Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WHOLE NO. 7119. MORNING EDITION—MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1856. PRICE TWO CINIS. eee ARRIV ‘ tensive trade, having its entrepot at Milford. Tho agen: Lonvox, Feb. 8, 1868 | 16 the condition in wnich we gue for peace. Rus- | what the Calted States may think of the Russtan ac- | tet the words of that treaty might be shown er be AL OF THE ATLANTIC AND ASIA. of the Milford estate bas offerea to both gentlemen land | The Misunderwanding Between England and the United | aia wilt be tn’ Cocstantinople in ten years. and when | ced ee Diseets at eee @ Gonatr, and in- | Ade bY & person as imperial as we Goad ox 0c. o on advantageous terms. SMates—arbitration—The Peace Conferences--The Soiind | thers, the Black Sea is hers, Asia Minor is hers, Persie | tend se epating, by. candidate st the next Slestions Hae tp to be oe, in pegs — 4 ig annewruceme! gcvernmen' than \wericam government names of Ue ploaipoteatiacies wis are | That was the opinion to which de had inclined on exam- AFrench company is about to purehase eight large | Due:—A Blow at the English Peerage. will behers, Affghmeetan will follow, and then she takes ONE WEEK LATER FROM EVROPE, | | {irene comany lish Geuerey Stone Navigation | Doubtiews every asil from England is now anxiously | India. That is what we are afraid ot.” Elsewhere, gave no in. | Sie St, But 66 the eamecinnte Canees memavaarees Compeny, with the view of establishing steam lines bo- | expected, on the chance of some light being thrown upon | Mr. Roebuck alludes tm almost derisive terms to ‘our world wiéeh #t was not betore weed | the American government NO TIDINGS OF THE PACIFIC peseage Licata tle the miounderstuadivg which has jhe between the g> | fleet slly, our pe ptr ele pe epi area seca ae AEN Dees Ceaee Tanne ot oe ok ; Se Ciccas “he arctan Gite: : The market for American securities in London, during | veromenta of the United States and Great Britain. Very | satistactory to oneatiy thaa the otuer, ratided, the snods | Sojtans,tnd Matemed, Djomsil Bey, the Tasik Ambas- | they ‘tock: « dillereat our aaa the week ending on the @th iast., hed been without ani- | littie more has transpire, at termes, dentin avo oear deadly frutt, may remsin. | Already the ony nfisenoe of the war on Turkey pty pag tiling te a ———— ace hn | mation; the few transsotions which had taken place had On Tuesday, in the House of Commons, Mr, Cobden adhered to ‘tho frat rm ily anoount it Kasela has | ts boldly asserted riends, the allies. Freedom of | town of four bi Poa oni dred a Be- INTERESTING PEACE INT ELLIGENCE. been generally at lower prices, as will be soon by the | asked whether it was tho intention of the government to | pruliminarios ol pence” tod that eer pieniocregtiaciee | osm wclalmed for the Ba se nemaintstration cod ratitary | HED at She month of the river use, aad two oma quotations annexed:— lay upon the tabie of the House any correspondence ex- | willartive in Paris on tho 25th instant. [ho last accoante employmenta; reform of the ts, tri and vite crete, pechape of ne value of aliy-aam, a8 Armistice Concluded by the Belligerent United Staten 6 per cont, 1667-88... planatory of our present relations wish the United States. | {om St, Fetorsburg state that the Grand Dae Constan- co . Who has represented as the soul of the Aussian jual ted Der con +105 © = | ‘The correspondence relative to Comtral Amerios was, be | war ‘iain pees eet Ce ee ae relies coat te i perleot agoord with his or ther Alexan- Bowers. debe seer ernk toclins vende: Be S$. || sedaver, conaptote, ou bad abrosdy. Woon published in [ser Geust Bsbloweech is ced terner vane ape droaken Goss matueurtnon wie eegemt she omer | tics, bat it was one of those cases bn whieh article Massach sorte 6 per cont sterling bosds:-:: 98 6100 | the United States nnd referred to in the President's mea | Sommanden the Cuarian army watsh was sont to Hungary | now to become cae of tbe members of a great European | Yfasimoult, |W the arbitration wore to. deskde whether Minsiseippl 6 per cent Pik. Rd, bonds, 184i-71 43 a 45 - jn 1640, and thus enabled Austria to dupiay the ‘‘splendid | family, ana she must quit the roea on which she bas | wistner ft the Engiink government said i was, oF ‘The Poace Congress to Assemblo at Paris. Do.” Oper cent Union Bank bonds.... 18 a 1 | Sse With respect to tne other eubject of correspond. | iogratt‘ude”” waich hea throughout marked her coudact | hitherto trod. In the Gist place, s dillorenee of religion | YrDAtber Ht waa ss the Amer can governmect Dae ane , \ Penorpivania per cont stg. Fi z ence—tbe entistment questicn— perhaps the noble Lor | | towards Tassie is te late ne a aiaed ment aot scumtivote s oop litical ee, snk ae tite trent a oecause ny sooth eemeesone bo. _-& per cent bonds, 2 would say whether the correspondence-apon that matte: ispoleon has desided that artic! next, in order that religions may de complete, ® | that the protec and.ce +n; of sheuld #MPORTANT “FROM TURKEYs | Vitsints 5 por cent ng. bondé; 1688."..... 85 & 86 |} conld be produced? Lord Paimerston replied that in|] Guanie, ‘forthe beustt ot the Ctnene: feos, it | Musselman Bay, be howe, arn Christan Tika | Ceatinne whe they undertone should te avolsheds WP it ohare hae 90 o 02 netther case was the correspondence completed, Wheo it, | be dispored ot by means of a loitery. The ar‘icles are to inerrine Pag — eultied Manesimiad Tne ‘Objeo: § ane +titl adhere tos treaty which eai@ they should nevur TE Montreal 6 por conta, 1866-86 83 8 85 | wase0, of course ft would be laid before the House, in | be extend. within, stow days in the east, galiory | sin made by the ministers of the Porte, in fact, only P odbc an end ant things onl renee Between the United | New oriesus 6 per cent stoox, 1883. TT & 79 | order that it might bé in possession of the fall and entire nico Ap bt orpet day, at | Desg,om the ponatbiity of the exeoution, and the consid- | Sever bern made; and the reeuit be thas ar Between the “linola Central’? per cont, 1876.. Te 1% bs p of, tho iaglsiative |bocy,. gave s grand bad ga tiday, at | erable aificulties which woud exist in causing such ivees | Eoited S ten borg on the spor as Comparet eum Ge States and England, wage col pero enjgvs Ah $6 | Me Blo vhen aed hatha weld potpne home | om fit Entaman od Oe a bn | Frc Rbueine’ anatase | Cun, wei egos ome or gunn New York Central’ per cont conv, 1804.-;-- 04 8 96 | t1op, of which he had given notice, relative to enlistment | treordinney taleny, tod we sock sacmermenick Ok, | stasoasin wbich the Ottoman empiri now pleovd, at a | MESS TY? ai cian and there sould bono dounh, tase Do, Eee ee etc oey stor 98 cing | ta the United Btates, until after the production of the | legitimlst which disdain to enter the Tuileries, are M Torrent to proteot the tadepen. | Whether we went to war or nut, our éhildres would fod MENT IN THE COMMERCIAL CIRCLES Now York & Erie 7 per cent lat m’ge., 1867. 98 0 100 J P 2 , Just shed such, ta of blood to protect the indepen- | that the whole of these countries were either in the EXCITE 1 Do. ‘7 per cont 3d mtge., 1883. 84 86 correspondence. ven found among his guests. His wealth, since the | Genco of the Ottoman empire, the rejection of auch woo Do. T per cent onny., 1882...¢, 75 TT to, thai coup détat, 1s reported to be of fabulous amount; and it | principle would have a very nad effec in Europe.” Cee rieaelen ce uncer. the doen pame neened aeaee 309 Teer ont aaciigfand 78 10 Ge ‘The prevailing opinion is, that the points in question | ig rumored thet all he possessos—his fame, bis riches, | to wnich the h Ambassador, Lord Stratford de | Youd Sia'es of America, and notaing wo could eves TECLINE IN AMERICAN STOCKS. | paname? percent in mtge Sot noan, at will be submitted to arbitration. his immense influence—only await the asceptance of & | Recciiffe, added, “A ‘most disastrous offect.” do could prevent i:. (Hear.} He could not say * | Pavtnae, 1660.0 92 0 93 As regards the Peace Conterences, nothing new has ta- | beautiful American lady—s Mlas Hatton. Saou, indeed, | “The present state «f the Turkish wey intarest | Toure tn order keep eae ata ble at inece eae ~ ic Sopa 3 i 04 f me) are her chasms, that itis not difloult to imagine that, | some of yoor readers, It is as followa:—One offictal Es ord 10 h60n Oh: Sse ged 864 0434 8 9534 | ken piace, Austria has eubmitied the Rasslan acoept- | like the striae’ of Orpheus, the strorges; oaks shoul het could not do it, but ibat would be all tnat we cual Do. 5 it. Ist mtge., Action of the Manchester and Liverpool | Peoner'yanis, cont ato per cen apotuer in the same twice a week; vwo in wah, a hres a | ee es no sign of Prowis belng aémlstod to them. Sho ts vary | {he indoenes of Ameria ladies in tis onchanuing ty. | French, on wondey and fharsday: e Greek joaroal, every | fatal ey batter tat ie oosgtry ainaia bncaae intent Chambers of Commerce. Our London Correspondence, corecn tbo satject, as ovary loss to har auttrlty is © | are gait, perhaps more than ‘qual a thai of the French | Serurday’ ong. Atmesisa.eyery” Fourwsay tos raotoce | fitie,TrateTer, and smay over howe sarage inte 4 t mad cee ia ut Lowvow, Tuesday, Fed. 6, 186, | gain to that of Austuls. oot the moet eynloal eriticium ia exercised | every other Wedveaday; a Turkish jourual, printed in atin dag at cckabie tolstion ite be cei ote SPEECHES OF MESSRS. BRIGHT AND GIBSON, | Zhe Digicutty Between England and the United States— Sa:dinia is repreeented by one representative enly. | UPOD Seana gy ier lb laparagement Greek charsolere, every Saturday; & Bulgarian, onces | But there was a question which pressed atl ‘which. ever vent on iliamoes, too, ara : more, Pting of the Engh Pegler. Brig on (he Quct. | Baton Tero the‘ardiaan Ambasador at Constantioopis, | Peealyen iho taps bot voon individuals of the Two's. | Tridsy. "Out Hall toese the brat named ay wiice'y | {be merchacts aud mannfucture:s of this dite ls Ly tion—ihe Peace Negotiaiione—Prustia Bacluded—Re- | protes’ed against bis not being admitted to the Confer- | tions, while they become more and more rare between the | called ‘raguin Pag, (jmuraal of fasts) is offal, Of | Yorksbite should have thotr attention t THE SUBJECT BEFORE PARLIAMENT. ted Coolness Between Mr. Buchanan and Lord Pal- | ences held at that capitaton the fourth point, He has | Freroh and Erglish. the reviews, two are Armen‘an, published every month; tem Ieft Cons'antincple, The fourth potat refors to the Chris- | geune on Raturden’ tha eeerieee oe the Pe ae ‘Turkish. 85 a 68 | nto to tho consideration of the German Diet. There is | bend be'ore them. Indeed, one is continual'y reminded of | Journal ia the Turkish ‘nsruage Pere telco a eeakT ong | achieve. Ke thought that the Times gave smiraile fhoreday “THE NEW YORK HERALD. sho db-oaas one printed in the Armenian characters, every | the bill for the enlistment of foreigners. He wae eneof - 3 cous AU- | fortnight, and s Spanish illustrated review, in Hobrew, | these who oy it. Mr. Gibson, his pon ‘The question of peace, or « continustion of the war | tian subjects of the Porte, A regular reform bill for the | gusta, daughter of Prince Charles Bouaparte, to hor | which appears mntily. ’ | those ie opposed. ity | Mr: Giese, ie. seaanenn. aie OPINION OF LORD PALMERSTON. | agatast Rossin, is becoming almost secondary to the | wbole acmoinistration, pollioal and social, of Turkey has | Sousa Prince Gabriel, which took place in tiie chapel |" The Masoum of Navural History at the Jarden des | OPpOred sf, and, to show how unnecossary it wad, he was been drawn up by Lord Stratford and M. de Thouvenel. elit hecpasaci. | Plantes bas jast added to its collection of living anfmals | had ever yet got to the field of war or had taken part {a quertion of the misunderstanding which has arisen be- P health, but during the hospltalities which will necessari- | an siligator from the Missisalpp!, which measuses about 7 len Mr. Gheoen! thet N tween this government and the government of the United | All the cocks at Sebastopol are nowachaotle mass of | ly attend the Conterence, it has been determiaed that Hx feet in length. ay Sey oy (ie. Brigh) bd — Pe, IMPROVEMENT IN COTTON. | ccs. reins. Ian armistice {+ ccncladed, it is presumed the | Cloud shall be her residence, The Ceeairensgece ‘The captains of the American and English vessels | Abangard,”? was adwaltied by everybody to be the ep — The omistion In the Queen’s speech of any allusion | blockade will be coniinued. Palmerston, when quee- | ihe Emperor birnself was bora. i obescyanze pee ay ee ee ese ee pings to | which it was impotsible for the advucstes of the SLIGHT FALL IN BREADSTUFES, | tothe murject has croated surprise, and has boon d' | tloned onthe subject, declined givtog any enwar till the | Hla to suah interesting oooasions, in the timo of France's | praying that tho number of akipbrokora at thar gore | Tcctinareament, Herald, if we wesegolag to have cussed in forcign as well as English papers. Tae Lon- | prelimizaries were signed at Paris. Russia, it is said, Peg eboosgh Le Ree Me aria Steely faut. | may be increased, so that the French government by ® | to seduce sen without the consent of thelr govermmanee &0., &e., aa. don Journals aro stil! occuplod at this misunderstanding, | eoke for four months. This wopld, if the blockade is | Satuining rooms with the, Gooe lett Dpen’ Poor oe Prompt measure may put an end to many existing | to onlin? Were we gving to negotiate with individuas® ia buses. 4 and it han beon the aubjeot of discussion at @ meeting of | ral:ed, enable her to replenish ber storhouses and re. | such an hour of woman’s tilal, such mockerios might | and teeatt hee grec? Uirtee e aa emiy zine skip | Because that was contrary to the public law of 5 el and twenty-five goods’ brokers. The shipbrokers have ‘ : Pa oma gem, te Cpa | he ner Chae Crm robo er rion al al th rapa | SS en, hat? aneni ce oe | setae tecnica | Cer oteanet ned went ranean rived off Sanoy Hook at ten o'clock on Saiurday night, | the rimrs of Saturday, observes that it ts jastas wel | war are carried on with the same activi'y as before. France, The ill tated Dauppin, son of Louis the Six. | war 100.000 pone ey ceeciaent pagel thet dato | war they became psrties to the war, ‘and were no loagee and reached her wharf about seven o'slock yesterdsy | nothing was said in the royal epecsh, as nothing plea- | Atelegraphic despatch from Copenhagen, dated 6th | teenth, the King of Rome, aun of the First Emperor, the | teen there; now’ however, the movemest Wan ineromed | Houta, and therefore this bill vas not meceasary. Bt f 4 ly neceseary if fing to obtal morning. She left Liverpool at eleven o'clock om the | sant could have been anid. Ina first leader it depre: | February, ssys:—‘‘A conference has taken piace between ee son oC the Due de net i Coaat to ce million tons, and serious ¢elays and tnconve- | tye wile? rare Suede ais aby peopel ted morning of the 6th inst. sates war with the United States as the greatest calamu | the delegates on the Sound dues. Denmark has made | Reno ans Poor Pake of Orleans, '7' | nieuces are felt in consequence by the present limited | of thy government. Well. what taken place? We @nswers where? Absit omen. . The Atlantis experienced strong wosterly gales for ten | ty that could ceour to elther party. It appeals to the | ® fies propositicn, asking for $36,000,000, to be dis. | A report prevaiied that another slory wasto be added to | “Umber found that in Prussia an Eoglish Consul had been tm- The last copy of the Oficial Gazette of Madrid contains neds ticfag from thy Hamse days in succession after she left Liverpocl. In iat. 45 29, | good sense of the American people, and trusts that the | buried by thore interorted. fhe, Palace of the Tuuoriea; and although ths project, 1s | the two following paragraphs, which, considering the | Rowns, ant from Hambuig;rercons t come to Hsligeland long, 48 25, during thick foggy westuer, fell in with | intention of the Washington government to demand the | — There bas been s mottication of the Spanish ministry. | oeut tt i ale shat it will be so. ere long, "On | “cial sea) ttese de Mestijo has givon a ball ta honor | {0.eplist, and were it not nat those governments wore large field of ice, and tracked it soutzerly to lat. 43, an4 | recsit of Mr. Crampton will not be inafsted on. The | M. Bruil hes reigned his post au Minister of Finances, | the removal seafuldirg in tront of the new part of | ofthe anniversary «f the mnarringeot er august dvughter | 0° 1e0be) we saris thine pd gare 44 go go westerly to long. 50, keeping it in sight tor three days. | article concludes as follows: — and is suoceeded by Santa Cruz, the Louvre, bas so ccmpletely dwarfed the Palace by con- | with the Emp-ro: Napoleon ILL, and of the birthday of | pie the most incredible was that the government of ae The Naw York Hunan of yonterday moraing contained | the {ination {s becoming every day more critionl, and | A debate took place last night in the Houso of Peers | Yaich ‘the Tolenes aia tn apeaing Besa agit date py one oe chore de Alba. It was like © | econemical coumtry—a couniry that Sind adopted fee the leading pcints of her news. woketce le cut ove vitength ard he kaosiony uae | Teuworthy ofnetice, Under the titie of Baron Wensley- | unguinly corridor, is sigualty wanting Insufisient acoom- | “worthy of the ‘proverbial grandeur of the’ mother ot | {200,24 con'ained on asa-ciation called » Chander o@ The Cunard mail steamship Asta, Captain Lott, arrived Rey roaches ‘ao all that e pactho and | C#le, the Queen has created Sir J, Parkoa Poor for life, The beter gt ol tthe moment, {he invention 1s simply to | those two J-wels of the Spanish aristocracy.” the westwarc, where the labor of a ¢>mamon Laborer cm ® At three ofslook yesterday af'ernooa, sho loft Livorp00! | heorstle nation ean do tw avert the on‘astrowhe wnton | Peers regard thisas a blow almed at their order—against | Finn. the Saneliian of the aneonss of abo Guinean | he tecoud paragraph {yas fellows: — a farm was worth 48. a Coy, to enlis' mem and 1o take theo on Saturday noon, the 9th Last. seems tinpens ing—not over us, but the nation tant has | hereditary descent in tities; they say itis Cemooratic. | Exbibitiem was commenced afew daya ago. Piscatds | in his saloons, a. fow vighte Shee curious for, Sot enti a tae bas ad tay (tear, eetmats The news by both steamers is one week later. surrendered the care of ite honor aud peace into sven | wow, Barcn Parke is mace a Peor, decane he is aman of | have been stuck up by the Administration dos Domaines, | which was attonded by fo élite of "the woelety of Mvdrid, | they did wae this, Mr. Crampton, the Amerioan aoe We regret to state that nelther brings any tidings of the | 'Mg,i0 ft iO Rk he Oe war, talent and a good lawyer. Itis © recompense for merit, Saeere onthe Quatenion ee nee 4 Drummond himeeif danced some bolas with Senorita | ter ctr idmund Head, ihe Governcr of Canad, and o Paalio, * At the Manchester Chamber of Commerce yesterday, | S0PPOsing he hus a son—s fool, ore disrepuiable charac. | Tne Paris butchers ‘are becoming, I presume, better | our na.tonal dances wore greatly admired. It's agily ia | $cuDg under th ta dutalaibe, even, te the Unieed Biatey Our advices by the Atian ic and Asia are important, Mr. Bri s ’ | ter, (he heppens to have no heir)—is that gon to inherit | tex for they havp undertaken to supply one thou- ‘ioular was really remaz! for a san of clouty Al- | Our gover: t said directions were given that thees . Bright made a lorg speeoa on the question, The ful : Ailcgrammes (tip kilo is two. pounds eu vernmen: gr The Peace Congress was to meet fo Paris om the 20ch i & title ccnlerred for meris? The ready answer would be, 's on. abould be no inf:ingement of the laws of the United S:at lowing rescluticn wes unanimoualy adopted :— 1 meat, a week, for two months, to the table es- Talking of balls, however, that of Count Tascher de Ia | put the thing could pot be dore af ail without an infri inst. Anarmistice between the bdeliigerent Powers, to ~ tthet | Certainly not. tublishmente called the Fourneaux del’Imperatrice. The | p, (Clramberlain tei the Baeneece,: ia tas Soh 4 ‘ That this Chamber hss observed with deep regret tha’ 7 elagerie, in peror, in apa ment of those laws; and they find, from the re) , Jest till March 31, had been agreed upon. difficuities have arisen between tue British government It is, however, regarded as unconstitutional, as an | mention of the Em; name reminds me that the | ments in the Tolieries, on the 4th matant, waa the most | of the trial in the district court of the United States ‘The difficulties between England and the Uaited States | snd tke gcvernment of the United States wi ard to | sbuse ofthe royal prerogative, &c. In fact, it has its Minister of State ordered for the embellishment | unique thing of the sind I have had to resord. The | of the State of Prnnsylvania—agninst Henry Heris, that the ‘construction of a treaty on the subject of Osntral of the new avenue ce i'imperatzice, the, two grand | company consisted of three hundred. All were in fancy | the men he had slluded to wore] concerned in a. plea te attracted a good deal of attention, aad iaad cxusad con- ios, ano to atiempta which are allegoa to have been | P7atd cons. It is a great pity, doubtless, to distard a grow ‘of M. Hiias Rovert, whieh were in front of | dresses. And when the ban‘ hd finished a beautiful men in the United Btates, not actually enlisting toem. aiderabie excitement, both in politioat and commercial | gsde to enlist ver for the British army within the juris- | *#tem whish hes insted for so many centuries. At all Palace. Todeed, it is the Em; "8 7 march, while the guests perambulatod in pairs the sps- re, but conveying them to Halifax, tn Nova Sots, or ctreles. It is the opinion of Lord Palmerston that the | <icticn of the United States, tals Chamber wonid ur- | events, ibe blow bas been struck by the hand of the | intention to ornament the whole extent of that | cloussaloons, it suddenly struck up s mwisuot, then a | to Canada, for We purvee He woul! not say that there troubles can be amicably settied. cently tmpresaupom the geednament of this country che | Queen. The veteran Lord Lyrdhurst made avery abl | peeyauleronue with statues aud groups of, marble. | gayolte, then a Syrian dance, all of which were danced as any prcof of che complicity of the English Mlnisiae fety of ccnsideris 80 tions conciliator; certain couples, evidentl; pared for the occasion. t: the case Tho following curious story ts sent by the correspondent | “it wih a stecng de nose aivestions io e conciifstory | anc interesticg epreeh on the subject. It will lend t> | tion to the procession of that extenordinary spretecle, Tee cusint Gromeot aveny cgnreituin’ aad ieallioe; Wish eh rd Sieg dade gh stil ee yong of the Associated Press at Liverpool: — Uxited Kingdom avd the United States the indescriosbie | much divousslon, ard will doubtless be taken up by differ- | the Bceuf Gras. This year, by shappy innovation, the | small black marke, had the most charming effect. By | f 14 thet laid their statement of the case before us; butit was We learn, on the authority of the London Morning Ad- | evile which must artee fcom any in:erruption of amicable | ont parties. It is the slgnal for @ great newspaper war. pe roe rei pcegro bape ; under the enormous coils | and by a second group sollected together in the ceutre of | clear from ihe evidence at this trial—and there waa olew . relations between the two countries, ie carcases are laden, were | the room and danced, with admirable grace, the Teran- a d there were actual ietters of Mr. leat le Houry BulWor had tatimeted the gre’ tons berween the two ; F For tho Inst three days there bas been very sever | accommodated eaoh with s carriage, in which, with their | efoum and danced, with admirable Of things was the | ‘Contonee tha aithit Miner itet the chek cation it would afford him to sot. as a sort of offisial me As regards the war or pezce with Rusaia wo are in statu ‘ “ horna gilded and surrounded with chaplete of flowe 3 voy | fer Bp Giator between the 3:iush zorernmeat aad ihe American | ory Wee ae Ee re Ee) are eae memes Alls || TE aes ME EE TLE oreta nScee The ne, coe ereerinen ple chars S otcetad ten rocieetang wae Aik ceive oe nee Soe b4 ‘ ar “ + 5 ; od it to desoride it—to get a fey knavish vi Sees tehtna aa Wednesday tie testy withthe | We learn from Vienna under date of Feb. 2, that on the | St due ola ias tance attached to this sight by both old and young cannot | a Styrien dance. hut d coup the bottles, which was ofla: | in te nited Staten to come to Canada or Nowe Py view of seeing what could be cons towards briogiag | previous day the French and Britixh Ministers received Our Paris Correspondence. when proceraion igulting off cieaincoel cao ve soe me ueeprens oes - poieticimarad ~ Ro pe in the Pentagon fot aes papyccr w ; ; , d ce ing wor aye avout s more friendly feeling Detveea two goveramsuts. | ixatructions to alan the so-often mentioned Protocol, 1m- Panis, Feb. 4, 1866. | gendarmerie with burnished helmets and drawn swords, | tame, who, with arms akimbo, heel and ‘oe, double shailic | Urat were’ tericg thie; ebee It wen bene ocncert with a member of Pacilament of great diplamatic | "diately a/ter the receipt of thelr despatches Str Haall- | fhe Parisians under a New Phass—Pheir Joy at the Pros- | tliowed by the fat victims and s triumphal cat,onwhich | &o., did a sort of marine hornpipe. The company was very well what they were resliy golng for, amd m 0 4 sat, arrayed in pagan splendor, the goddess Ceres and | gti taxem by surprise, and was in perfect ecstacies of de- | the thi re foolishly that ‘A ine the experience, was endeavoring to arrive a° asolu'ion which tom Seymour and M. de Bourqueney communtcated their pects of Peace—The Old Leaven Changed—The Thirst of her Yaxlous pateats aud pelt , foliowed by & y ~ he thing was done #0 y tha: i: got iano may be more acceptable to porh ¢ antries thaa the plsa | contents to the Austrian Minister for Forolga Affalre aad | Mikitary Glory Giving Place to the Shopkeeping Spirit— bevy cf moundebanks in’ masks and anothor | etre, ‘Tiss secret coeamta to have beet Goll heck era | Pbuadelphia nevspapers. This c-eared great unplea. ant Togenous exe, because it must be noted that there were a great Poeuty, itis anid. takes placo at the insiization of Loca tothe Turkish Embassy. In the course of the evening, | Hoebuck's Preni-tions Regarding the Future of Rusria— | tquadron of gendarmerie appeared, the rush o| all agesand | the dancers broke upon the spectators with all tho ad- Dantber of persons’ te’ dhe United Sintee wan, tole o, from cas a 5 8 land, F jaxcle—Marrt classes. big women and little women, gray haired ola men | vantege of novelty. After this, general quadrilles wore | cause or another, had not sympathized with Roglant om eae Sutieary lnltee wean reeplaie | is ha pi Sector ang Se ike Ween ater op omead ate bhi and French Allancte—Marriageaf a Bonaparte | sna b:yish urchins, to the immediate spot of interest | formed,; and the guests, at parting, | arsed over wheilm- he Dusters qeaiton ; and une that there rah Ee'Busbanan the compromise which be is prepared: to | Trey axd Russia, shou'd meet at the Foreign Ofies on | Princess—Proceasion of the Baeuf Gras. Was go suimated, that he wasa lucky man who escaped | ed M. Teacher de In Felagerio with complimynts aad | portion of the Irieh pecpie there who had importaat ree. secu = on tke following day, and then ard there sign the important | What with the mesting of the British Parliament, the | with whole garments and uabruised sins. Andthia is | congratulations. The Emperor and Empress wore there, | Kons, ac they suppored, for being hostile to this couaerp, . document is question, At the appointed hour the four | Queen of England’s bh, the commentaries thereon, & perambulating spectacle till Tuesday next. | it is said, in mask. No notice was, however, taken. ‘Well. the Koglish government stopped the enilst The Northem Bee, of January 26, (a journal pub'ished t; speed 5 nz contributions on all the publie office, all the BERTIE | duc they Gla hot mks hat the American govern at St. Petersburg,) contains the following passage :— | foreign diplomatis's had assembled, and they and Count | the Conterence to be held/at Paris, theexpected armistice, basaics, and last, not least, on the knperial called sufficient reparation or apology. So far as he un- May God grant us peace; bot, should it not be coacluded, | Buol attached their signatures to the subjoined proto- | the approaching peace, the threatened war between the BERTI. OUR RELATIONS WITH ENGLAND derstood i, in making an, apology they deciad the com- Bussia sill has at her disposal sufficient means of resistanc, | %l— United States and Groat Britain—the Freach calsulation Panss, Fob. 7, 1856. e tolaslon of ‘the offence; which wan very muoh ke fiad- to repel her enemies, with energy. Rasste desires peace, | corner tie ive peopel een eed fe te aeective | of gain in political and commerclal aggrandizement by | Festivities of the Carnival—Pacific Revolution in the French Whe Maneheater aul Lavermosl Olauabers ox | but.we hope be will never 4oeo aay more” (Cage but she does not fear war. In the same number of the | hereunto auvexed, under the tile of Draf; of Preliming- | the Russian campaign—the Foglish dudgeon at its short- Mind—AUl Paris Melting into Universal Love and Chari- Commerce and the Threatened War with | In this sare they seemed to orpeced eee Ney they Northern Bee it ts enid :—As regards France, it may bo | ries, the undersigned, after bering Pe ed it, conform. | comings-—tbe arrival of great diplomatic dignitaries, giving ty—The Little Clow’ in the West—French Opinions on the the United States—3; 3 of Mr. Bright | Violated the laws of the United States, and at tho same positively affirmed, that the French nation loves and respects | Sbly'to authorization reselved to that effe time to argue that they tad not violated the laws; bat should ee more when ‘he goverument aid om jot, have agreed ‘ is and Miiner Gibson—The Question in Paril- that their governments shall each shaped plosipown- uatre to metropolita ngstetiee—the carnivalandthe Baul | Anglo-American Dificulty—The Allied Mode of Asserting pt Goer Ra te Rusians. The French prisoners, on their part, have | tiaries, who furcished with the fall powers nisesatry for | Grae—Paris is well nigh beside itself, the Independence of Turkey—The Ortowan Pres—Ameri. | Smeut--Opinion of Lord the house all the corres with regard Deon treated like brothers, Prccoeding to the sigaature of formal preliminarios of | The probability is, that the great men especially de- | can Delegate to the Paris Conferences in the Person of an | PROCREDINGS OF THE MANCHESTER CHAMBER oF | ‘0'hematter. But this point was iy 4 ‘The Liverpool Albion saya:— Pence, shal” Conclude an armistice ands deGaltire treaty | puted by their respective goveraments to wind up ina | Alligator from the Miustssippt—Petition from the Amert- COMMERCE. had fallen into the very thing Mr. Glbsor haa pcan We understand that it in resolved by France ant Eog- | ticfee Tari wihin tho tore of three, Weeks Gating from | ‘Tue-love-knot past hostilities will be received om thelr | can Shipmasters at Havre to the Kaglish and French Gov. | o The anaual meeting of the Manchester Chamber of | sgainst, when he said, ‘You must get in\o trouble with land to cecpatah tro spec Commlaeiouars tmiesiately | this day, or pooner if ican be done, . eutry with more enthusiastic acclamation than has ever | crnmente— Fashionable Gossip, dic., he. eae eee ee these governments if they are neutral”) What ehoala Bra for’ the pro vention ie favase of cesurrencos quch | DcBe At Vienne, this lat day of February, 1858. been bestowed upon the most suocess‘ul heroes of the | The fentivities of the Caraival have ceased, ‘The Barof. | The adoption of the report having been moved and se- | ‘ho iavecaic ifthe Russians bad, engaged privateers im Five copies or “expeditions,” as they are technically it war, and that of these the Russian diplomatists conéed— board ships and as have recently again rendered some of tue flasat present . of iT iploma ties: has crimsoned with its life blood the marble uet __ | between e ‘men on fi ongsging mem Portions of the east coast of Jouth America a Pre to | called, of the protocol, were prepared, and ono givon to | will not be the least welcomed. The most carsory obser- pein ge tale ZA tas Opere piclenlg ious sitet hens prectenn| ool regen upon the land t H was quite clear te t our peccenens Hos asstatan by algropa yestortay) Ts = | euch government. Count Buol was to leave for Paris on | vation will admit that the French peopie—if Parieisto | tauwted ft lst practical joke, and the acop certan | Ametion The subject, in reference to which he had | gtoement suiielent, Mr. Crampton led obviously vio- Count V. Katerhasy, the Austrian Ambasador, has be- | Cr About the 12t:, and M. de Bourqueney two or three | be taken ss anything like an exemplar—are strangely | ‘aien, to remind the Cevoteos of fun and fro‘fe that there Bee as COE oes or nic cosling tpuesit tain cnah ate: Crmetce: BORE TF ntl: anion ae come very popular at St. Petorsbarg. The prospects of | “wn nosy z changed from the character untveraally assigned them in | is time for all things—s time for festivity, a time for re. | present stato of tho aifairs between wis coantey and the | splsh Mr. Crampton ‘proceedings; but his fafiaecs Me peace are generally regarded with great satisfaction. boots: {s the official aanouncement of the Pleal- | the eariy part of the prevent century. The general im- flection, a time to dle, Le Mercordt des cendres has soon | United States, ard ne was somewhat surprised to find no | cod must necersarily be greatly impaired in that oowm- Advices from Hoog Kong of 15th of Decemer, say :-— | Povenlsries to ave part in the negotations which are | pression has been that the war trumpet blast bad oaly to | iho churches full o overflowing ; Protastanta aa woll aa | euc#lon 1 aaa error Of fhe eanccta tom ate, recol: | try, and therefore they tuked us to reoal Kish. Te mighe ‘The trial of the American Consul, Keonaa, stands over, | “Unt t? open at Parts: — be soun¢ ed for Frenahmen to forget all party differences, | Cathotien have crowded to the altar of Jesus, to mip at the | he wan in i Vey, Cap WERT § See ee he was in Paris not very long afer the event happened, | were things much more unp'easant than trat. It was pending the recovery of Chief Jus\ice Huime, who has fey, es Walewent. Mis Seale: di Foreiga Affairs | M2 oae of civil regeneration, all dynestio prejadioes, | fount of trath fresh lessons ot peace and good will to- | thatel the time when affairs betweon France aps Eng: not so long since that we ase Yer kicked out of Me ned Gere nie nothiog now to montion, | of tho Emperor, and Baron de Bourq Eavoy | every thing but the mustering drum-beat and the mili | wards men, land were very o:itleal—he (Me; Bright) believed it was | Madria in consequence of @ very unpleasant deapatel, ‘and no authenbe intel g | Retremtmary " eney wih era to the “8, OF some- “ 4 ligence fan reached us trom the ae ACERT TUT at Vienna." | ‘ary glory of France. Either the enemy hes not been | 14 would seem that they havo not been thrown away | Thirg equally abeurd—a deputation cams up from tne | {ror Pres:nt Premier, wich be. had reed there; ani interior. At and around Canton ali is quis*, and the | Count Bool Schauenstoin, Minister of Foreign Aairs | YY choren or the commercial spirit—like the rod of | for peace is on every Up, apparently in every man’sheart. | Chamber of Commerce, at Bordeaus, to Louls Philipps. | Cramptes, because it ts contrary t> the dignity of, this Chinese appear more conden: ot tranquitisy them before. | or tne hm veror of Aurttis and Baron de Haboec, his | 4&foD—hes eaten up tho false hallucination of the day | Every one’s face seems glistoning With newly awakened | He wes not sure they did not call the monarch) out of bed, | governme (ir. Bright) was of opinion that tt wae A tale, involving loss of property in Glasgow to the ex- | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at | —but it is an indisputable fact, that throughout | joys. Sochermed are all at the eiellla sghss Gt ttsek |' UOtcaias sere ; night, ar- | contrary to the éignity of this eoun:ry to violave the laws uing the questicn which was thus handled by the | of to t course taken. sent of about £100,000 sterling, broke out and raged on } Paris. tees Wl this war the brightest emanations of military enthu- | that the soldier—so lately the object of veneration— hg Reed ot England and France, and hurrying those No newapaper ts Login’ that betea nous hist ooaiet oak Wednesday night, 6th inst, The Earl of Clarencon, Principal Secretary of State | *#em have been ruch as in the United Sta‘esjor in Great | with his star-covered breast, looks Mke an oxore- | OUntries into ana me fnevitable war; and cur government was wrong in this matter. (Bene, bear.) A moat fearful collision took place in the Eeglish Chan. i +4 : would nct leaye Leuls Phifppe untit he gave them But F we Jid not recall Mr. Crampton the American b . | for Foreign Aflsirs, and Lord Cowley, Ambassador of | Britain would have been pronounced fade, Either th» | scence; and the only wonder is that he “bas the word a6 s kirg that there should be no war between Eng- | government would be in ® different position, He Bel, off Foikestone, on the evening of the 3d inst., be. | England at Paris. sole: Sibi peop'e generally have never understood the polloy of the courage to show his face. It is now discovered that a | lard and France upon that question. Now, at this mo | observed an insolent articlein the eonomie, a, of tween the Josophine Willis, Capt. Canney, ono of the | Going Orloff, member of the Council of the Empireand | ¥#!) oF in the bottom of their hearts they liked mot the | the Conferences last year at Vionna the Rassian | ™ént we knew just this, bel neg ae Prerident Pierce aa only at the head se oliqaes London ond New Zealand line of packet ships, and ® | Aide-d-Camp General of the Emperor of Russa, and | alliance with which it wasnecossary to carry it on, for cor. plenipotentiary exceeded bis instructions; that his Im. | All, that we knew was, that nothing could be knowa. | gut when we put him upinio that position he ue powerful iron screw steamship called the Mungorton, } Beron de Brunow, hix Envoy Extraordinary and Minister tain it is that the dove which brought the olive branch Dound to the Thames from Limerick, which resulted in | !lentpotentiary to the Germanic Contederation. ‘the fountering of the former ship, and it was feared that | The Chevalier Massie d'avogilo, Senator of the king- Parliament had met; the correspondence between the | Icnger be supported oy a clique merely. bat by tho whole perial master was all the while for sbaking hands with | English Foreign Office and the American government was | public opinicn of the United Staies, We were {a danger to the diluvian ark could scarcely have been more wel- | the Western alliance, only he forgot to tell his emissary | t laid before it; everything was sabterranean— | of getting into that position from which neither nation come f peace everything was concealed. Our Foreign Miaisier | gould retract without what they called loss ot honor; ods Ricty: vei Sond bone 10, Ph ehrrrd than the sound of appears tobe tos city | the fact. ihe conferences being at an end, however, | Vay golcg to Paris te attend the nogotiations— | coq thon we should seo our £80,000 .000 of 3 which. judging from the continual tramp of armed men— France—at least the Emperor Napoleon—waa assured | he trusted, and he hoped they all trusted, that | ,foat on the ocean, of which the Chatrman hei« The London Globe of the 8th instant, says:— pM Lo from tke continual strain of martial musio—ite milita: - | he tbe pre-eminently successful. (Host, hear.) | pecome the victim cf privateers, and ths whole Alien ‘The Czar is eaid to have written an wutograp’ letter to | , Ast! Pasha, Grand Vizter of his Majesty the Sultan, FY | there was some mistake, and that Nesselrode quite ap fervign Otte ¢ 4 1 4 = Their Foreign Gffice would then be left without its au- Notel c the Pope, stating that tan Roman Oatholis bishoprics are | *20 Mehomed Djomil Bey, his Ambassador at Paris. cmbloms—the milliary fgares of rhetoric which porvace | proved of the xentralization of the Black Sea. So, a¢- | thoriced head, and fn the hands, no doubt, of tho present Sreninoet evecrcmeee "i repreted to sab'tae doe ‘about to bo established in Polandand in tae German colo- You will observe that no mention is made of Prussia. {ta oratory in the Senate, at the bar, on the throne and cordingly, placable France, in December last, contrived | Prime Minister. Now, Mr. Buchanan, the American | ous tone that had been assumed, not cnly by our own nies of the Volga, When signing the protocal at Vienna, on Friday last, | in the pulplt—has the soldier in its thoughts from “early | that an intimation should be made at St. Petersburg that Minister, ad stated In a despatch to ‘hla guvera.neat Pett AY tbe more, oder ate of thw Toa Another conference has been held at Copenhagen on | on registering the acceptance of Russ:a, Prince Gortache. | morn tiil dewy eve.”” she for one had no real hostility to Rusala, and thatzit an | {ett tthe government of Lard Aberdeen Rovl toreronze | Journals of ihe United Stares, and, under ail olroum- Fran regret : office, all the points of differense ; ‘the question of the Sound Duos, at which the represen- | keff requested that sho should be invited to take part in ce, its said, has not to the ineviteble sa- | honorable arrangement could anyhow be suggostod, the Heal vit ey the Uoi:ed statse would certataly | "incr, he een oe cate - tativos of Prussia, Russia, France, Sweden, and six other | the Conferences. Count Buol seconded the request. The | crifices which the war haseost her. ‘The grandeur,” says | Hamperor Napoleon would be the first to promote it. ‘This | bavo been setticd and he (Mr. Bright) knew slag that | plause.) delegates from the Germanic States, were preseat, On | English and French envoys said they would refer the | the semi oficial Constitutionnel, ‘we might even sey pre- | drought out the famous Nersolrode etreular of December Soe ee evicat talogs ine erties at et thy smaliont | _ Th resolution was carried unantmousty; and a wis this occasion the Danish Plenip»teniiary laid upon the | matter to their respective governments, The admittance | ponderance of the political réle, will compensate for the | 29, which anticipated the Austrian ultimatum. trifle which might bring us into difficulties ax great in having Soave tak Gnd Flee on Mr. dean table several documents requested at the previops meet- | of Prussia would be tantamount to the admittance of four | ®xpenses. There was atime when the commercial rela- | Yes, were tt not for that littie cloud in tho West, as 9¢ | regard to America as ee ne ioe gett cae vies | On the American question, the Roacratlo member drew ing by the members of the Conference, rolative to the | Russian Pleaipotentiaries. Mons of France and the Levant were very prosperous, | Robert Peel eslled any uneasiness on your side of the At, | <mereing with regurd to Plusmo Hee tone whtat | up the following resolution, which was moved by Mr. receipts duzing the last ten years, He also made a new | The Moniccur publishes the following official announce. | when her flag dominated in the Mediterranean; but ali | Jantic, a great calm would suddenly have seemed to come | be laughed at if he supposed they would lead to any dim. | Watts, the biayor of Manchester: Proposition to the meeting, which was sanctioned by his | ment:— this was anpihilated by the English blockade ot the first | over the horizon everywhere; bat while it is the personi- | culty; but oe me poets Aon on Aen laren wlan fiec Chenier bee. Kamag —. (om rouret toon 2. government, vis:—that they would take the sum of 36,- | Russis has adherol to the five propositions which are ] Fimperor, and on the return of peace her flag came in | fication of the lion and the lamb in the East, it is bul pefot in waleh cach party found his fonor was conserued | fO¥ernment of the Untied States, with regard to ine conmrac: 000.000 thaiers as compensation for thetr interest in the | (0 serve a the preliminaries of peace, ana which were | presence of the two navies of the United States and Eng | torriers in the Wert, on ether side tho Atlantic, andeyc« | Pot sand’ not retract; and then the question of national ono a eat Sihaslic lens Geran Bound Dues, ot Francs tx et epaney oy, Kiwi, i ae land, which had taken possesion of the transport | ing each other with bristling baeks, teeth set on odge | honor bscame the question As fame, wile the original | the Bruit army w idln the juriediouen of whe. Caked The London Times of Feb. 8, says:— annoureed in a note addrossed by Count Nesanlrode, the | lines. All this is now changed. The effective | and growls no formidable that # farious onset, in which | Cause of dispmre ‘Touguly, oat, an grove patton tak pp ET Try \ om fmapension was announced Vale morain of Messrs. Penal gs a seinen the Austrian strength of the French mercantile marine has con | each is to seize the other by the nape of the neck, seem’ | brought into struggles {nvolving an enormous cost of | Conclliatory sate 8 song determination spare pope £20,000 is Aree eevee Maneatis, Gif ricated to Count Buol by Priace Gortechakoff, ‘the Ras. | “iderably increased. ‘the French flag ia everywhere | more than threatening. Bat, to sey the truth, the French | bloow and treasure. If the tations were open and we | evils ‘from, eeeraghen alamied which must arise any ble their losses are understood to havs beeen caused by 43 | ‘ian Minister at Vienna. The Rassian government, in | seen in the Mediterranean and {a the Biack sea. French | do not delieve in anything of the kind. We bave seen al | !Bew what was doing, he perhaps need not have had to | {ions between the two countries. wows defaten part sed the signi pera ane th anywhore else to talk about ths matter, Soupled wink ons on the vart of persons ia thelr employ, Viana, to ecregoue Ang By ero AO Protocol cit | packets and merchant vessels will not forget the new | this before, they say, and it only ended in an overflowing Seoucan he veuler Publicopinton would snuff cl agrens ‘The resolution was uuanimourly agreed to. Son drt tome oon the ta ae penn see " Conte ‘to the propenitions intended to serve ar the base, | Paths which in the wake of their flects they have follow- | of anclent brotherhood, which au fond is always remem y of there thinge; but, he would ask, what would be | ACTION OF THE LIVERPOOL CITANRTR OF COMMERCE. Manchest The annual rt if the Liverpool Chamber of Com- de hoped that arrangements will be made tor che busiaess Botiation, and to veclane that plentpotentiaries | ed. Frenchmen, stimulated by the spicit of enterprise, | bered by our AngloSaxon friends, No one speaks sorious- Teh cf the onines the buying e Sev Ortten meres wan held om Monday, ath oat, at the doard room to be ceriied on without Late-rup iva. ect [APS OM een — Mh oe ae if | will remain im the ports of the Biack Sea, and prepare | ly of the difference between the two countries. The d goocs, snd the conduct of their export and import | of the Chamber; Mr. Kaward Heath ia the ohsir. The Armenien Catholic Chursh at Constantinople fe | f0%,'2 preliminaries, ‘hue omnis ches mae, the way for our commerce by making known our habits, | causes of quarrel all admit to be of easy arrangement de, to some concealed onapiracy, almost, among ti Ms, Tacemos the secretary read the sixth annual re- downon the 2th of January. About thirty persons were | and to the opening of general negotiations. * | tows and iengnage.”” and the Pieroe administration wit gain nothing by thelr | srvantel Why, they would have no salety wnatovor in | Por of crammuiw, in alluding to the difioutty with the elther killed or wounded, ylbe Belen government had alroac expromede dosiro | It is instructive to contrast all this with Mr. Roebuck’s | motives, aay the politicians; and such in fact also seoms | jinq cf our Foreiga Omics, wo had drifted” tate the | United Btates, ‘said’ he ‘waa ure he was aposkieg Tie New Prussian Gacetle snnounses from St. Peters: ss arenuitbend haeti o eagerly, aevetey | language in the House of Commons, remembering that | the view taken of the subject .by the most enlightened | war in which wo had deen engaged, which showad che | the views of all Liverpoor when he said that ) Avstzian government having, on its side, eagerly acceded , in ity and feebleness that had been at tho b, thing eould be more foolish, suicidal, and wicked, th. « 1 Burg, thet afer pence hos beon proclaimed, the Czar | to that augyrstion. it is therefore im the capital of the | fow men at prosent stand bigher in England, as anoxpo- | Americans in Paris, and who-tnew that we might not be dcifing” ines | the provocation of hostility. between these. t90” sis. = ‘will proceed to Moreow to 06 crowned, eee ee ee eine ae eater, SPPointed | nent of public opinion. than that gentleman. Ttis true that @ notion appears to prevail that the | war now? He heard a man tho other day, ri was | countries— (rear, hear),—countrien which had acomm .@ The cession of the Wallachian Divan for 1866 opened.at | The protceol rotting f-rth the sesoptaacs a gee reed **The dominions of Tarkey,’”’ he says, ‘are situsted | Kaneas question is fraught with trouble and danger to | a violent advocate for the war with Russia, denying longrage, . ee see ox or a beeper a pees Bucharest, on tho 14th ult. The Hospodar’s message | ties was signed yo-terday (Friday) at Vionna, at noon, | between the acquisitions of Russia and our domtatons in | Euroye, if tt does not succeed in dividing Amorica. It ecole ree ayy ane: eo Pa al Re eg Bll pg As grant ini ed (ES Pang cw So mer ions a surplus revenue the pest year, of tro and a | end it was decided that the pionlpotentiarion of the | Apia. Once in Constantinople, ones tn possesion of tho | is thoygnt that in time the slayo States will havo a ma- | DPonie almase a Tretia to tls tenuneiaidons of ane | the Tutti Sa foutugs, elicited, which they ail hope half millions, Government is im negotiation for the | ,uwunrent Turis before che 2uth of Fehtuary PM | Asiatle territories of Tarkay, and Russia would bo for- | Jority 1 Congress, othe; but if we got into the yonition Lo, waich we ware | Were pessing amsy with the parsing genorations. Tn hie building of railways and the lighting of the eapi'al, ‘The armistice is to extend to the Sst March. midable to Kagland in India. Do not let us fancy we | When tt 14 disosvered, says the Didets that the eou- | atier ihe Rassias crowed the Fraud, sad after the | view ovares of tatiel eitated 1 sm0omh Cown ealstiog AUiiord paper niaios noe Lenin, Eeq., of Bonton, | It in stated that Mr. Buchanan felt tt ble daty to de- | can bitad the world by pre'ended ignorance, Tae world | queior beet nite them slavery and no} civilization, will | sonore ee re a Oa al et | kuarvtten, “Hie would not pron vance wa opinion upm the ‘and J. Croskey, Eeq., At sn Consal at Southainpton, | cline the invitation to Lady Palmorston’s avirés, owing to | knowa wha! wo are fightiog for, Kara has feilen, Be- | yosicn? The Cabinot of President Pierce has dared to do- | milistion to this country: and he (Mr. Bright) was aa | two particular Neer Boot issue eine the twa recently vistied Milford. Both gontiemen ware on tho | what he concetvad personal discouriosy on the part of | fore the Redan the Eng ish army has boon repelled. Tue | care that tho abolishtmont of slavery in Cada wouti be | ruck eqatest doing anything that mhould prtog bummita- | countries, but marly stale that, eapeetaly with onc € onthe ‘Tostarati . on to this 60 5 4 se questions, ree of sare orracd, namely, to make arrangements for thy es | one of the members of the cabinot—not Lord Palmor- | Engiieh navy has come back a second time from the Bal- | OO {dered at Washington ag a dostaration of war. | (ion to this country a# any man could be. If would attacbed to it by the proplo of the United Bates-f Y tani ree bd America for us waa the land of Washington. To-day all | much easier now to make poace, than it woald bo whew | A Bs 4 ta ishment of lines of Stoxmors trom Miliord to tho | stor—whem recently, In the élacharge of Yaiy duttos as | tie wihout @ singlo object ascomplished, Our hoaor | in cha aod. ° passions bad been roused on both aides, and wion men Primer Ah ref a A i. dy Winkel United Rates. ‘Mr. Ccosbey a as conta mpl ste remov- | American Minister, his Excelioncy was eagagod in vindi- | has deen tarnished. [ reooilest what has boon sail | ‘Tho funds continue thelr upward move, and the Tarees, rece re io te cantinn the ton rede a et tale | thooght @ ile oonegeston upon the part Of Engle a ing nvy of the sieamers for wh #1 agent from the | cating what he beileves to bo the honog and rights of his | sbreat: that ours was an army of {fons Yol by Juscawes, | which you remember wore 02 and @ ‘action, hivy al orese of the Bulwer-Clayton treaty wisn rewscd to cpadient and borotadle to ou Wows Bouthampton route, bat hopen to oroate n new natox- | ountry at thin oritten! juncture end {believe that ty be ® corroo! doreription, This | ready touched 78. The groatost imterost is atiached to go tralAmerioa, Now, bo was not about ta deny at all | dip, With pegard warms, thas (he impntadom