 1th ra et examining the excavations, a half, but did not lead to any reeult as rds the ‘Ona, ven bine sold at £136; an. , At, deliberately. to resort to the French alliance, and to | We are drifting on to n political vortex, in the charg» | for war everruled the inspiration of thove legitimate ex- | 404, invited Cardinals Marini, Patrisi, Schwarzenberg, | & Oa int, ae Paice Pg pon heen, Olive contindea gan place herself on the most friendly footing with this | of an indifferent or animoecile pilot. Looking at the | actions. Tbe treaty of the 2d of December was the re- | Archbirhop of Pregue, Carvalbo, Patriarch of Lisbon, po Hpoll £86, Malaga £52 rite eountry. These steps have been already taken; they | prooceedings of our Parliament since the opening of the | suit of that policy. ond @ great antiquarian, Antonelli, as well as several The conferences are suspended. at 348 ob the spot, and 3 are ssactioned and ratified by a tormal treaty be | session, in what respect do they show our representativo It was, therefore, from consideration to Austria, from | prelates, amongst whem the Prince Archbishop of Vien- Lord Jobn Russell and M. Drouyn de l’Huys have d of good quality sells at 55s: ; crown 628, Pall ‘tween the three Powers, concluded for purposes which | jnstitutions superior to those of France at the present | the desire of an offensive and defensive allance with her, | D#, the Archbisl (dead Lublin, and the Bishops of Verons. Ladied'Senve 6f (ai-dieaibots Orta Collitsden Cocca nut £41 105. a £43. are not to be obtained except by force of arms; thattresty | moment’ The «Corps Legiviatit” at least adopts useful | and to give to Germany an unequivocal proof of mode: | Newport and durlington, besides the two generals and Congress, Of 27 was prpposed, and we mey almost say dictated, by Aus- | domostic measurer—-the House of Commons only votes | ration, that we accepted the overture of negotiationson | some diplomatists and lsymen of rank to accompany him mid, 14s, tor ‘good whit ria herseif; and we are at a loss toconcsive that, alt the . Amora delicate complimeat to the Emperor | the basie of the four gaarantees, reserving to ourselves | in his vist to the venerable remnants of early Qpr.stian Markets. ‘tons Bengal, afloat, ; woain political facts in Europe remain'ng unchauge1, a | Napoicon the Third could acarecly have been conceived. | always the right of imtroducing therela acy otiier con. | architecture, bey eth cat a cae AR ge i. 00. parece seed ee great power would ctultify and annul engagements enter- he House of Commons, it i¢ clear, will not mucb | dition tbat might resalt from the chances ot war. It so happened that the Roman steeplechases were to | The financial . sbi of ee Ms Lari i rs = 4 =, ge to mouse. ed into with so much solemnity bat afew moaths ag 0. | longer submit to have its fanctions put in abeyance. It | — On the part of tbe alliod governments, this act of mo- | tate place on the same day, and tho course was on the | chequer, sbowing the enormous deficiency of £7,000, b; Sa1sPeTRe,—1,600 bags at auction were sold from ‘The preamble of thet treaty declared shat the three Pow- | taxes a | time to exhaust a reputation sufh as that | derstion cost nothing to their dignit: nor to the inte- | sme roud as that tobe followed by the Papal cortége, | inthe estimates for the current year, after reckoning F . D . > ere were “animated by the desire to put an endas soon.as | which LordTalocrston enjoyed, when he was carriel | sesta whieh they defend: for, had it becuso, they never | which induced Prince Doria, tue president of the racing | the receipt of £10.000,000 for the new loan, produced 60,8 2ekn lor 3h pee. oma 2p (Bis fs, bi 2826 poe porsidle to the preseat war by the re-establishment of | into office on the shoulders of the people. Their rapre- | would have given their consent. In fact, there was bat | committee, to wait on his Holiners to inquire whether | bad eflect upon the funds this morning, and cansed for 5% per cent refraction: . eon a solid basi, giving to the whole of Earope | sentatives have mitherto waited ia reliance cn the mials- | one of two things possible: those megotiations would | the races bad not be better put off to another dey; but | ecntols to open at a further decline of more theme | [6] 1 Atco Meee spot that the | succeed or would fail, If successful, surope, by the | Pio Nono, with his customary affabiity, reques at | quarter p to reewed voports thet toy Viocus | _f¥ICHs.—The aslen have been seat pragerees ey pet pe i oie hye Hey Keene emo ope pod paeenpepnetiore Bich, f the public might not be disappointed, and the o recovery, owio 368 Rave co unhappily dieturded its tranqutility, and that | crisis was made for him, not he for tne . Thena- | four guarantees, objained conditiors which, four months he 5 0 R 7 a hey were convinced that notbiog would tend mace ellec- | fio did not make him Premic sorely to gratify hia nae | previsualy, Count Nesselrove declared ne. could only ac. | change mace was contequently one in the hour, so a Conferences will probably not be entirely broken olf, bE AA A es Os, Oa} or did the sovereign con | cept atter ten years of disastrous warfare; if a failure, | give his holiness time to get ‘back from the catacombs | coupled with firm accounts from the Paris Bourse : zane > tually to insure this result than the complete union of | tural aesire to fill that post. , 4, ; Sete ettorte ‘until the enrire reutization of the propoted | fide to him’ the chief pair thai he might dil all the | Austria, whose alliance became an offensive one, entered | before the amateurs of horeeflash blocked up the whole | The first quotation was £024 to 34, hut = steady im- Bees pene eo Cael ian cases coastal object.” The stipulations of the treaty were only $29 | offices of State with bis own covnections. It wi into armed action, and the weight of her sword would | road. & | provement wok place to si% for ‘money, anit 8074 | 2O re ae md eb ie a So 1 preliminary means to be resorted to for the restoration | thing, no doubt, to set np ‘Palmerston’? as toon ontain by war what her influence could not effect | | The Pope having visited with great mterest the cata. | to 0 for the loth of May. Omnium, opened at 2 | Coste aualid. oad, oA to oO et a | 250" @f peace, but if these measures were ineffectual the three | standard, to show that the nation meant to carry mat- | m the conferences, combs, the cratoriés of Saints Alexander and Eventius, | to 1 premium, and closed at 13 to %%. The tran«. Srneibevdiovee wen be. a5 ? i ei Powers bound themselves to concert othws ant more de- | terg to extremities az sins! the comeion enemy. But this | Thus, in either case, it was well tonegotiate at Vienna, | and the ancient Presbytery, where inscriptions hed besa | actions of the day were large, aad comprised | Zanniber stoves from Sa. w bied isive measures for the attainment of their object This een fired off, and the new Emperor of | while continuing all tha same to fight ia the Crimea. place in his honor, rat down im the venerable marble | mony conriderable | rales of the new tock, | | Linsenm Caxmsin gi definitive engagement, as we remarked at the time it was umbed. We are nearly a1 we ‘As regarés the conditions of peace, notaing can be | epitcopal cbair, sna addressed & discourse to the pupils | which, bowever, was freely taken by persons who have | P SvGaR.—There has been incressed firechess in the mar] signed, is even more remarkable for the principle it | were, as regards foreign affairs, and in domestic more just, more moierate, more conformale to the | of the Propaganda College present, exhorting them toa | +olc conols for the purpose. the change ef investment ket this week, and prices in some instanc+s bave advand establishes than for the provisions it introducas. Yhat ecidecly worse off At present, the Palmer right# and interests of Europe. It will be easy for us to | courageous mimcharge of their missionary duties. His boli | holding out an ultimate prospect of neatly s balf per , eded. perewt. The sales of Went Indie are 1,640 hnd, principle binds us all in common to pursue this work, cry has done noth but +rsede the Parl am: tablish this by characterizing clear! @ thought | ness then ins pecte® the severa) burying placos of martyrs, | cent profit when the Omnium, being no fooger unduly a Whether by negotistionor by war, antil wehave obteiued | S's atismps to crush the prees. This is the noble pro- | which dictated them and the object m4 they Were’ to | and distributed relies to those perrons around him; a'ter ed upon the market, sbi Louie marl trae SO SND Rabe Searenarad ane beet Meats beoupnt 6 all we are contendiug for; aud, if Russia herself | mier’s littie] coup d'état. Now, Napoleoniem isa very | achieve. The first of the four conditions, in patting an | Which beexamined the pians presented him forthe erec- ag tly sper: Coma 8895.46 94 La weed, | G6 9 2te.; avd 418 bhas, 47 bbls, and tierces and 10 of the Straits, but as yet | end to the pro’ rejects the compromise which has been offered to | good thing on the other s orate of Russia in the Priacipalities } tion of jb her, 20 other moce remains of eaforcing thove | we have pot puitier, 0%; lodia stock, 227 to 290; Ind. Sounds, 128. to | boxes Cubs (the first of the new crop) sold with grea} 16 wn ourselyss so incorrigidle that it | of Moldavia, jachia and S+rvia, and in placing | moeaic demands and executing that treaty than that of | «hould be parodied here. vi their privileges under the collective qusrkbtes ‘of | Props chequer ville, June, 48, to 7a.; Ms to Spit of ap ereenge aes fore ogee 4 nee eomquest. It in true that Franve and Eagland — the great Powers, takes away from the Cabinet of | can,) and havingex 10s, ‘peomtaea; end Excliequer bonds, 09 to 4. have changea bands at eee a ere 0 have staked their military reputation on the snevess | SHCUND MANIFESTO OF LOUIS NAPOLEON | gt. Petersburg the rights which it pretended to holdfrom | bad seen, prepared to return to the monastery of St. Severa) transactions were effected to-day in the New 2.800 boxes Havane, No 123; bry peice believed 15s of the Crimean expedition, and Austria bas not the sem ON THE WAR WITS RUSSIA. / | apcient treaties, and which were oaly the means for sub- Agnes. Whitest ing myrelf to the more profane | Terminable Anpuities at 1614 per £1 annuity. It is 2s, 80, for the United Kiagdom. To: ay, 3,000 b military interest in that enterprise; put her political [From the ?arie Monitenr, April 16.) Jugativg thove ‘populations, for dominsting Turkey, for | sxusement of the steeple cbare, I had an sopoctunity | considered the Isrger portion of them will be gradually | 212, 20, for the Usted Mlogtom, doterest im its success is mich greater even than o POLITICAL PAKT. approaching Austria on her most vainerable side, and | of meeting the Pope a: all his suite—cardinals, gene- | absorbed by the various arsur ince companies, Lead film, with large demand, Common pig £22 50! awa, The time is come when, if this war is not brought | After having tol: the country the whole truth on the | for troubling the whole of Europe; the second, by stipa. | tals, and prelates included The duy was most lovely ; | ‘There was a slight increase in ths demand for money | . Ltn fim, to an ignominious termination, whieh edo not ims, | pian of the campaign aud on the expedition to tue East, | latmg the free navigation of the Danube, liberates the | #04 Pio Nono, radiant with plensure, looked as hand: | to-day im the discount market, owing to the temporary | * 7° IN ssauenced by the lees pasifi: news, has ad to be possinle, it must assume @ broater politics! | it remains for ua to state how policy understood its task, | commerce of all netisu a csapactule ot Atstria—from | some and affable as ever, giving his gracious benctiction | witkcrawal of the large sum required for the deposit on | | TALLOW, influenced by the lees p spot, Sls. 63. for mex: eharacter. It is not th» influence of Russia over far. | its duty, the honor of France, aud the interests of Ka: | the moral and material obstacles which impede it, ani | to the namerous'racing partissna ies the oppo- | the ne 2. Seth: tha. fob July. k key that wo have to dread. for there it flet and vanished | rope, What were the general causes of the war? For | throws open the months of that grat river to the States | tite direction, with a smile which seemed to vay “‘Chacun | Foreign securities were dull at the commencem:nt of bu- p28, i q Defore our armies; ths influence which Russia bas suc- | what interests were France and Kngland to carry their | of which itis the fortune and the defence. é 30 goat” siness, but priced eventually became more steady. Pa Tea.—Public sales of 12,500 packages have heen seesfally established sud eaployed against us is that | military and naval forces so far from their own shores? | The fourth, in delivering Tarsey from the pretensions | _ Im the elcister of the monastery of St. Agnes his Holi- | chases of Turkish were made a: an advance, and fue, the week. of which 3,600, pepe atone which pervades the Germae Courts and & secret agent oft Saar coca Gan ts ic, the yi were sold witbout ms‘erial alterstion in pricee fly adalitted | comprieed—Branitan Five per Conte, 8834; Rastian Five eee ea ee ane oe it ch has placed | On what points do the dillerent States of Earope touch | of Rusma to a religious protectorate over the Greek nub | ness entertained his cistingaished gues? Russian policy on atmost every | upon this question of European order? Whats the ob- | Jects of the Suan, Dever thelees Assures more than | large bailon the first floor, and subseq Germen throne. The one thought which bas restored | ject which ought to be kept ia view for the interests of | ever freecom of conscience at the same timo that it des- | the pupils of the Propaganda College to kies his foot. per Cente, 0834 0 0034 ; Saroinian Five per Cents, 863; and RPENTING —A seas of rou to Austria her ascendancy throughout Germany—that a ‘Bow are the four pr 0 be uuderatood and the supremacy which the Czrs arrogated to them. | At’ this moment about 160 perrons were collected to- : Luteh Two-anda-balf per Cents, 62%; and Turkish caret “oe awe iaspr ae y83 — py po negen hai is, ever the German people—is the hope that the Em- | accepted on either aide as m basis for nezotiation’ Is it the political object of which, the better to im- | g¢tber around the Pope, when an awful tremour mani- | for the secount, 74%, 4, and 7635. a Sis, peror Francis Joseph has a policy anda will of bis | just, is it useful, to limit the power of Kussia in the | pose, was concealed under a religious insak. tested iteelf in the fooring, which his Holiness instantly closing sccounts trom the raris Bourse this eve- | © Wiis _ pabtic sales of Colonial will comeiducé Gu th own; and of all the discouraging results of the | Giack Sex? What will be the results of the Vienna Con- As regards the third of those conditions—that which ceived. and endeavored to prevent hie guests from Surther rise of nearly @ quarter per cent, | » 4 proximo Tbequantity arrived is aboat 25,000 bales, ‘Vieona Conierense the most would be the | ference, for peace or for war? That is what we wish to | ban for its object to limit the preponderance of Ras- ing alarmed at, assuring them that it waa the aboxk | making a total improvement of one and a half per cent ‘An English Joan for £16,000,0¢ ug mo ' independence of | examine in the second part of this task, thatonthaeve | sia in the Black Sea—we have reserved it ex- | Of am earthquake a phenomenon with which his re- | during the week, ie Ny from | dle inmontbly instalments between th: ‘thie young rovertign are unlerminned or destroyed. of the decisive rolution now under ashierement pubic | pressly as the most important and most contested, | tidence as nuncio in South America hdd rendered him | From all parts of the continent, recor ny from | , ad of the year, has been taken at a price — opinion, completely enlightened, may accept with equal | so as to explain is here, categorically First of | somewhat familiar. However, before’ any further con- | Paris, the rates of exchange continue to exhibit fa. | (Oot i! per cent for 8 per cent Consol, THE COST OF THE WAR. confidence peace, if itis possibie—war, if it ianeces. | all, how must it be understood? Evidently an;- | jectures were broached the floor gave way vorable tendency. atibatt 4 from January, scrip leaves off to- FINANOBS OF FRANCE AND ENGI, sary. thing equivocal on so grave a point cannot sult aoy ibaa a iyi nh nt antec ae TOY Seabkt came wera d Console at the price ot 69% a [From the London Chronicle, April The commencement of this great struggle is known; it | one. The allied governments, who have a conscious- | 82d Pope, prelates, cardinals, g-nerals, soldiers, and | lerge increase of taxa'ion st ber ~ | opera absorbed during this week . * * * . * . originated in a small claim brought against Carkey ‘oa | nese of the justice of their pretensions, have aot feared | Scholars were precipitated through it, without order of | dition to the loan, the budget has ex ters stock dealers, and we have httle of interest le Almost contemporaneonsly with the presentation of | the ground of concessions she had grauted im favor ot | defining them, Russia has turned the Black Sea iuto a | Precedence, amongst falling beams and fragments of | frrling. The oniy mitigation of ite the Budget to the Britien Pari ‘ament, the oficial return, | the Latine in the Holy Land. Russia only waateda pry. | Rursion labe; the bas gradually founded maritime estab. | masonry. Cardinal ——, g00d luck saved him | lies mn the fact that it incl; a6 margin o€ £4,440,000 | 12 naan or iat tae omen her of revenue and expenditure for the year 1855-6 has been | text. For ber the tomb of Christ was only a stepping. | lehmente there of the first claim; she has accumulated | Slone, of all the cardi ore present; he wax near the | for contir fee, besides ea pe dh ne Agri 1808, nominal a¢ 107 « 108: Massachusette published tv France, in the customary form of # report | stone to power. But that sacred stone could vot become | there, with as much perseverance as mystery, considera. | wincow, to which be clung for support, bat his eminent | | hich is not bbe conal Kaen expendi- i irom the commities of the Corps Législatif, who wore | a stumbling-block for the peace of the world, Ths | ble naval forces, and it may be said that by that exctu. | brethren Meriof —_ Patriei were severely injured in | ture. Ihe increase Re ad aye fncome tax specially charged with the duty of icvestigating ths | government. of the Emperor of the French, by | rive domination of the Black Sea she has placed Coa. | the fall, as was the French general, and a great number | injurious!y wl Gane ae ae a ‘nancial condition of that coantry. The two program. | regulating that question in the most equitable man- | stantinople ins xnent state of siege. of the Propagands ps ie < eighth per cen Batt) dbl Boor baad of its ‘mes offer many points of curious and suggestive com. | ner, forced the cabinet of St. Petersburg to unmask ite This atate of things is not possible, because it 1s im- Pio Nono himself descended unhurt; and sitting in hin | pressure om terminal 20 pn pe es surprise 4 varison, First, it is noticeable that the French govern | real thoughts. Every ore at once discoveret that Russia | compatible not only with the integrity of the Ottoman | Papal chair, and was extricated from the wreck amidst | was felt that » Sg) i er." aes be brought 2d mortgege, 80; New York | ment has contrived to provide for the war axpenditare, | had only originated the discussion to open the Bospa: ras | empire but with the security of the whole of Earope Fenner a ln oe Rtn ths AB Rl WE Ba BG is, sellers. 80 far a9 all probable outlay is concerned, without show- | to her sovereignty. The forced interpretation which sbe and Fngland, in demanding Russia to limit her | In gratitude for such an escape, his Holiness forthwith | the reme day, [anne do . said the contrac- ’ Satunpay, April 21, 1859, img avy ‘aeficlt requiring {0 be filled up by a lonu. Se. | drew from the treaty of Kainar’ji was, im fact, nothing | power in tye Black Sea, or to neutralize that. wea, are | lavited all whe were able to follow him to eater toe | tore ad to take thet contingency into thelrcaleutations. | 954 chancellor of the Exchequer brought forwaed his condly, we remerk that the whole charge occasioned by | else than the moral fallof the Sultan. The question th ‘therefore completely in their right. If that result was | ckureb. and with » lond voice intoned = thanksgiving to | With regard to { ¢ ape ae ri the y" 4 FeceiDt | ucget last nigh’, He p to raise by ine a the war seems to be far more under command, as welias | ceased to be a religions one—it became a political not obtained by peace or by war, such a pesce would be | the Almighty, and afterwards received the sacramenta! | «temp to Leip ¢ ob much difference of opinion taxation £5,360,000, as fol pase of far less inflated amount, among our allies than our | The whole of Europe found itself engaged fo it. It ephemeral and such a war useless; and, let it be well | bevediction from Monsignor Tizzant, seems to prevail as tothe smount I'kely to be realized. ‘An additional daty of Sa. per cwt on sugar. . .£1,206,000| ® nment can contrive to make it. came necessary to make it understand its interests, de- | obeerved, thie demand for the limitatioa of Russian | Meanwhile the wounded were extricated from the | TheChancellor aseumes only £200,000, but as far back Do. do. 1d. per 1b. on enifee *150'000 much larger out- | fend ite rights, and show its strength. power, Or for the neutralization of the Black Bea, does | ruins, and conveyed to Rome in carriages, mush to the | as 1861, Mr. W. M. Christy, who then advocated the moa- De. do. 84. par lb. on tes, possible errors and | All the efforts of the French Government were directed | not respond only to Anglo-French Interest haxgeiee Ot: ne iponendal, eitietae whe Bet anseuibin’ bt | dere, pombed cut as the sucaber of basi De. o,_onsp'rite. totbac result. Englaod, deceived at first by the pre. | also to the interests of Austria, for which ti the gates, and were consternated t» se so many priests | branches in the ani ingdom was about 1,71 A penny stamp on Bankers’ checks. tended religious character of the question, very soon un- | commercial and military river, is a magaldornt highway, with their heads tled up. Some disabled jocreys wore | that, assuming their average of checks to be 100,000 | ¢ Pe per cent more income tax, Cerstood, with her clear and straigutforward common | open to her activity towards the Euxine asia. sense, its real bearing. She felt, like us, the threat n: An stgument is brought against this pretensi arrogance of that domination, and her hand was atretal which we do not think serious; it is anid to | gero ed forth to meet ours already extended to seal t] the Allied Powers, “You ask s concession from ren Yay, anc at the same time to cov 0 ry considerable margin. His exp sheet includes @ sum of nearly £79,000,000 ster! ‘made up of items that are reckoned as certaint im adéiton, he demands» cred’t of £5,000,000 military services, anda further surplae of more £4,000'000 on the genera! account, to meet coatl cted from the steeplechase, but it was su od | each apn @ total would be obtained of £730,000, that the Pope's excursion would be by mo means uo dan | This setimate may have been much too high, Sak toot cet An lish Propaganda pupil boaste of having | that time the facilities of bunting ‘been constantly nee first to succor his Holiness, the sam» youth | extendes, and it will be one advantage of the ow lagen. . Y lish | liance bet the two great tri ‘ia, which at most might be the price of the sur. | Who was reciting © congratulatory sonnet to the Pope | post that it will increase steadily with the growth of Daten ee ey LIMMICOOT: Dieta teary | civiliation of ta Women nr ener ee "of Sebastopol, and that place i+ still held by the | when the floor. gave way. ‘and was consequent’y in im- The only obiection rant to tt sgpeacy to WHIG NOMINATIONS IN PRIVIDESCE, Rete $16,163,000; and for the ordnance, £7,808 000, during | For France, as for England, the Eastern question re- army.” Ock reply Je thia:— the lew of nations | mediate proximity during the descont to the regions may induce persons te hoard sums, | The whigs of Providence have made tha follo f that of th portion jat is obtained by war may ‘the current year. Including the supplemental vote of | presented an interest superior to 7 eredit he pur down the gross anticipaied charge for mili- | bition, Russia wished to. Gomuuia ns eaetinee, of frequently drawing checks, sicanie city officers:—For Mayor—k. great iy va rhe sd bans ae ope iewee 7 0 t ie Ram, ‘aivtrven'ef the t 1s Sebastopol at the preseat mo 80) ba bronen the Pope’s fall by ren- ‘r end inconventence of that practice woald y ies ¢ s voi! the wecersity rd + carpet, which had been spread: over the | and vill thus contract the circulation; butes the dan: Ward 1, Tsaec Thurber: wa: We have not yet taken Sebastopol, below. ‘The see tt al; but, to whatever tutel In 1853-4, the Wa iro) ara, | Black Sea, having only ti her hand to toach.the no longer a naval port, as her | dering 5 ar reminded that the military mem | vp us amy Bosphorus, placed the Mediterranean under the menace | fleet, ru the mouth of the harbor, or shut up be. | ence we may choose to een it, his Holin £16,500,000, and last year the cutlay presented @ total of | ef the fleets of Sebastopol. In advancing towarin the | hind th ble barrier, is withdrawn from the | taimly:did escape sa! pene ‘datlle over £50,000,006 Dardanelies she brought her frontiers to the thores of the | struggle. The Sea is the battle-fleld which we | cipsl-council end senste, viewing a penny, very ths Darling: a7, . Holder 7 ground so desirable an experiment. ward ¢ hes A¥elined, and the delega‘e: from the wari duties om sugar, coffee and tea, hae the conventicg@ will Gl! the vacancy,

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