Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 P NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1855. ae —— i AF far will serve to meliorate her condit’on. What that | enemy Se 1, whi was alread; more than | of thirty-five, and delivered the city to the fdames. | months, The island is mow perfectly healthy and it is Interesting from the Rio = AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. ™ | or oe ee y Sing ‘When the troops had passed into the northern part, the | expected businers will revive aboat the middle of Oc. OUn MATAMOROS Soke Job sa unfortunate country wants is unity, not red republican- But the evacuation of the city in the ofan army of | bridge was b ‘up. On the 9th September, afer the | tober. . ROS CORRESPONDENCE. Our Paris Correspondence. ism and socialist freedom; and an approximation toward | 9 hundred thousand men, whose a s touched upon | evacuation, the explosion of batteries 7, 8 and 10 took ‘Lhe vessels of the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, of ee ere Meng nag ret : which this is the great West Iudia rendezvous, tonch’ at Parbados, Demerara, Trinidad, St. Kftts, Antigua, @ Galvupe, ‘Lominique, Martinique, Tobago, St. Luci, incent, Jumaica, Nassau, da, 2, Ce ‘ if —Organi: ratianal Greytown, Carthagena, Santa Marthe, ‘Jucmel Havana, | £toi—Ancther Morif—Onganteation of the Ni Vera Cruz, Tampico, Ke., &e., from whence they coller Guards—bever on the Rio Grande—American Blections. reat number of passengers, who, toge'! a, is exes ys * the forwarded. 10 Soutpampton’ every fortnight: How | ycite fate ct bis ex serene Tighneae! “loyal tro>p4,” W nderfuly strange 1 is that, with all the energy and en- oe esac arisirel pay deo pth terprisé of our people, no American has conceived the | Isted, and on the 5th inst. the agreement for the pur- idea co mammoth steam packat company at pore was formally entere} into on the part of the com. St. Thomas. The monopoly bas made the oft company’s vessels surly, crabbed, and ‘coneeqeenris | missioners appointed by the contending parties. We odious to those who of necessity travel with them. The | dave at last succeeded in humbling these arrogant fellows, inion tt ee ng tan ie made in Sbvut Bteen | whose very preveuce on this frontier was am insult to ite York Qught to be mace in Gve to nix days, (it being lees | CMMTen. Sativtied, as we are, with the triumph ob- than 1,400 miles.) Sixty dollars for each pasrenger would | tained, we bitterly regret, nevertheless, that the imcen- 'y well, Our steamers are ten days from New Yor« to | disry petty despot, Woll, by escaping in time, has cheated Piverpcot, and charge about $120. A firat class Awerl of his of inbale pala reg tripe & month, leaving this rian | te hangman out of his dues. Their days of nt Hmultaneously “with the! Southampton ‘teatier twuing | Power are now among the things that were, and they “round tickets” from St, Thomas to Liverpool, via N will in hola banks York, at $170 (by an arrangement with Cathiigg Pace en ee a ne other Furopean line), would, in three months after the . cate of ber firet trip. get emajority, and in ime eight | PY ‘he terms of the capitulation their entire force, renthe of rhe travel; for the West India people perfectly | with the exceyiiom of such of the troops as shall undere peri of spaennen ee. sapere en ee Loose to remain as national guards, will be allowed tc-| sasdeinioh-aee withh Samunaah notes depart, each soldier to have bis arms, accoutrements and ‘When we add te this (he pocesiage ofc the mar- | { ur rouns of ammunition; to be furnished the animals: seta of New York, el pl ton and timore | necessary for removing their baggage, one month’s pay» pices nom “thged thet that wonsit at the Wark six pieces of artillery without ammunition, three of these: India merchants who visit Europe to purchase goods, | pieces to be given up at the end of the first day’s jour- would prefer this route, So that the merchants of our | ney, and ihe other three to be left wh8rever the govern- went cities are deeply interested in the success of such a ae cuter, p Seesiy intocedten in . ncoess of such | ment and commandiog general of Tamaulipas, Garza, may lars which now annually find their way to Europe, would | @etermine—every species of property considered a: be- breed ie the Unit be tenense she opging to the governmen’ to be delivered over, and the otal interests, Tora Rpene stab Ma her ncn, | entire brigades to be subject to Governor Garza’s orders, They of course acknowledge the supremacy of the revolu- prompted by a desire to monopolize the West India trace, long since established mail routag through | tionary gevernment, and now declare that they always have been the warm supporters of federal institutions. the agency of the Royal Mail Steam Packet COmpany, to all the peints indicated, by which she bas secured a vast amount of trade which otherwise would have been lost to | Such bas been the end, on this frontier, of these depraved her. ‘The West India trade has also been a primary object | ™D, who are cooing doves in adversity, and heartless of interest with our government since the da; not Washloge mpires when in power. ' tcn, No less than six negotiations were carried on between | , Ut the 10th, 11th and 12th ultimo, s conflict of arms. the United States and Great Britain on this subject pre- | took place between the troops of Tamaulipas and Nuevo vious to Jackson's administration, and not until the'sth | Leon, and those stationed at San Luis Potosi, when, day of October, 1880, was this trade entirely open to our | through the intercession of General Comonfort’s commis. vessels; and though it hus increased greatly since that | *ioner, # suspension of arms fur seven days was agreed ‘ime, and our merchantmen, freighted with the rich pr>- m. Sante Anna’y General, Parrodi, with Crus and ductions Of our country, seek every port and market of | Others, commanded the regulars, and Col. Zuaza com- the Antileryet we have no ee tinned mail conte to ded our forces, composed altogether of riflemen. any of the West Indies, and depend entirely upon tran- odi having violated the truce, Luis was taken sient sailing vessels for the conveyance of our mail mat- | Pcssession of by our —— and Parrodi, with his ter—often important, as well to the government as to | Minions, sought safety in flight erehanee On the 19th ultimo, the Bishop of Linares, commonly It strikes me, therefore, that policy dictates to the | called of Monterey, a-rived at the latter city, when he fovermment thet, to protect and increase « trade which | ¥4# received with ull the pomp and cireumstance due to Ban heen eld tobe wo important, our merchants should His dignity, and characteristic of people essentially Ca- laced in direct, certain end 5 communication ae § mith the merchants of the Wert indiesand whens sin, | , Governor Vidaurri bas published a decree allowing the gle steamer running between New York and St. Thomas | {mportation of common salt her js the ports of entry Would give us such communication with so many im- | om ‘his line, on ite paying a duty of one dollar per fanc- portant points, which are now so inaccessible, that a let- | 9%; (@ messure of twelve pecks.) ter sent from the United States, by the way of Pngland, | _ tue National Guards are being organized over the reaches them sooner and more certainly than to wait ¢ | Whole country, from the Sierra Madre to the Gulf of Mexi- direct opportunity by sailing vessel, there should be no hesttation on the part of the government in giving a liberal annual bonus to a company that would contract to earry the mails twice a month by steamer, Our intrenchments, presented the greatest difficulties, and | place. In ‘the afternoon, the battery of Paul blew ap, required the choice of the most favorable moment. and «mall powder magazines in the baitery Nicholas also Turing this time the enemy contiuued, from the Sth | exploded. September, to increase his horizontal and vertical fire 't is thus that, after a siege of 340 days, the garrison with an incredible violence, and was pulverizing our | abandoned the south side of Sebastopol. Tne enemy, works on the whole line of defence, sometimes firing sa!- | controlled by the impression produced upon bim by this Vor fivta all his batteries—sometimeskeepingup « rolling | hercic and sanguinary defence, did not even dream of fire of artillery. This infernal fire, di prineipally | pursuing the Russian army. Very little loss was sus- against the embracures and merions, showed evidently | tained im passing to the north side. that the de-ign of the-enewy was to di mount our guns, ere destroy the ramparts, and attack the city by assault. | he Financial and gvod Crisis in France. Our gunvers were falling in great numbers, and could aot (From the Paris Patrie, Oct. 7. be replaced. From the Sth to the 8th of September we | ‘The Bank of France has by a recent decision ruised its had placed hors du cumtat three stall officers, seventeen | rate of dixcouut to 6 per cent, and decided not to receive superior oficers, ano three thgusand nine hundred and | notes on longer time than 75 days. The Bank of Kagland, seventeen soldiers, without counting the servants of the | on its side, has raised the rate of discount to 53 per cent. batteries. These are evident symptoms of an existing ‘eusivn of the ‘After a redoubled fire on the night of the 7th-8th, the | monetary market cf the two countries. ‘The question is enemy at six o'clock in the morning discharged from the | to know whether this situation 1s connected with cause trenches nearest to the erniloff tastion three mines, | purely economical, er whether it is the consequence of cwhich overthrew a portion of the parapet and the mer: | the state of war in which the two great Western Powers Jons at the salient of the bastion. are engnged. ‘About the same time the enemy’s columos began to | — ‘The loyalty with whish the French and English govern- form in the direction of the Knglish 22-gun battery, | ments have treated in the face of their countries and of Gnd in the second parallel bebind the ‘amtechaths | furope, the question attaching to the present war ; the junette, and the troope bad soon filled up theapproaches. | candor which they have exhibited in making known thy Our line of detence wae-divided iuto two parts, following | charges which the war would impose upon the tax payera, the nature of the soil. ‘The detence of the front of the | alluwed them to enter fearlessly on the discussion ast) city, westward of the southern pay, wax coniided to | the influence which the war might have exercised ovar Licutenant-General Semijakine; that of the front of the | the economic situation ofthe two countries. It is beyond Karabelnaia was under the orders of Lieutenant-General | coubt that the war bas had an appreciable influence on Khrouleff, The right line, or the line of the city, was | production, on consumption, and on exchange. cempored of section: ope and two; that of the Karatelnaia | But we may boldly say that it is not to war that we was formed of seciions three, four and five. At the news | must attribute the greatest part of the financial difticul- that the enemy’s troops were collecting in masses in the | ties of the moment. If, indeed, we analyze tue figure of Advanced trenches faclng the Malakoff fill the ninth di- | the expensee of the war, we must recoguize that the un vision of infantry, under the orders ot Lieutenant-Gen- | productive expenses, the net losses, form the least part of eral Khrouleff, posted {tsef on the second line of defence. | them, and that the service of provisioning, of transport- ThesSth September, at 1134 o'clock in the morning, the | ing, of food, of camp utensils, &c,, &e support. nu- enemy left bis trenches, «ad threw himself ina swarm | merous brarches of industry, andigive work to thonsanss on the salients of the bastions No. 2 and Kerniloff. of herds which, would perhaps have remained inactive ‘The sosses being filled upead the parapets demolished, | were it not for war. he did mot. meet a very lively resistance, After having | Whatever is done, there will be always, in rich coun- penetrated into bastion No.2, and spiked @ portion of | tries like France and England, masses of floating capital the guns, .he had already reacked the second line of de- | which will never be engaged, either in the serious opera- fence. when he was driven back at the point of the bayo- | tiona of egriculture or in those of industry and regular net by Muyor Iaroschevitch, at the head of the battalions | commerce. They seek only adventures speculation, pro- of the Bjeloser regiment. "In the meantime, Ma or Gene- | Jific in riske as we'l as in tavorable chances, In time of ral Sebaschineki hastened with three regiments on bas- | peace it is thrown away often on the most futile objects, tion No. 2, and repulsed successively three attacks on | and is delivered up to the most unlimited gambling. that point,’ whilst the vessels moored in the bay of Kara- | But war makes the speculators more circumspect, more belnaia and the northern batteriee kept up a violent fire | suspicious. These capitalists, which formerly made adven- aguinst the asgailing columns. At the first news of the | tures, as may be said, appear to range themselves in assault, Lieutenant General Kh; ouleff came to the aid of | more serious operations. War, making more consiterable dastion No. 2 with a regiment of chasteurs, but the | demancs on certain products, they speculate enemy having been already repulsed, be posted himself in | Hence a momentary yoid in the monetary market , the second line af cefence. The enemy penetrated anew | the fail. ‘This is not beeause there is less disposable ca- near the chevauz de frise, overthew tke regiment of Mu- | pital, but that it is less adventurous. In ordinary times rumski, but was again repulsed with the bayonet by the | uncurbed speculations are brought to a ievel at the end of regiment bjewski, four or five years, on an average, by a commercial crisis, ormous masses, consisting of five French divisions, | sometimes on one pretext, sometimes on another, but the forming an effective force of about thirty thousand men. | force of which is rigorously proportioned to the extent ot then precipitated themselves on the sadeata of the Kerni- | the follies of speculation. loff bastion, Colonel Freund again repulsed the French |. But that which a commercial crisis does in times of with the bayonet, at the head of some companies; but as |" peace in a rude and almost always disastrous manner he had been wounded, and as the columas were still | war, which vever breaks out unexpectedly, does also preasing ov, more numerous, they sized upon the upper | though with less shocks, This point of view ia so trae extremity of the bastion, General Khroulef was wound- | that the experienced editor of the money market ar‘icle ed in an attempt to dislodge them. Major General Lyx- | in the London Times wrote yesterday that the English capi- xenko, who succeeded in command, also received a | talists who were engaged io enterprises of railroads and serious wound; Major General Juscrow, who succeeded | public works on the comtinent at the time the war broke him, was killed, Lieutenant General Martinan then took | out, will have to thank Russia for havixg saved them the command of the troops, but he also received a severe | from # commercial crisis. wound, | A large portion of the comaanders of regiments | The measures of prudence adopted by the banks of and battelions were killed; the officers also strewed the | England and France will probably have for immediate ef. Panis, Oct, 11, 1855. The Most Interesting and Delicate Topic of the Day—4p- proaching Advent of Another King of Kome—A Peep into Futurity—Accouchers the Great Political Agents of the Day—Dribois versus Locock—Another Move to Draw Closer Political Afinitics—-Grand Agricultural Schemes —The War, ée., de. Tho long anticipate! offic’al announcement of the Em- press’ approaching eccouchement has at length been made in the columns of the Moniteur. ‘After this, of course, there is no room for doubt, and the vexed question of the salons is imperiously set at rest, It is certain that the famous accoucher, Dubois, whose father atten ied the accouchement ef Maria Louise, refused to confirm the Empress’ hopes some three months ago: and even Dr. Lecock, the Queen of England’s ac- coucher, who was sent, for, much to the anmoyance of Dubois, was so cautious in his expressions that the most niimate members of Hor Majesty’s circle were misled. Of course, latterly, mo doubt whatever has been enter- tained; but it ie satisfactory to hear from official authority that the Empress has now successfully passed that stage when accidents most frequently happen and that simply in a physiowl point of view no rational fears need be entertained for her well-doing. Politically the subject is a very interesting one, and doer not fail to at- tract the attention of many whose lucubrations extend Sarther than “Our Lady's bower.” Napoleon was born 4m 1808, and before the birth of an heir will probably be forty-eight years of age, and-before that heir can attain that period of discretion, which is supposed to exist somewhere about twenty-one years after birth, he must “be within & twelve-month of the appointed age of man— ‘three score years and ten. Supposing him to be se for- tunateas toescape the assassin’s dagger, the perils of warfare, or the natural consequences of disease acting on ‘an o’er wrought frame, and to attain this allotted course ‘ef man, is there anything in the present state of French 4mstitutions—for which this event is called by the Meniteur . wew guarantee—whick would lead one 4o hope they could be maintained in the hands ofa tripling! Talent we know is, in the justice of Pro- vidence, not hereditary; and if, by an exception, itshould prove so in this case, the great school of discipline In awhich the fa‘her inproved his would besranting to the son. The golden balls of the Tuileries cau never be to the son what the waters of the Pacific and the dungeons of Ham were to the sire; and the existing institutions of France are all made fer a clear head, a firg hand and a determined will. But suppose the ordinary vicissitudes of life to assert their usual prerogative, and # youth of twelve years of age is left under the guardianship of a wegency. The republicam danner would be at once un- furlec, and if its adherents were put down, it could only be by an.exercise of authority placed in the hands of one man, snd wielded with an energy that would make him’a dangerous neighbor to # new fledged throne in abeyance for a minor. He might seize the Vacant chair that unity may be made before the close of the ensuing winter. This is, of course, a matter which must be set- tled between France, England and Austria. Neither Prussia nor Russia will be comsulted about it. If the form of government should be changed in Naples. it will not be for the purpose of conferring power on Mazzini and Lis red republican friends; but, in all probability, to in- crease the power and intluence of the King of Sardinia. ‘The sensible men of Italy seem to be satisfied with this arrangement, the x-President of the Venitien republic having expressed himself in # letter to thateffect. He says, very truly, that before you can have a republic of Italy, you must heve Italy; aud is you cannot bring Italy at once under one head, you must, at least, endeavor to diminish the number of heads aow existing. In the present status of Italy, Austria is the preponde- rating power, not only on account of her German and Hungarian provinoes, but because the kingdom of iom- bardy and Venice is larger and more powerful than any other Italian State. If Naples and Sicily were added to Sardigia, then that kingdom would be the prependerating power in Italy, and preserve her independence as against Austria through its diplomatic relations as # European power. It is natural for Mazzini, Ledru Rollin and Kos- suth, to seek that solution of the historical pro- blem of Europe which promises the e-cstab- lishment of the condition in which they them- selves played the most conspicuous parts; but that state of things is now impossible, and not desired by he majority of the people. A socialist republic car only be estabkixhed on the total overthrow of the — state ‘and on the ruin of the present domestic and reli simstitutions, Out of a thousand who are.dis- satiated with the political.condition of Europe, there are not, perhaps, five possessing the smellest property or any substantial trade, who desire even freedom at suck @ rice, and the question isby no means settled whether eedom, without tbe institution of religton and of fami- Wy, (wbich ts par cacellencea product of Christianity), could exist long enor even for a fair trial. Neither is the union of Mazzini, ru Rollin and Kossuth a natural ove; it is their mutual misfortunes and ther common exile that has made them join hands in their attempted revolution of Europe, and no iadividual bias. Capitulation of the ex-Dictator's Troops—Terms of the Com- pact--More Fighting and a Truce—Entrance to San Luis Kossuth, while at the head.of Hungerian fairs, never thought of « republic at all, much less of a soeialist one. As a propsgandist of socialiam, he would never have had a party in 4 ening All that Hungary requived was the ‘cietonies of isbor from the crushing feudal sys- tem, and the education of the peasantry. The real struggle of Hungary was for natioual in- dependence, it was after the failure of the revolution, after a protracted and most heroic struggle, that the ex- fled Hungariuns joined the fugitive Furope. Ledru Kollin, too, had not been a socialist when he was placed at the head of the French republic. He had always taken part fn every question which pro- mired the amelioration of the cond‘tion of the laboriug classes; but this, in itself, did not make bim a aoclalist. The true socit of the French revolution of 1648 was Louis Blanc; but Ican assure you that have not yet met a single reasonable Frenchman who believes in the reslization of Mr. Louis Blanc’s socialist theories. Mazzini is more of a statesman than either of his tw colleagues, Kossuth or Ledru Rollin, though he is no m ni in care it should be army of the North to advance on the city of Mexico, and then regulate matters to the satisfaction of this ; : orator like Kossu‘h, and no lawyer like Ledru Rollin. He : » é Focutiex. dual Hot uaiconie Wee Site Siew i z ground. The troops defended themselves with valor | icct the restr of speculation; but they will not sensi a the afin Hct poiateel ipa als With a view i Boog hh oa and is a better ju detente and obstinacy, but at 2 ‘clock they ‘were compelled to bly affect the Siar commerce, which works on capital, mee ais See fe politicians may choote to 20 tt eontingvngies, Nepoleon should reiax his present despotic | Pom#uths Who, Ue Ht respect, has Saomited his forees, | 7i¢id to the numerica riorily of the enemy. or whose products are of a nature not to be seriously re- © Revolution at Montevideo, Of the power he now wirlds, and w 1 forecast. Kossuth has evidently overrat rees, |“ At the same time, ‘attacked bastion No. 2, the | duced by an increase of one per cent on the rate of (From the London Times. success of the revo tenure, and open the valves of the press, only just a Mitle, would such « state of things bo more advantageous , for the minor, with « legitimist preterdership hovering on dhe flanks of the empire, ands republican party in fits witals? There are some who think the only Prospect the Bovaparte dynasty, in the Bands of « minor, | would have cf weathering storm and riding tri- ‘umphan* through that gale which at one swoop swept ayay Kichard Cromwell, would be precisely, whet, in reference to the Murat manifesto touching £4 kingdom ef Naples, the gov rament Journals have bean declaring Nay ‘the Third has no ‘need of, namely, thrones oc- eupied by aumbers of the Bonaparte family. There are some, I say, who think that is precisely what will be merded that these Bonaparte kings will sonstitute a dreakwater against revolution, come from whut source i may, as knowing that with the empire of France their own thrones, as in 1814, would come to the ground. These discussions may be premature, but they are not aecessarily out of place at a mament like this when the auiuds of all thinkisg men will be summarily turned to- wards France—France, whose very pulaation thrills fbr vghout Europe, and whose tranquillity is pregnant with weal or woe to quillions that are reckoned by hun- dreds. But having thus touched upon the deeper shades of ‘this interesting event as] observe them cast emong many aces where all are not licensed to enter, let us turn to light sunny gleams which no less attend it. The last convulsion seems to be 1g over without | 80 nobly seconded by thi . troubles or disturbance of trade, but the unfitness of the We cherish the fond hope that a brighter fortune veople of Montevideo for self-government has been so | awaits Mexico, aud that, under liberal system of go- constantly cemonstrated that there can be little hope of | ernment, ita numerous resources will be any permanent order in the State, unless by annexation | brought into hfe under the protection of a government. co Braz "A more perfect specimen than the following of that will rexpe:t the rights and liberties of the people. It. a South American revolution could hardly be furnished :— | 1s believed bs Pwd most intelligent men in the country MoxtEvipno, Sept. 4, 1865. that the late leason ‘vught them by the despot Santa Anna, Stirring events have occurred since ‘the departure of | Will tend to secure for ever the establishment of freedom the last packet. Montevideo has witnessed another revo- | 8nd republican institutions in the country. These are lution. Flores, who was instrumental in the overthrow | theonly institutiuns that may yet save the country and ot Giro in July, 1863, and succeeded him in the President- | #ecure its nationality. sbip, bas, in his turn, been obliged to fly. If Giro treated | _ From private letters received in camp, I learn that the the ‘treaties with Brazil, thro he obtained the position of contempt, Flores, with false promises on his lips, disregarded ‘them. And what was the sub- mance of these treaties? Nothing more than to carry on the moment of the yublic consti- - tutionally, to place an estimate of ie expenditure -day, I suppore, wit be one of excitement on the and resovrces of the country befyre the Legislature, | American ride the river, as an election for District and to act upon them. If the resources were insufticient | Judge will be helden in Brownsville, and at other places Brazil to, and did, subsidize them. But Flores, | in the Twelfth Jusicial district. candidates are |. whose capacity for government was not superior to that | Baste, at present Chiet Justice of Cameron county, and E. of his predecessor, and who, if he was more headstrong, | J: Davis, district attorney in and for the Twelfth district. ‘was not the less influenced ‘by men almost as incapable | I have not the least idea as to what the result may be. as himself, but without principle, observed neither his My next, hope, will be from Matamoros, as re- promise nor the law. He restricted the freedom of the | *pects the lower Rio Grande at least, as also the extent of he enemy directed an attack against the Gervais battery | discount. and drove from it the regiment of Chasseurs of the Grand [From the Paris Le Pays, Oct. 10.] Duke Michel. After having seized upon this battery, tue * * * * . * Frened kept up a fire through the embrasrres ithout the talent and devotion of his fiiends, and the strength and resources of his antagonists. And he has not only done that while ia power, but continues the same error dn exile. He underrates the power of an established government, no matter what bas be its mistakes and ‘crimes; while be sadly overrates the willingness of & na- tion to make sacrifices for a problematic future. Kos- suth does not calculate at its full value the power of conservatism—the vis inertia of na- tions. He eomputes the streogth of his party (which I think he prodigiously overrates) and that of the party opposed to him, but leaves out the vast con- geveniiv’s idttgance of those who ore opposed to any move- ment at all likely to compromise their present condition. The whole of this conservative influence, in a political calculation, must be set down againat him; it would, perhaps, be with him, if he had been able to sustain the relations of an independent government. Now, however, that the revclution of Hungary, no matter from what cause, has failed, it is bordering on absurcity to suppose that the elements of power in that country can again be combined insueha manner as to reinstate parties as they existed before the revolution. It is not the power Of kibtrin slone whlas prevents the rising of Hungary, but the change of public opinton, of circumstances and condition, and these it is not in the power even of an exiled king to wield at his pleasure. Kossuth, in common with other men, has done injus- The crisis through which we are passing this yoar is not produced under circumstances presaging great ‘misfor- noon the English, supported by strong re- | tunes. It is much less grave than those which we have serves, attacked the sulient angle of battery No.3. The | cleared happily by the simple application of the moat regiment of Viadimir, driven beck at the beginning, but | eementary lawe of public economy. In any case, we do assisted in good time by companies of the regiments | not believe that there can result from it any of those Kamtechatka and Jakoutek, rushed on the enemy with | profound monetary crises which affect all the the bayonet, and drove back the English, wi were already | elements of commercial activity. In all couo- on the parapet. The enemy returned to the charge, bu: | tries where there is regularly a deficit of ce- he was once again repulsed by Colonel Mesenrow, who | real productions, the incessant importations of foreign was killed in this attack. A third attempt hud the like | grain, notwithstanding the enormous sum which they result. A detachment of the enemy was stationed in | require, exercise only a secondary influence on the finan- the trenches, from whence it kept up a violent fire ot | cial market. Circulation is easily established, di the mushetry: 48 volunteers of the regiment Viadimir, | bank experiences no seridus embarrassment in satisfying under ‘the orders of Ensign Dubroxvine, went | all the exigencies of the commerce in cereals, If, as ix into the trenches and chared off the lish. | said, the deficit of 1855 requires an expense of two hun- . Whilst we were cognged in repulsing the asseult | dred milliezs (of francs) for the purchase of forvign on bastion No. 8, the enemy’ attacl the bat- | grain, what is such an expense extended over a perio teries Buditchteheff and Jabovski. He was repulsed by | of more than six months? What is itin s countgy where the infantry regiments of Soudale and Jahoutsk, andthe | in Jess than ten days more than three thousand millions attack was no more renewed on that point. The salient | are cffered to sustain the policy of the government, and angles of the siege batteries were attacked at the same time | where three hundred millions of bullion are shut up in as battery No. 3, but the assailants exporienced a fire so | the treasury chests, and thus taken temporarily out of weli sustained that they did not think fit to descend | circulation without commerce or industry perceiving or into the fossex, but contented them-eives with @ violent | suffering from the effect? t. | tice to the capactty of Louis Napoleon, ‘and he has also | gre of musketry, which inflicted severe 1 the |. Cectatels tia wot the k si eas . | press because it censured his acta; he closed some of the | country frem here to the sierra Madre, I will endeavor to Saris tbe Mspieia, Gs opaorase ol all opee le prise SE Ee th French people and the ca. | combined tattaicny of the regiment of Volignle and of | strained to bave reevurse for’ the public. sustenance, | {toting office, and he vent one of the edidors to prison. | Keep Jou duly informed. "Rio BRAVO, dur nctecehontents han augmented to eu gencait-almant ity of the French republican leaders, It was not | Minsk, ‘Three attacks were again repulsed on this point. | 1o other producers than the natural soil. It is not the | He, in fact, to act the dictator. Senor Amaral, ik Hina bos cl AE 5 : Eadulous, something varying from two to ten thousand | ™érely the generosity of Ledru Nolin, De Lamartine, By the ordersof General Parvloff, and after the attacks | less necessary to follow with a watchful eye the diverse | ‘he Brazilian Minister, remonstrated, but invain. Flores The Pork Trade in the West. oursued his self-willed course. At length the people (From the Civcinnati Gazette, Oct. 22.) wonld stand it no longer, the President fled to the country, | For scme month» pasi the pork trade has attracted . where he has collected some 500 to 600 ‘gauchos,” called | more then the usual attention of parties immediately wvalry. and we are threatened with a civil war. One | interested, and ax we are now close upon the period j or two deputatiens of merchants from the city have waited ions will commence, a gl upon him; but at present there has been no decided re- fu sult. Meanwhile the Brazilian troops, like the British and French in 1846, keep within their barracks, nor is it likely hey will trke any active part in what is going on. | every cluss of mercantile men, Hy treaty Brastl bound herself to support the constitu: | indiiectly. hog products enter largo ionally-clected President; but it that President pert mankind ip every nation, and the products of the United | ciously di-regar ‘ed bis obligations, could she reasonably | States bave generally furnished sufficient for home con- te expected to support him? Some angry commuuica- | sumption considerable surplusforexport. In ion: were rent in to the government by Senor Amaral, | point of imjortance, th readatuffs D Louis Blanc, &e , which, in 1848, prevented the re-estuo- lishment of the reign of terror but the fact that the peo- ple of France wanted no red republic—that there was no class of society in France which was pro- per food for the guillotine. There is, with the ex- ception of perhaps England, no country’ in Europe, in which there now exists 'a privileged class opposed tall rational progres:—against which the people, or @ faction acting in the name of the people, could pronounce summary judgment, The year 1798 connot come biek, because that snciety which ex- isted in 1789, and which was overthrown by the French revolution, exists no more, and with it has also dis- appeared its antagonism. [he red republicans of the upon the third division had been repalsed, the fire trom | phases ot a crisis which ix always a public misfortune, the battery of the bastion No. 3 was directed against the | +ven when itis not dangerous. But from that to the Malokoff hill, At the beginning the enemy contented | exsggerated alarms which certain miads appear to expe- himeelf with strengthening the cannonade agaiast the | rience, there ie, thank God, a great distance. right side of the line of defence. About 23% [From the la Patrie, Oct. 11.] o'clock in the afternoon, » strong chain off > «¢ « #8 # # * & @& #& & volunteers left the advanced trenches and marched | The deficit this year in much below the deflett of 1853, against the lunette Bjelkine. Compact columas, 10,000 | . na only applies to the harvest of wheat. Maize, buck wien strong, marching behind this chain, rushed impe- | heat, chesnut, vegetables, potatoes, aro in rare uband tuously in'o the ravine, but, assailed by grape, they were | juce.”’ ‘There commeditien will soon develope the chea) repulsed, and hastened to rejoin the troops who at that | incvement which is a Iready manifested ins great num moment were assaulting the salient angle of bas.ion No. | ver of markets. concurrently with the cereals which we 5. In spite of the grape and fire of the muske:ry, the | pre receiving from Algeria, and which Spain, Italy and columrs which were attacking bastion No. § had cleared | North America are preparing tu send us. franex—nay, the poor man is almost afra\d to trust him- gelt in the streets, lest, kiduapped, blindfolded and ehari- @:eered, he ehould suddenly tind himself, vi o armis, com- Hed to administer w: the mysteries of Lacerta, ‘Then, quertion arisea, whether or not he will have reeourse to chloroform in the Empress’ case, [t is understood that he is willing to take that responsibility if the Em. peror given his permission, though he prefers the god uld way of our graudmothers, wheu the pains of travail were conridered a perfectly natural visitation. Dr. Locock ia said to bo aecidedly for the chloroform, consiering the deli este trame of the Empress precisely such as should ren der freedim trom the excitement of pain of the utmos tmportance. Leaving this question where it is, the next | SPPeated Mts aninguolim. the ree Pat whe. caiddl : interesting feature ef the occasion is the sponteancas | Bretent day have nothing aga: le | the fosse, aud were on the point of assembling on the | Jn No: i 4 which so enraged Flores that he was on the point of farm products, and this season t ater ofthe Queen of Fogland au Prine» Abert to sani | Gives thet filth thet industsy and, thelr propery, | narazer, when Colouel Alonlioi, commander of thee: | egchen, agcending {0° the: intent news, tho enormon: | PME Ms, pearort, when, Movers. Thornton and Mal- | trades largely émbauced by the extraordnay high pr sponserr. This, I believe, is an undoubted fact, and was | 11,6 whole Stete, and it is precisely the fear of such nent of the Chasteurs of Podolie, attacked them with | fgure of fifteen millions of hectolitres,’ But, to speak ane p presentat pped in pre’ In tae first place, jucers an ar in a most touching conversation at the a ging ich &@ | his reserve and repulsed them with the bayonet. Whilst | cniy of t ad of with t! eir friendly mediation, and effected a reconcilia- | try ot large are intevested, becnuse, if a foreign demand Tulleres between the royal and. imperial parties, | ChaPge wbicK has made the French people, in 1810. s0- | ihe enemy, repulsed trom baitery No. 6, wis retiring | vacaous vegetables every one knows That ioose articlos | 0M, The dieagreeable communications were retired >a | should be experienced at present hhigh rates, provisions ri 7 ” e “< i ts : plications ve occurre is time. would serve er ent 2 al rmer year em the morning of the Queen's departure, Just, befo:¢ | 71/e ermperor Napoleon may die—he may fall'a victim to | frecear tire serch ey eo ange Grom He treneher in | havea very important share in the support of a gre:’ | has returned from Spain, We have now three legal Pre. | the place of fing our Delances with Sarcign her Majesty entered tho State carriage. Of course the offe was accepted, and the occasion of making it was consi- dered peculiarly opportune and graceful, and as the most sincere acknowledgtaent that could have been made for the »plendid, continuous, and most unwearied hospitality that the Emperor, and the French people who had chosen bim, bad extended towards them. Tue Emprons it ix said with tear) in her eyes flung her arms round the neck of the Queen, who, with a true womaw's soul and mother’s apirit, cordially returned the embrace, bidding the fair rigenie “be of good courage.” is great event is expected to fall about the 15th of March. when, it is supposed that certain titular creatios ‘ill be made, though \¢ is known that leon fs de mined that peerages s! not be rendered ridiculous in his reign by being bestowed on parties whose merits are not of a sufficiently remarxable character to give as much lurtre to their titles as they derive from thom. In the coming reason the Princess Mathilda will do the ho nors for the Empresa, who ix on no account to be exposed to late hours or the fatigue of standing. In other to the foase and on the opaulments of theredoubt, whose | RUT? of Gepertments; whole populations make then guns, which defended the flank cf the right front. bad | scarcity of cereals wili exercise no ill effect. Besides, been’ previously dismounted. The enemy’s attack | Successive decrees have repealed, up to the lst of De- on the front’ and the left face was repulsed by , 1856, the ‘various Giepesitions relative to the im fusilade and grape, _but on the right face the mm and exportation of grain, and the tonuage enemy succeeded tp scaiing the parapet and penetrating ; and on 22d september last, upon a report of th into the interior of the recoubt. The second batialion of | yinister of the Interior, a new credit of ten millions hi the regiment of Schitomir was driven against the left | been opened to increase the budget of public face, where a terrible hand to hand contest ensued. When Ly jroducts of the last harvest, says this and Major-General Khronsteheff, who commanded the left | the large complement which may easily be added to them wing of the first scction, perceived the success of the | oy the United States and other countries more favored enemy on this print, he sent therea reinforcement of two than vets, aemuce to Our popiistion the provisions Trecee- battalions, At the same time Licutenant-Colonel Verev- | sary for the year’s consuinption. Commerce, thaaks to kine, who cecupied the ravine between bastions Nos.4 | the security, the encow t, the facilities given to and b, proceeded at the hea of two companies into the | jt hy our government, will be able to supply our m ‘ same redouot. Of all the Frenchmen whohad penetrated | and grain will no where fail. Rut {ts price, Teaperatty into the interior of the work there remaiued only corpses. | igh, produces sufferings with which your heart ix The enemy’s ey which had been assembled in masses and you may, to alleviate them, multiply, on all for the attack of the first section, battered with bulls and | Pints of the territory, work and aid. 4 sidents—Oribe, Giro and Flores—and an acting or provi- | countries. In te next place, consumersare i sional President, tn the of Don Luls Lamas, our | because, if present prices are sustained every descrip- former mont able chief of police, and father of Don An- | tion of meat must rule high throughout the year; and drag, late Minister of the Republic at Rio de Janeiro. He | last, but not least, packers are interested, because, if ix the man that abould have been elected President after | are ‘not sustained for the manufactured ar vy the raising of the siege, being well q ialified tn conciliate | losses will be encountered on the purchases made all parties, The immediate cause of the outbreak was | and to te made during the early part of the season. As Flores rending the Chief of Police to the residence of Don | the course of prices for products will be governed by the Jore Munos, who is the lender of the conservative party‘ | supply and demand, we will direct our injuries, fiat and torearch for arms. None, however, were found. Mu- | chefly, to these two points. ~ noz wax informed that had any arms beon discevered he | As to supply, the general impression {s, that the number would have been arrested. incensed him, and he | of hogs in the west will fall short of last year, when the defied the Coief of Voliee in rather strong language, | packing was twenty-two per cent dellcient ad stating that ana representative, his person was sacred. | with Previous season, This supposition is Thi Veing reported to Flores, the Police Chief was des- | on the following ground:—In almost every hog producing patched a necond time to arrest him, but Munoz in sald | State the eurn crop of 1864 was largely abort, and the to have defied him with the constitution in one hand and | stock ot bogs ‘was con-equently not kept up, s0 that the a pistol in the other. The argument was irresistible, aud | number in the country at this, time is not suificient to Nitmez was victorious. Finally Flores, at the head of a | make cropeq ial to last year's packing, notwithstanding hattallion of artillery, mace bis appesrance, but he could | the prevent superabundant supply of corn. Then, tn do nothing, as the street was crowded with people, who | addition to this, there is known to bea large deficiency a crazy or dastardly assassin; but to suppose that tea Lovis Blanc, Ledru Rollin ant Kossuth could establish their form of government, which all the rest call chaos, is sheer absu diy. Even if a republic were established in France, it is doubtful whether Ledru Rollin and his associates in exile, including Victor Hugo (le beau bossu), could play an important part in it. In the present con- dition of ‘Fiance, none but a military chieflain could re- main for a fortnight at the head of affairs. The elections in Prusria exhibit, not exactly hostility to the government, but a decided decline of the Russian influence, and of the ultra party represented by the Kreuzeitung. Had the government taken a less decided part in the primary elections, and had not a regular pro- cess of intimidation been pursed against both candidates and electors, the resuit in the provinces might have heen similar to that of the capital, where the author of Kos- mos, Alexander von Humbolit, though nearly eighty years of age, voted cpenly the liberal ticket. Facts like ‘there speak louder than elaborate articles in the news papers, though even the press has spoken out boldly shells, retired in dicorder into the trenches and made no aspects Dr. Locock’s advice is urgently given that her Majes- | nq commemorated the act of the veteran sage in prose a Gur St. Thomas Correspondence. were there to protect Munoz. Munos’« house was al-o | in the supply of old products That will go over lato the fy should take an much walking exerciso asshe ean without | S04 noetey, If you suppose, however, that the German | yi it coummander lo-Chief baring gore to the secant cr. Tuowtae, Sept, 28,1856, | filo! people, "The President gave them fair words, aod | new essen.” Thus, a deficiency in supplies, suflcient, returned to the furt. where he was waited upon by a de- | it is suppored, to justi the rates that are now being people will act, or that the Germanic confederation will putation of the friends of Munoz, and a paper handed to | paid for hogs, ts figured up by operators. Were the hy- tigne, and that #be follow her usual occupations as ib take a part in’ the present struggle between Russia and much as possible. and seeing this hill covered with great masses of Freach | santa Anna at St. Thomas—His ex-Highness in Trouble— troops, behind whom were distinguished strong reserves. To turn from one subject of fertility to another. Tere | the Western powel © mistaken. Th he Old Le Neelf—His Departure and Pature | him, signed by most of th bled. T thesis hich these conclusto based relia! ea strong disposition to derive ® practical lesson from | Conunue for yeara before Germany will take a partin ic, | became convinced that the retaking of the Kerniloft | The Old Leawn Barays Heclf-— ese we | moruing, the’ 28th’ of ‘August, Munos, Battle, "acd | beyend any reasonable doubt, the result of the, busines the present Gelciusty of ths fresh harvest, aol tonp In'short, no -Gernan power will ove uniil ite territory | bastion would require stillenormous sacrifices, and as it | Plans—A Good Route for an American Steamer—Com- | Toreing. he Sith Of Auguit, Mupos,, Battle, and | wy be coriaialy astictactory, but this caanor be alt to ad alzeady entered inso his views to evacuate the clty, | mercial Advantages of the Enterprise, dc., de. he resolved to take advantage of the fatigue of the as- ailants and. of tbe inaueteas which tMey had expe. | I know of no more forcible way of describing the ex- Heneed ch all other prints, to execute this operation to | treme-hot weather and general stagnation in every the last degree difficult. With this view he order Lieutenant General Schepeloff not to attack the Kerniiomt | >™@nch ot business here, rye bs te un a tes bastion, but to prevent, at any price, the enemy from | bot as it is dull, and as dull as it is hot; the population debouching from this point towards the interior of the | seems to have been burned downto the last “spark of city. ‘This officer succeeded, by holding uatil night the | ii," and to have relapeed toto an unmistakable buiicirgs which a th rthern rear of the , elon, to repuleing all the nttempta of the French to | lethargy. Yet, these Somnipathists were aroused for a deboucl by the gorge of the redoubt. ae | 2 Bours on the 16th inst.,and whites and blacks wero It is thus that, i) bravery and firmness of the than fearf garrison, Dotwithetanding the raived condition. of our phate re Se _— loecsiesgpemen era & works, Occasioned ay this long bomberdfhent, all the reek coerce mean Elie heat of a tropical attacks of an enem: who had in his vo sun—hun js, yes, thousands sexes and colora, bee {teense ruperiorty a oe 1d Bere from “snowy itis to sooty,” were crowding the taking of the Haat iatsslon, the. ool pores where os a - “hese mt mouths Me open. sailants suec was due alone to his immense | We gazed upon this phenomenon from our window, numerical superiority, “hich allowed bim to direct on | wonder, not unmixed with fear, tor we had supposed is int near LOU Ra me! to tl hed Gentiticn cd the ground to the ree? of the Malakom, | thing short of an earthquake, or the sound of the last which Fendeud the approach to It from the side of tue ee would have bere hes gd ata tie city exceedin, jcult. And dressed in t! But the deloace of Eetestopol has cost ua dear. ea- | Tocf ch abana deat wanker cueet aks i tenant Generals Khyouleff and Martinan, and Major | *3!¢ of ® slop-shop dandy, General Lyssenko, have been wounded—the two latter | bis head to disguise the kinks, by a superhuman effort grievously. (General Lyssenko died of his wounds on | saise a trot, we exclatmed, ‘‘In the rame of God! what the 18th of September.) There have been killed Major | tag happened”? when we heard shouted by the crowd, Generals de , Jouleroll, Archenevaky Nidhardt, Gap Math Rotate, aah the Jeoul, ‘ants Anna!’ ‘Santa Anna’s come!” And sure enough ee oad Babee — a neral Sarow, his ex-ferene Highness and suite had just arrived in the plone! itechek, Tschereinissontf, Alennikoff Freund, tesmer from Havana, and were followed into the hot the Captain of the Guard, Woejkoff, Captain Mey 4 d ws gee Wea latter Bavs ted Gate i asaie Maree, Ly w crowd of dirty, half-naked negroes—boys and girls— eral Noseoft and Colonel Sojereff have received con- | mort of them, emphatically, in undress, with less than the fort and there began to shout vivas, as | be the care. much to keep up their own cow ‘a8 to damp | itis upquestionsbly true that the number of hogs in that of the sergean’ts guard that "and duty at the | the countsy at this time is largely deficient as compared *e. After two hours of unparalleled exertion, by | with last year, but it being al-o true that only » small, which time their throats were dry; the sergeant relented, fremerticn of the bogs actuaily produced go into the and gave up bis charge. Thus they gained powsuann of nds of packers, it may well be questioned whether the the arms instore, and supplied ali who applied for them. | prerent heavy erop of corn, and the high prices that pro-/ Flores, as soon an he heard of it, mounted, and, accom: | vail for boge will not operate to avery large extent towarde, panied by a few horsemen, fled into the country. and is | making up the deficiency that exists in numbers, 0 far now, as I said before, at the head of rome 600 men. Senor | as regaids the packing business, and also to so imerease; Amaral is accused of fowenting this rebel bat itis | the weight as to more than annihilate the ae difficult to vee what Brazil has to gain by it.. Instead of | falling off. kxperience, we believe, has fully es! hed revolutions she desires peace and good government, and | the fact that high prices for corn, and low ron for hoge, abe has liberally supplied money and constantly remon- prevanitog at the same time, have never failed to resul strated to promote these principles. The Buenos Ayreans, | in a sbort packing of the latter regardless of the number whore restless and un-crupulous dispositions urge thea | of hogs in the country: lo corn and into en‘erprises as subsersive of good government as of | priced hogs have in most case: the te re~ honesty, are the sccusers—the Buenos Ayreans, | sult. ‘Ihe letter therefore, is the main point to which who owe their present freedom from the despotic | attention should be directed tu determining the probable rule of Rosas to the generesl'y of those whove | extent of the crop, for votwithstand! deficiency conduct and good intentions they impnge. But | in number admitted in the country, the clreumstances re whether Brazil has cansed this revolution or not, ft is | ferred to above may preduce not only a full erop butan quite cleer these people are quite incapable of governing | excess. Let us then compare the prices of corn and hoge @ country; and the sooner it is in the possession of | at this date for two years:— Brazil, or some other country that could govern it. the vog | 3g is invaded, ard then the forces of Germany will be directed egainst the invading power, whether it be Rus- sia or France. The Cortes have been re-opened in Spain, and there is no dovbt but that the Aoglorench allkance will be act cepted by the liberal party. Should the war continue, Spain ard Portugal will furnisn troops for the allied armies, and England and France will be bound to give them protection. It is now, to speak with Mr. Cushing, a ‘fixed fact” that Cuba cannot be taken without figh’- ing the armies and navies of England and France. An Ambarrador Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary from his Majesty the Emperor Soulouque, with a suite of three negroes, har arrived in Paris; but itis not stated anywhere that black regiments will be sent to the Crimea to fight the Cossacks, though it is not improbable that the latter on beri J the darkies, might take to their heels, Lelieving the devil to be let lodse among them. All sorta’ of complexion will soon be engaged at the theatre of war, and there is no reason to suppore that a nogro contingent, ‘commanded. by British ollicers,”” would be declined by the allies, If Mr. Buchanan remains in England until he settles the affairs of Central America, he will remain there some time. The policy of Iingiand in that matter las been de- layed from the beginning, until something definite shall bé known as to the practicability of a ship canal across the Isthmus. England will not settle this matter without consulting France, or until the question has received some practical solution through the acts of the Central Americal governmenta. The recall of the Brilish Ambassador, Lord Redcliffe, from Constantinople, is an cvent which cannot but have a favorable effect on Turkish affairs and the progress of the war. His lordship was the most unpopular man in Constantinople, interfering constantly with the acts of te the landa Lontee those improvementa whic therto have been go la¥ishly bestowed on cities. It ap pears that there are ia France upwards of fifty millions of acres which do not produce a rental of six francs per or situated cn the sea or by the margin of rivers, are altege’her lost to fertility, and that by @ proper ap- eS of the improvements in lcultural science y might be rencered the source of abundance. It is ealculated they would furnish to the lasoring classes, 13,410,000,000 francs in wages, and to the proprietors and evntracto:s a profit of 31,180,000,000 franca. ‘The Cnwers states that Lord Stratford de Redcliffe is to ‘de admonished, but not recalled ‘The report tha* the allied flecta are before Odessa has ‘thrown ali Paris a fever of excitement. Letters from Bocharest are full of complaints against the Austrian excesses in the Principalities. and the semi-official orgaa+ in Paris are beginning to take the matter up werlously. The Duke and Duchess of Brabant have just arrived @Attainville, son-in-law of the Baroness d’Essling, mistress of the household to the Empress, and the hus- band of the grand-daughter of Marshal Massena, has issued an adress to the inhabitants of the department of the Var, declaring himeelf to be a candidate for the place of deputy to the Legislative Corps, now vacant in one of the divisions of that department. the grand Universal Exhibition is every day more thronged with visiters than éver. ERTIE. Our Stuttgard Correspondence. SrvTroanp, Oct. 7, 1855. Peace Prospects—The Statua of Naly—Powihle Changes in the Government of the Two Sicilics—The Prospects of Sar- dinia—Mazzini, Ledru Rollin and Kossuth Palse—Their Antecedents and Prospects—Why a Red Republic is Im- better. If our government consulted the real interests of | Hoga per 100 Ibe. net. pacar hece eae! he ies ask Beant tp lpn —, New cvrn per bushel. porsess of e country, or at e it under Last price hogy down. ite vrotection until it was peopled from Europe by a race | wack ‘untie nce ienies eats pag wt init Ueno core. more industrious than the Indo-Spanish. Exchange. 40d. | heay; and hogs are firm. ‘We find therefore, a clasa of cir to40%¢d. Business at a stand, and the Customs closed, | cumstances © exiatence that are well calculated to increase Our own affairs are of too absorbing an interest for us to | the packing. ose engeged in the trade can readily see. care about those of Buenos Ayres at it. Lopen my | we presume, how this may be done. Out of ten or twelve letter to ray the deputation bas just returned from see. | million hogs produced anpurlly in the Western and South ing Flores, and that he has ratified before his chiefs what | orn States, not much over three milli ns enter into the re+ he agseed to the day before beeen. tare p= ty re ign | ports of pickers. Circumsias ces, therefore, such as higt ‘ iq | the government, and pfovoking the unceremonious man- i the Presidency, and allow the President of the Senate to low pitces ‘an abundance or scarcity of cor! pocaitle on the Continent of Europe—Elections in Prussia | yer'in which he wow at last, snubbed by the Sultan, | ‘gen*. the Georgia uniform—shirt collar and spurs. Th take his place until the Ist of March, when the new Pre- | (rie totmeteacscn fieaial-hatecta wad thin ie doue by tar —The Vole of Alecander vom Humboldt—Opening of the | His retreat from Constantinople became after that, « | tenter'ise- oe Serrizon on the Sth of Sep | riciator was en route for Venezuela, os it was said, ani | sident is to be elected. The offer is so reasonable, brah teaeArhetoe emi h geet Io cd le that | mers exerting th neglecting to secret the insie party will be obliged to agree to it, and I have | aheir sicck f rhet, or eell or fal little doubt e very tbing Site coveigea. Fup) ies for ‘compas Soden bog ‘All the farmers ir the Western states were to contribute or withhold one 0” matter of necessity, not of choice, If his successor, Lord Figin, is not ‘a very shrewd man, France, not Eng: land, will henceforth be the preponderating power ia the Spanish Cortes—The Embassy of Emperor Soulowque— Staff Officers. Officers. Soldiers, | did actually engage his passage for Laguayra, in Captain Central American and Cuban Affairs— Future Prospects 4 55. 2,625 | todd’s ttle packet. The captain having reserved nearly 6 206 5,826 | alt of his state rooms for his ex-serene Highness and of Turkey, de. ‘ Fart! Turkey must, henceforth, be treated as a Enro- 9 ORDER ‘oun hogr 5 i i 38. 1138 | suite, consisting of six game cocks, his wife, danghter M ora Y ca | two to or from the usual supply, this alon: The papers are full of prognostications of peace. Aus- | pean state, and her civilization must be an European 3 pol By 1,730 | son-in-law, two aids and eight servants, calied to Tefocm face tee body of a young Shen Be Re ae would Cane difference of half's million in the fla und Prumia are sald: to be meditating 6 ; bat 1 | cme. OF sil people inthe. world, however. the English pony SARE 30 333 11/328 | him that Be was ready to sail, when his ex-serene High not twenty-five feet from the # ter packed @o not believe a word of it, Thep aaef Hasson von | *f¢ the least capable of acting as ah peo Pe The lors of artillery is not comprised in this table, the | ness coolly told the captain that he had changed his | street, in the southern part of the city. The place was With the foregcing view of matters, it is evident tha’ Osten im Paris, the jourecy of pg ye et hs - J. G. | report not being complete, mind, and would not go to Caracas, ‘The captain then t lot, a short distance north of Twelfth street. | (be anticipations of a short crop are by no means gure t¢ A y of Mons, de Bourquoney, | a. ae ef the Fall of Sebas- judging from the progress of the fight the loss of the | demanded the passage money, alleging that he had laid bman for the railrond by the apot be | be reslized, but on the contrary, we regard 6 oa bighl French Minister at Vienna, to the same place, and meny ne ed, + ong enemy fn killed and wounded muy" have been enormous. in suprlies expreaaly for me cere Highness, and bad | ‘ween three and fonr o'clock In the morning, hear! a | froteble, ualess « sudden reaction and material declin§ other of jn these rent assaul e in passer because of his e1 - t 5 ome distress, ‘ should take place in prices, the aum! <n e naan good understanding between PRINCE GORTSCHAKOFF'S REPORT. hands of the Russians at bastion No. 3, Ttsd'omenr, % | ment with him, His ex-Corene Highness said he hat se. ies fi vckrs peeeanen ty the aid ‘of his laniets, toe @ will be caval to that of Jast vear, while in therd France and , ue; but I think J am not mis The Russian organ, Le Nord, published at Brussels, | Officers, and 128 soldiers, of whom 80 are slightly | ccuted no writing, and therefore would not pay; the cap- | body lying there in the mud. Life was not yet ex will be ap increase of at least fifteen per cent. would wounded, At tbe vedoubt Schwartz the commandant of | (ain, hewever, had a witness, and immediately instituted the 46th regiment of the French line, 4 officers, and 148 | #n action of debt apinat his ex-Serene Highaess, who soldiers have beeu made prisoners. raiber than be bauled up to the court room, forked over At four o'clock in the evening the General-in-“hicf | the dinero to the plaintifi’s attorney, gave the order to begin, at nighifall, the evacuation of kumor, with her thousand tongues, says that President the south side of Seb, ‘and to transport the | Monagas bas no love for Santa Anna; and hence Colonel informed, when I give it a» my opinion that all these di plomatic propros relate to matters and things in Italy, and not to St. Petersburg. Neither Ras-ia nor the allies are now in a condition to make peace, and the orders which have been sent to Genoral Pelissier, cannot by but the poor being was so near to death that «he co ve Ld vaghe rad ba ati dee eg mpd cont, et apenk, and probably heard vot the questions ef. | im pounds, or an aggregrate on last year’s crop as report teen to ers, Toe: eoebmen Wah for asdstance, and | +0 of sbout sixty*Pve million pounds. ‘The stocks oF oli when be returned, the vital apark bad fled. Suspicion | )reduets, now in the country, as compared with those « fil upen. two men, named John Holland and William | be cevreryending date last year. are deticient about fort Crifftth who were arven ed and placed in the watch-harn. | (ive mallien pounds, thus leaving an excess of twent gives the following lengthened analysts of the report of Prince Gortechakoff, Commander in Chief of Sebastopol, on the events of the 8th of September, when the French forces obtained possession of the Mslako! The artillery fire which opened on the 17th of August | troops to the orth side, either by boats or by the bridge | “oto wax despatched to Venezuela to find out how the ‘We found 1 1 the floor of the stable, { million pourds for the products of 1865-6, ony yeasonahle construction, be wate to look more con- | agsinst the Karabelnala was continued during twexty constructed over the readstead the oveeeate took land lies in that A chew as it might be a little unplea- ccpesael trea exh = which she had worn Ree w to the demand, te is well known.that prices cilistory than the Emperor of Russia's trip to the south. | cays. In this interval our daily losses amounted to, the | place in the following order:—Volunteers and a detach- | sant for H. Fx. 8. H. to appear at Caraccas without being | before ber death. on the shawl was removed, the | after they rench a certain point, exercixe agreat inflaenc, ern provinces of his empire and the Crimea. The boitur | ft*t cay 1,500 men, the foll»wing days 1,000 mon, and | ment of artillery were posted upon the line of defence, | firet invited. H. Fx. S. H. made several abortive eff ria | ight which met our gaze was one of the most dreadful | on the ccnsumption, ever in the necessaries of life, Th opinion is, that the war has only commenced, and unle from the 221 August to 8th September from 500 to 609 | where they kept up a weak fire of cannon and musketry. | te get up a cock fight here. Disgusted at his failures, he | of which we have any remembrance. Before us Jay the | conrompti in of flour, which ix the prime necessary, fell « i t y * | men every 24 hours. This cannonade was demolishing | Ibe lines of barricades, which had been estadliched in | took passege on the Fnglish steamer for Carthagena on the of @ Tamale, but so covered and ameared | la» yen: fully one-third, in comvequence of igh rates the operations in the field, on she part of the allies aro | our works, (he parapets were tottering mto the foases, aad | the city, were oceupied on the right side by the reg’ morning of the £3 inst., taking with him five servante. but for the outline of a human form ft | and in ‘he event of euch prices prevailing for provisi in. 1 the epaulemen's falling into dust, To the le(t ofthe Kara- | ments Tobolek, Volbynie and Minsk, and on the left aide | three of whom bad each two game cocks under | ‘auld pot have been distinguished from a maas of earth. | e+ would juti'y $6 76 for hogs, Ww» must estimate + with the same success as those bef re Sebastop |, he by the regiments Asow and Overs, Unoor the protec. | their arma; the other two wete without socks. Rnesie will not »ieid hie sth | Qelnsia, battery No. 2 presented every evening nothing ca clothes, the outer garment being what might once | ‘a'ling cf in b cal consumption at twe ity-five per cent sab pa yield an tote from her pretensions. Both | hut a heap of ruins, and not a single gan could be worked jew of these advance detachm nis, the troops were gra- | tants Anna, Senora Millard and Senor Millard, (who ix | have pe genteel sppenring plaid dress was to onto: | least. The prices pometc g tiie date fast fo for th pai re arming. New troops are levied in Russia The battery of twelve gune on the left slope of the Ma- | dually collected on the Tlace Nicholas, and crossed the | brother-in-law, as well as son-in-law, ty H. xs. f.,) | crced with mud and water that {t was diflleult to deter- | leasing hog products compare as follows with the pres and new troops are sent to the Crimea from France, Eng: lakoff Mamelon had to he brought behind the second bridge; while the troops coming from the side of the | reanined here comfortably ensconced at Gover ni | wine the material of which they were made, One foot | currerey 1854. 1855. Among the troops sent by the way of Ine of defence: but this line iteelf had to suffer not lew | Karabelnaia went om board the boats and xteamers | house, where they will await the return of H. Ex. H. oe bare; on the other were a shoe and stocking. The $20 007 ; t than the left line of the Kerniloff bastion, aguinst which | which Vice Admiral Nevoril-ki bad placed at thele dis | which important event is to take place about the 16th ot ener procured water, and, washing the mud from the 12 ke ‘al number of horses and cavalry | the besiegers were concentrating the most violent fire. | porn). ‘revext month. Anything further that we could ey | (sce, revenled the features of a girl, not over eighteen | Lacon rhonk ers. evescces 5 I elearly indicating tha: « campaign is meditated, and tha’ | The extension of the evemy’s saps up to the border of | When all the troops bad evacuated the Place Nicholas | about this great defune’, wouid be mere speculagion: be J sears of age, fair and rOtund as one in the bloom of youth | I rices advanced gradually during the year, but fal nd beaith | The lips were injected with blood, aw! the | (we-thirds of the #ock went into consumption at ra‘g ght cheek and eye bore the appearance of having re | ranging frm $12 to $16 for mess pork, 6 to 8 cents {i ived a severe blow. There was a slight wound under ides; and 53 to 7 for bacon shoulders. At th he «ye, from which the blood slo sly oozed. The hale | rates that pow prevail for hogs, mess pork must sell frc as ci dark color, as well as we could judge, not black. | ‘he start at $18 50 and other product» in equal propor'io: ihe breasts indicated that the girl bad been a mother.— | * that the consumption will be influenced to the ful Chicago Times, Oct. 25. extent by bigh prices. our fosres, the injuries to the line of defence which it be- came impossible to repair, and particularly the loss of men cccarioned by the enemy's fire—losses which would culy be increased by the necessity of ywul iplyfag the number of workmen—all these consi lerations determined the Commander in Chief to put an end to the effusion of blood, which bad become useless, and to abandon to the and the promontory ! aul: «ni had carried the wounded | <eceived opiuion, however, is, that he will reside at St from Forts Nicholas ond fal into the northern part the | Ibemes tor some months where he can receive dic signal was given and the troops whieh occupied the | epeedy and certain intelligence from Mexico, ia the bo; lines of the barricades retived in their turn. of being recalled, or of discovering & good opening to ali According as the last troops retired from the different | back parts of the line of derence, they destroyed the guns of | There is not a single American vessel in Pert, Yhieh the forte, blew up the powder magazines to the pumdes | has been thecase very frequently during the three some decisive blow is to be struck Immediately; may, {t to powrible that the news of it may reach you by tele Graph before this can be in New York in the regular course of the mai |. As regards Italy, there is some hope that the present