The New York Herald Newspaper, February 25, 1856, Page 2

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, 1856. from view the elm with which the war was com- at we being sotnated any arreshencicn coul, not icra | would bave been something Snnstural in of | na ly intended. Some had taken place, not loee enn slow agate by oe women’ cape hes, at poet we cur pride. sy bere ett be many = Se ae whe Lampenenanence of wie eee £% med . protons Non meema:8 ae larly Scie Bene aby tiger te Beiartipaicn age tho powertagroneen, of Great Beitehy Aeneas in whea: 170, i [3 bh fi i tf ihe 4 wee 10 more from large the difference Powers, To the tion Anerica | brillant s manner with the which we peraitte: fi ‘would orme all’ the more gracafaliy from her. He | world es ts, ‘not so cousitovabi, we mejreven say;as | fsa x01 jet wade a0y 7epl7: however, he was wilivg to | cutsalves to advite, we shall ive bags thet Shated few daltons toMy ont eek Tasca ws oon ties ‘The son | lay all the correspondence that had taken place on the cong? is about to open, the grand inter- tthe further end of tbe h Finland. parent; and | rubject on the table. Wich regard to the eunject of en- defended will not be abandoned. Th A eee ha ea Reaeiak Geen cas on lar toy, pit in | iutment, the Eneish euveroment was led to beliere | usc chont forethought ce of Italy and Spain, ; peace when the pronpost of gain enters at an over weening ‘two different | that tne, were OF gy "7 a pro tribe south of Europe, and oceu| elf with the | most Christian Bogs ai accepted and frankly used the | element into their refleetions. I hove alreaty bad ecca- shown amore | who wished to bes ~ pe » Wack porth, with the Baltle and the Sw treaty. * * *| alliance of the Granc Turk. lt seemed, ina word, that | sion to report to you the number of commercial and 1p ‘ind with the ant, in eee pence, 2 7 Bo a) =a iwi | Have’we advised tbat conditioms which cduli no: | in political a sommnseelek ta uenee France was des- | dustrial un . that have been cempelled to wind on 4 - ve made apolo- ~ - ngvere) Dimoult #0 conttnns eee hop |’ te ed witheut dishonor should be imposed ? | tined to une a mek Ly ee ee the republics | up their — in consequences of the working of the war; flesh blood =e mod ae s the Usi ed States, orders thsi to diseon- | No; @ meand tires no! Only grave acts of injus- of Venice an = pee ” t maiotain. It cncther, Be yet mentioned, one of the most extenstre @ are limits be- | Drege to the Uni ed Siatae, orders were given to diseon- | Me; © Aveireea commitied by Russia. Victorious, | woe siogular that the supprosrion of piracy frst arrested | and wealthy, has just reccived & (earful wound eer, thould carry te | feueihe Unived States on the subject, to wnom it was | We demand then Sins Uhene ears be revieed, for France the pregieee of Oot Sed westignetet MARE, | ail cicatntlcce eavaemiie aaeiaranaaaars 4 2 d can do it; never were cireamstances » | which farther is, im tact, ite { replied that the enlistment had been tinued. Ao. | and ¥ glan i oes | Uelivered by us from the corsaire which infested tt. The | proof of tee injurious influences of the war ta the midat men ba only to | ber dogteh as fenr.d a, gin at thn time | more, orale, nnn, ar Buse nc arop | inmeare vce encered wo Chena ad svn | an sejicngy a oe provauiy of ae. hg ewe tes thas ~ i hyenp ‘and it would be urjust to America to | secompany us with their rympethiea, Let ns have tne Gig ted of eet Meme sos, oe Company Pe Wares Tee ary iy Mber, and ihe answer wil be the | publeh the former ccrreeponcence without thiadeapatch; | courege to reviee Shet mp oat oll 2 or tig Hees sgbt. against. many rivala ia tho wee | the vars’ ’extensive: and Tocralive, busiseen Ie serried Shon mere calightenet a) T chick ihe word ‘bat people onnirang, and qotinas eneniencns 80 Woe | Mibcst the answer ef he Bite reve nen tet of which theta (tions of tig Westar fe aporton andthe | Hee mater Then eae oa Wish Haglend, | «a, che prog a having i ‘sates rogurded ag 3 = pee) front States Praretmg han a ees oer ‘hat the powerfal oetiueinee fee a aeane ee he elicveat th ‘that if their cote was ones wo ve conquests, ane they fought me sam wey yen oe ee ho a oo Pores pose ol Sore.” Ta oomeetuanea cl tag ee — ficial ple. But! am sorry to see | empire just brought to reascn ia the rg pat a | toth parties met with an «qually conciliatory spirit, an ami- ay piss age en, see (woe Hane atincen, | digy of the Egyptian expedition, the commerce of Fran | resources of {his cewpany have suffered di the Western | able arrangement might ite in the Levent was neerly annibilated. On the return of | the Minister of Fiance has advised the per to ik the adopting that ben prinel ‘that some of the friends of this controversy heve set false construction on the reluctance of ) t thoes who have Sely town 50 auch tepiek guarek th ibe nied Sater (No, may Ye, Fowers 10 60 tower We have evyn been ourselves a2- THE VERY LATEST. joy in the eceptance bout recerve ‘of Russia; bal the | Benen ou fing found i's to presencs ot She two nares raw thle pevilers and the publication of the ie a cheers. ‘paper ‘to-day, cused foute: jusien. necessary, tain, guaran! and y whic! ¢ over- % Crampton, Bo Brit ‘Minister, 1s to leave Amerloa, fore, t0 guard against: thet misiske. | We ete Lopes ecemmsamt i uuecart ee M. Tnenaehe Sie the niate | Furope, will 4 our (isasters and had pkiltully taken possession of bag Tisee ie tot credit of tha pommpan 5 and that Mr. is also to leave England, and swase— none mcre s0—of the extreme loss, difficulty Lonpon, Feb. 9-9 A. M. but an sppearance of peace, and a pesce without a future. trapsport datas The sneer commenced. the = mest pease complexion of things the various “ie intercourse is to stop between the dountries, | risk of sucha war ae s class of republican zealots arson: | rhe zines, February 9, in a leading article, reviews the | Yoreover, ‘the Queen of Kc Ta not isolated in her | navigation of the coast of Syr Walle later statements that } might otherwise convey to you of the Tim forstel in the Washingten, payers, iioa'waat eo g te iroe wi the most valuable portion of our. | course taken by the Eoglish Cabinet on the one hand 4nd | noble language Lo apap ae rrr cotaling eee, took 8 Tage pat inthe Levant trate, | the moment cf ecooptitg ee teri nas oy tee, ba ne ‘organ a 0eals, the cause of this ‘im the United | commerce and tmanataeturen, ad Hopes a rr the government of Washington on the other, in relation andere ‘mted CO ae atioe, Englazd marches Fong ian! ae s py Rese eats te sae oes . Sieh aoe beeing Pan inaért here, Sary to the Lacwn lows of the United Stator, for tne par Torld. Weare aware thet we should have to deal with | 10058 iE ust ha fe con aonsanruechuthsins ot ihe movement It gave to Marsllen 1 tained the fortune | every improvement they hear of having been applied by pose of enlisting their sul to ‘on this war | #8 enemy inberliing all our en‘erprise and daring, but bcregaa teach agttllsnt det eg mi mand IMPORTANT FROM TURKRY—TER WAY SHE ISTO DE | of that port, whose prosperity was menaced by the “Among the varfous tenlers, sdveriived tor ‘the against Rusia, 1 wes blamed ‘that mea- | 20% ectenedsto.sa010, bya aaleak tore ‘S cludes as follows:—‘‘We are as desirous of peace BR or Layne sc rivalry encoultered by its shipowners fn it eastern toed ia one ae square inebes Saveammenearesirieece tamek sere reer aristocracy, and the routine, of the report en can be, bat we knowthat when e.maifon becomes } |. [From the London Globe, Tot. 6) evar | Taikttes nerclal statistics of 1855 have not yet boon | dverlostog the siden, ke, of foe reed Shar il had’ boos’ over so ivch, in aver of he trom the Chimes we ‘publish sleewhere discloves mach | 100 proud tefiston to reason, the only appeal ls to arms.” | 2c ‘erntarial or diplomatic, At the root of these | published, We may exzect to sce very considerable fu. | Mivered at both St. Pe-ersburg and Gr ne'aci. rs D thine’ it’ ditgracetal Nonatry te ve | cadly fantastic examples. We do not how difien-ties lay those of a Aifferent kind—dificulties | creace in the ‘The transport of troopr, the des ‘the retirement of Count Kleinmichel scons to have ate into “ihe nations of the world (A icky thn United fa'eeralied the armiee tha reduend THE PEACE PROSPECTS. sae cental to the internal condition of Turkev. By her sue | atch of munitions and provisions of all Kinda to the | been the signal for. n number of the olficlals who Rave ‘ee, ¥ true, tras”) in viclation of thetr runtelpal tans, | Mexico ond sramon.cices henwcsale peovignss We nie cersive vietories Russia had placed wibin her frontier | army and the ficet, have set in motion an enormous | bitherlo been under his cement, to retire also; and Ante oak to enlist in our armies to | that twenty-five millions of men of European, and chiefly | mr. Peace Preliminarics—Am | pcaitions that will always, in the hands of e vigorous | nomber of vessels, and ocossioned immense purchases. | where they have not dove it of Shei oun scoot: aking: tip battles tnwhich their country Bas ‘a Jo Britieh blood are not to be despised. We could hardly Siseea Uponime Peace Oon- ‘exercises commanding influence, and confer on | This, doubtiess, is an exceptional activity, or, #0 to say, | has been given them. Among those who have done 20, Seen ttace hose, aed choca} “Whee thar bill | expect to. muller much aus camage than we could intict, | Armlattes, Agrced Upos r Jhar ‘porseator material advantages in’ war. She also | s yosult of war. Our budget partly pays the igua | is the director of bis private corresponden ‘Was being parsed though the Howe of Commons, # Reverthelove, we have not the leone doubt bs the world pa tbns waeoe oe Portant Negotia- | thelr povsetouitive bub Inddaliiipelations caer it sheet aaa oe edi ca, ae who bas With rawn em the. nerve on es Bis of i a tbat Brite wh rs msecrs to ¢ R le ad wes perpetually arted, “Where are you going 0 g0t | Shen, ‘woald rather ga war at once than subuat to nar INTERESTING FROM ‘ST. PETERSBURG. Ceungns pata, Che, masse, 208 2Orss ac cereetios | Sune m eah bare Don gonsererna tm Out Pageens ot | Nar tasters eommonsde Ceest nant, oe States, tho “laws ofall the laws of Switser- Jegracaticn. ‘They "would rather eo thelr mans- en OL ee Of Whe Turkish empire. It was bor interest, as bo | France and consumed in the Levant, But there sacrifices, | shelved, and he resigns all the functions he bas hitherto- See ncecly avery crvliccd country, ike cur | factories ubut. up, their machinery rust, and their hips St. Permnsotns, Jan. 27, 1856. | Oh oike to frustrate or to extingulah every aitempt 0! | even should they weigh still more heavily om the present | filled. ‘By a judgment of a court martial, ratiGed wre inwe, Torti thels vubjecte to make war against ne: | Tol in pert, than require precmnent nee oy To the astonishment—I should rather say the stupe- | t0'\Uitans, either to reform their domestic policy, or to | jinancial stale of the country, comstitwe for the future | Fmaperor, Prince Biberdon, s Caucusian Prinee, and su>- Wen Tien thelr ows governements’ ure Soncerned, | iereign power a more bumbling apalegy than the oocasion | faction-—prédueed by the decision of the Oth Ot SAGA, | cevalope the vast resouroes of the Turkish emaplre.' With | “a certain investment, dhe interest of which wil argely in- | exelgn in the Finland battalion of the line, is condemned ei arn tonstivatcd it, us we in Bagland have done, | Tequires. "The Americana must therefore recken on an | Pave succeeded refleetion and comment. | Toone unrelenting hand her ¢i upheld abuses, cul'i- | demnify the country, The effective strength of the French | to be degraded to the ranks, and to be removed to another sre uetmnor’ for say” one to come’ here and enlist | obstins’e resistance, f they drive as to it. Let them | {9 dlscuas causes and remults, and the consegnen©e is SAS | vated ancapalies, and, a hey eoult, frastraied in | ‘mercantile marine bas considerably increased; the Me- | battalion, aa well as to the lone of ‘ais nobility far thet aovle of this country in foreign armies, We | count the cost befor¢ they take any fatal stops clo, after | 8, 1), Fe‘Goastantine inmeelf, tho mot warlike of the | *he earliest stage ell measures of improvement, Siterrarean packets mow form a real fiect, which, after | Yesterday morning early Prince Paskiewitsch depa::0d having rendered such important services in war, witlthen | this life at Warsaw: we have at present nothin, more ‘we asked " ears, il: make the calculation ‘ussia, which the Western Powers have MWhere are the men to be got?” It was said | tuo oF, Meise aa Zo quite conciliatory tn his lan- |, 2ne, BO ey 0 la the telegraphic srnouncement of tbe event, which cunigran i that there were many German ts constantly | vain. The British people are very slow to go to war, but | Imperial family, bas grow : - | trnstraded, van to master Torkey externally by seizing | be reedy for tbe operations of peace: the French flag has 4 ‘and will never mak age. Conversing lately wih the military Casey thy - i passing throu tand into the United States. | thcy are still slower to make peace, fe | gn and arming tions, and internally by de- | been every where not only in the Mediterranean, en looked forward to of late as inevitably of speedy Wicar bear, sad a vores, «They goto Liverpool” ‘Thay | & dishonorable ons ‘ Houer ofa loreign oburs ai St Yetersburg, the Prine ls | SLIPS sunjects athe Sullan fram thal allegaece, | but in he ach seen iS bea vilad parts where, ft Dal , ‘ f said they would stop them in the Lanceshire and York- [Se genprg aeireeranrgerrreresbepy a aalg to have exprerene wted wisely tn adhering to the | Ed gaining possession of controlling diplomatic priri- | many years pa almost ceased to appear. There | ‘The Dublin Commercial Advertiser contain the follow- ined to survive the events which gave | ing statement:— birth to them. The French packets and her merchant momercial letters from St. Petersburg have been re- verse's will not forget the new paths which they have fol. | c¢ived in Dublin which mention that the prospects of lowed in the wake of ber fleets. At the game time thet | peace had already operated on the market there, and, they lend supplies for the army they also convey French | caused a considerable rise in al! export articles, espect- merchandise, the produce of our industry and our soli, | slly rve, linceed and wheat. The exeharge on England ‘and thus introaucs it into markets which had before been | bac o further advanced, and this would enhance the monopolized by rugland and by Russia. Besides this, | sterling prices free on board. In the sana vanes snother mest important fact has taken : they have | sanguine hepes revailed that peace would thortly be carried to these shores thousands of echmen, who, | concluded. This rire in the St. Petersburg market i stimulated by « spirit of enterprise, or by the instinct of | itis sisted, in dno time ext-nd itself to the market o! — aoe i) way for Cae comrensns make Archangel. ees Mc mown our babits, our laws, and our language, and in sensibiy irspire around them a taate for our productions. The Weat Coast of Africa. Several French establishments have since the war been | TRADE VERY DULL—REVOLUTIONS IMPENDING— ahire ‘permade them not ‘An effort to vest Parliament with the administration of denen sthive railway carriages, and persuade them not to > t0 | . Pfereign policy is being made by a class of polticians | Propneition of Austria. Peace has, no doubt, tte merit | “Ei inp world knows that the fourth point related to Ganghter.) They failed to 1 ae i oe pe chore, | smong us, who sxe more nolry than influential or nume- | And it puts » stop to the celamittes Europe bis suite | 46 condition of the Christians in Turkey. Steps have eee wit tothe Unites dates afige them; | tleally stvong. Tho honorable member for Manchester, | the last two years: it Us, ater ah, esos} ot glory HOES | dec taken fo derelope that point fo tts lequtimate scope at a ee eererien to cnlint thom there, thore Germang | ina recert addrens to.an important body of his consti- | may be fully equal 10 Apy citer.’ Neen rer had | series of Conferences, held in Constantinople by the Ministers themrelves ii “trouble with the government of the | ‘tents, labore? hard to prove that we were about to b> feeis, then,’’ was the reply, v ce @ England, France and Austria, on behalf of the allies SOE a ee ene er eringe ued ne, | plunged intoa war with Americs, beesuse Lord Ciaren- | gr¢at danger for Russia, and that the Muscorite empire, | o> nurkey,” and of the Grand Visier ai ‘Minister guileting sari ‘aiplomstising, and war, [ imagtse, is ima. | doe ie going to aris, and the Foreign Ofico will, in the | lolated from the rest of Europe, was approaching 8 | J 7M Tate on tehalf of Turkey. It Sa under Dietia auch's subject faniil‘an Unpleasant fe mean tne be tit in the banda ot Lora Wodehouse, | catastrophe.” «| | toed that the Conferences have arrived at cor. Mean petiten ihetwo countrise, which, if anoches | Such clap traps are more eulted to the vulgar mind than | ,, Such is not, my opinion, rejoined the tain conclurione, with the foll eoneurrenee of all ee eee take place, may have 4 iendeney wo | w more advanced inteligence. Mr. Bright would have | ;\ Russa would bave dejended herve to The lest mitt | oarties, that those conclusions have been set forth Bagh place, may hare a tendency to | vad only adererved compliment to bis anditory had he | heroism; and, in epite of the formidable preparations ot | FIO‘ ies" or articles twenty-three in number; and Fe ee ee ene ascia | betaine” from v0. transparent a sophltm, leaviog them | ‘he bellgerent Powers, T am coavioced that the next | sat “hey comprise the leading points of "moet Seother which this government, with a view to the | tozetiect that the Prime Minister, in the vmporary ab- | CORES ies Bat the internal ocndition of the coun: | thirge esrential to the complete relorm and good govern. if janent interests of England should have pursued, | “ence of a Secretary of State, becomes respommible for the | / ment cf Turkey. Thus it tsproposed to place all t was the strictest rules with reference to. the | discharge of his functions. ss ms| | tae Rirtcae ed lores ecitien comin think that | jicts of the Porte on a footing of legal equality; to enatte, | Yormed in the principal ports of whe Blatk Set, whore | MASSACKE OF SETTLERS BY THE NATIVES—AN Waited Stater—to have cone nothing to infiinge | , Lord Pelmersten, on the other htop te = ‘Now. it the opimcns of the ostensible leader of the | therefore, Christians as well as Moslems, to howd property. | they will remain, Such are the advantages whic France | AMERICAN SLAVER CHASED AND DESTROYED—IN- om their neutrakty, but everythi that was in | favorite system of ic secrecy. bas e u wage The scheme includes the establishment of separate derive fiom the war, and may well be placed in the BTALLATION OF THE PRESIDENT OF LIBERIA. ing war perty are modified to such an extent, you may j oe Baeir power to cement the bond of brotherhood | Howse ot ieee cn usedoonnot tke whole, bare. | of fine change thathasbeen preduced among the courtiers, | courts of justice for Christian and for Moslem subjects; Mata. Butte ecploy'a parcel of agents in the very teeth | lections.”” This, we doubt not, after the approved tashion | | At St. Petersburg Prince Alexander Menschikoff' us the | \civey the legality of Christian evidence. It is recom. Teiheir rtaties, Speeing oices, Scimpirg msn of ths | ct the Foreign Ofice, and with the object of communica | oply person of importance who indulges in rectiminations. | 20 rieq that Christians should be eligible for all employ- Cee ee ee ee ence UELOR® lmd it been | f0g aali'tle actual information on the subjec: us porsi- | He sake why the aristocracy do not protest aginutansct | Tint. civil and military; that. all eabjects cminis a by America, would havs caused ber to run a | die. We are not disposed ro join in the cry against offi- which be loudiy condemns. The truth is, the aristocracy | Oi th16 for service in the army; that sebools should be eat rlak of breaking’her neutrality with Bussia—I say | cial, secrecy, in, reference to pending questions, with een ee eee ng, afver the’ war auail | instituted on an extensive scale; that an efficient police y will be found to be, ihe PatHament will not be back. | public havea right to demand is that they shall deter- | the ¢ay—fighting for the orthocex faith of St. Viadlais; | mineral; to make roads and Mean ainona wot in pussing seeverd censure on the course that has | mizethe genera. principle on which the policy of the coun. | while the higher ona lower classes of the clergy preached | ence, ind to improve the financial system, The scheme, Tren pussuca = (Hous hear.) Ave the people of Englnd, | ‘zy shall be conducted: or atleast that their voice shall | upon the defence of the nation, and promised the de- | Win "tis wnderatiod, thacordial support af the Sultan, wea: fo indifieront after ail'vo this war that we must raz | be heard. Hf we desire to know the eonsequezces of | lights of eternal bliss to the mariyre of the fas; end, | raid vefure ihe Grand Council on the 24th of January. over Europe, violating the laws of various countries ia | aluwing “public opinion” to control our policy in Eo a oe ee rear ee ccedesen, | Whether it has been adopted or not, the mext mail erier to enlist men to fight our battles? (Cheers.) I ; = peepee enteipem pprerrtnel end dy a ee Oo een eabetion pea ens, nikon eee prcbably inform us, " i ? fen at the preeent time. great and ywi peor ~ > il be found to de1 if this scheme should ‘would sak 2 war man is it secesuary? Are we arrived at sank os ae aoe vt ery standard of the empire. All was fair and ous in the ST concn = freee y tieietores sty scale against the price which they have cost her. It will ‘The steamehip Retriever arrived at Plymouth, (Eng.) ot be the first time that history will have revealed the | on the 7th instant. Her cates are—Fernando Po, Jan. berefits which follow the most sapguinary struggles. Ci- | 4: Lagos, 7; Accra, 9; Cape Coast, 10; Liberia, 15; Sierra vilization and commerce have frequently had to carveout | Leone, 18;'Batharst, 22; Goree, 23; Teneriffe, $9; Ma~ their way with the sword, and long combats have often | deira, 31.’ a “prepared the progress of international relations and the She brought 1,824 ounces of gold, and a geod closest alhance between nations. This is a providential | cargo. fact. The war in the Kast will furnish a new and strik- ‘At Fernando Po the Bloodhound arrived from Lagos on ing example of it. the 3d; business was pretty good, and cil plenty; the town very unbe: '. Bun. cat cama ene te WIRANOTAL: | OTE Cameroons tare was suspended, a revolation being i d the place rather sickly. Faves Whe Lomtm reste a in Fr Gliaber, matters were quiet, trade dull, and no a| The costs of the war, as far as appears in the publizee- | pearance of «change for the better. River exce pedsre in lage bake Grader eB ay teed Helly. "A similar condition ofaffics prevailed at Boaay to the older class of our readers. For the last year they | ti" nas Senees atthe take Seraeton wath fue are not to be compared with any one of the later years of aah phot ast whayis aed Eog¥st Bonar aed Engiiah degit ning; th bles in the ; by the traders; oil very scarce, and the place vary sickly. eignit ‘commit: fme:conaries Jap, and ins.itations, and of whose prosperity no git ning; the young nobles only saw a 5 the old war, nor are they to be compared the | oY 5 8 NOS . Ee nee ered “tant eould fight for yeur | iniguideant portion depends on the maintenance of free | means of adding ee ae eo rail stycntsies ura the Turhish Eeweire, idepen, | loses of The county by ite manias for rallway apecuis- | ,A¢ Iagor, things were quiet, und a good baainene deine. eaenites if they would pay them better? (Cheere,) “the | commercial interoouree with this country. is being lashed | it wae tccn felt that the war was extansiog, Tuses: | Gent ofthe external security which the destraction of | tion, for reckless trading, for loans, to new States, for | town and shipping were healthy. i whole procecding is ing to England (hear, | up to the war {cver to serve the basset purposes of do- | Ol a tat he bicckace amzibilated hor ra i Sebastope), the cesrion of Iemail and the mouths of the | bubble companies, or even with the loss by a bad her- | “ne teeate, on the Ist of January, chased a brig of ‘hear); and I ray more, it ia contrary to the opinion | mestie po'itictane. It will require all the magnauimity » | Danube, the Cestruction of the Russian fleet, and of the of He greatest writers, and the great Minor | of the British government, aud all the good semve of Uae frace, which is indispensable to her immense oxpenty, | forts on the Cireasatan coast, are calculated to confer, teen” nino, tall, Baroge “sho ‘eyriem ‘of separat- | better cesseain America, to eguateract these, aceronly | ¢ whale peta secuaary to har mercanil | nd"which wl be nal ated by the Janes cf Pars incividuals Oma overnments, and so | jess (ban yas act ~ essed him: “4 if there peace concluded there, and some other at that a pritate, man is to make war on bis | deeply exxiovs that they sbailnot mececd. Howcanhe, | ,,!0 rpite cf all this Prince Mensohikof continues bos- | Dears gt a distant day, concloded pothaps at St. Peters- vest. Itis evident, indeed, that if necersity lay on us, E wre could carlly catty on the war with Rupeia on s much | $80ut 200 toss, which was ran on Share erica grander scale than at present. Wo have already called | 1 1i1¢ versel, with the name, “Chataworth, of New York,’” attenticn to the chief figures in our remarks upon us on her stern, and was fully equipped for # large number e4 quarterly returns at the close of the year, but a fuller se- ii thing in 5 . When oftlaves. She was destroyed by her captors. own account, without bis goverment interposing in the | im the seme breath, deprecate that system of official te | be" jcund tbat 1 ee ee eee eeemtselt ait | DUE, if the war gon. Turkey will be enabled tore | turn, just published, gives us more innightinto the state | °f levee. Phe was destroyed by Ber captor “willing to grant mon, to which England ‘has gone, were | atic misuzceritardiuge, and’ whos prevents, in this | fered frrm bis, be €eclared to all who approached him | sorenele ocr mecaBins the atten oe wiopeea oy iat | "it appears’ that last. year the excecs of expenditure | | At Cape Coast wttiarr ers ee enay obcas 4o becomedthe allies of England, (Loud cheers) But for | country, such passicns from being aroused ? that there wes no lopger a drop of Muscovite blood in of Rue- | over income was £21,141,163. It is but two or three | yerlanee, ond great sateen ar cant veing placed : : .. | the empire. During an audience with the Emperor he | °¥® chief ministers. will be able, in +pite eee ee ees ies Rania tnt: | relations hore balm topended as iehorn Sgland and ame. | EcmPlaines Dery that the high and noble policy of the | Gia4be Wastin force, ‘lege rho tute $hem—to the tmall States, like the Hanee Towns, and in | rica. Its the first overt act committing the poupla to a policy | Cvar Nicholas. alone worthy of a trae Muscovite, was | it, va:icity, If these reforms are earried out there will he light of day and in defiance of the laws, and bringing | which their pride may be incoleed. Tho Precident of | Sbenconed. His visit had for its object, it is sald, to be | $2 Taitea ato exiatence thene compliment to free trade Tore lawn into contempt by enlisting men—it is not | the United States, by a wise provision of the constitu. | Bamed the representative of Rhesia at the Cougrese of | J¢ocriy for person and property, encouragement for wortby this country. (oud cheers.) We sre degraded | tion, carnot of his own will or judgment issue a declara- t ne ere ee ela who wan the immediate | commeree and enterprise. Turkey’ will be thrown open years since that there was an apnual rurplus of several mllicne—noy, in the very paper before uty ‘oddly enough, Cader Pathe Bef beet e oe aoe therein a paphuent of 26601 to the comminfonars dor | Dt sresdy, no duty was levied, and the requlta were: the reduction of the zational debt, wecording to the act | SHont bere po Cnty, nee Katie © Cape Coast, Accray, ecapeliing that application of surplus revenue. We all Samenter vite eke ‘Deeming delight our Chancellors bid bec Sema Both Accra and ( Cape Const are ‘Dy seeing 2 British consul at Cologne east into prison the | omofwar. He must have assent of the Senate. © | to Europe, instead of ‘as ebe would have been i | of the Exchequer used to announce a surplus of mil- other day for breaking the laws of Prussia under the au- | Thus far the interests ef peace are protected against his | conve, {ihe war, and he demised Pinos dene conqueredin a wer single fanded, enclosed in the Serbo- | Won or two; aud bow the members cheesed, and how Be npire genic pre e reentan ther:ty ‘of the British ecyernment; and #2 in the wrong | ie ne ee one ea a na ietion taut. | better and much more u Poe ayes ciapinjod | tianbcg of Russia, she will find in scministrative re. | the knowledge cf the fact used to bring a dozen deputa- | 1 ohics ce ihe government. hey feel themselves that the Bish goveroment bas | ve ct Me ‘slate harangue, the resolution adopt | Petter | me Te te ‘the see eee, Ma Gobante! | form and internal improvement the best of all material } ticns in a week tothe Treascry. A yeac of war, then, | T5"Aiiven ‘had risen at Sinon, and massacred reversl —— plein. (Bear, heer.) Iputtt tothe | od by the Mane ect mmerce is pasie in | Sity was given for the display of real heroism: | SUaantees; and we shall have had the satisfaction of | Pes mude ibe differsdoe ten tines o0 grok egmibartiai | £ the settlers. The Monrovien milfos were abaut to mecting, was, I right or, wrong in opposing the bill for | Uavsicie men of belo coumtrie im thelr offers to prevent | ® ccnduct more in accordance ‘with the haughil- | *pccersiaily carrying outs cilsteresied war and im: | view. MO be. case. it'us a aforence the wrong way | Tocéed to the spot er cone Right. And bare not citcumastasces | sctual bostilitise, There oan be no doubt that a question | Ber of bis present langusge, This morning the Acms | PFOv!96 ae Soaaeye Io the fee of a greatly, ineressed saxscn. We that the attempts to carry out that measure | of this kind ought to be » ed ins “‘conciliate-y | Tal wade snother attempt with the Grand Duke, with Pav nenenee i EARLEARARY. raised last year an income ot £63,364,605, which is abont | Blot Between American and Greek Sailors ac ee, ne istonad untortancte controversy wits | spilit.”” ané thet anything short of such conduct would | Wbtm be hes long beens favorite: but the Prinoe retused | In the House of Commens, February t:— £15,000,000 more than wo have ralscd at any recent ‘Cardim. the United States government, and with other Power’ | be little Jittle less than acrime on the part of either | ‘9 1eccive bim. and ordered him, through anaid-de-camp, | _ Col nel Dunax asked the First Lora of the Treasury | date, Gre tax alone we we-e actually preparing to dir- From the London News, Feb. 4.) Re eets eee sere nS ad ot lovgor covey | mcvernerent. Whet, under ‘enen ctreumstancos, tas | 10 #2Cceed to Gronstadt, to perform the duties which whether it was true (aa stated in French paper) that an | Prove with alvcgeinec” and lestyear we couped it, and | _ Amongst Es cupttoce reakile cr beeetvice tinal tiie, (user, bear), Putt PaMat, Bot Jonger cocupy | fovclliatery spirit!” Mr. Bright's notion seems to be | Emperor had untrusted to him. What I mention relative | armistice bad been agreed on between the Powers | Pita thereby £13,718 185. Icahows how the iron has | Fute Docks, Cerdiff, are some sailing under the American pasate stax yes. (Obie). pe thas in order wo arrive at'a ratishectory settlement with | 1 the sentiments of the nobility only applies to the | and Russia; and further, whether this artuistice extends | otcred into our roul, how well we stond 10 be fleeced, | fleg. ond menned by Yankeo crews, and others manned It earital, or at most to this provinee. 1 lately stated that | to operations by sea or to those carried on in Axia. and what excellent fleeces we carry, that we have indi- | by Greek seamen. A misunderstanding nwviag arieen be- ‘ America, we ought to submit to the arrogance of Presi- , A Sg ig Pn oi 1 gt ep dent Fierce ane concede all hus demands. © A eontempo. | thé Dews frem the governments of the interior, as re- | Lord Parmmnerow said that ene of the arrangements | Yiansty atocd and delivered: at the call of the collector, | tween sone men of the two parties, it waa taken up by ee een montane, Revcnery 2-) ved by telegraph, to ideas of Buch } agreed to in Frapee was, first of ail, that the prelimica- i We think it our duty to caution our readers against | Tar¥, whore inficence is deservedly great on the public | °*! ry telegraph, was opponed to ideas of peace. agi was, a prelimfoa- | . personal tax yielding in the te two-thirds as | their companions and countrymen om either side. Tho aoe any ace are Taaterteie'tne | miad, ofers rabetansaly the same Advice, This tiple. | i the cave, and 1:18 eondrmed by every post that comes | es of peace oni be negotiated and signed, and that an | Tick ay the cavoms, Tees than ‘hree,millicasehort of | Greeks bad located thewseiven.iaride the Liverpoa) a- the excire, and twice as much as the stamps. The cus- | verp, when the Ameircans, whose numbers were much toms for the year were £20,087,752; the excise, £16,389,- | greater, drew up in force cn the onteide of the entrance 486; tho stamps, £6,805,604, and the produce ct the | ccor, makirg use, the while, of the most vio'ent threats. property tax, 1o which we refer, was no Jess than | A yeace officer, reemg that a riot was likely to ool 13,718, 18 —s lar; sum, we believe, than was ever | Jected all the constables he could find in the es eri- trem provizces. It is in ol Gaited tates. The papers, rate, apparently apon an: | Tec Bade, cary, {0 the meanest capacity, aMordire ® | the gieatert disvatifaction is felt with the decision of the | ot yet signed. The prehminaries would be discussed 40 demand the recall of Mr. Crampton, our "ainistor ‘at | Bright and our contemporary took the same course at the Czar. The pecple, though in a state of destitution, de- | end tigred, and until after that bad been done the ques- Weshington, on account of the part he took in the en- | Cuteet of the dispute with Russia. Tuen, we were ad- clare thst Russia is lost, and that she is abandoned by | tion of an armistice could not be entertained. Hetment of American cl:izews for the British service. Be | Viked to abandcn Turkey to her fate. She was ina rtate | the great Vladimir. ! - $ ‘The Crar, as I bave already informed you, adopted of THE VERY LATEST. + ‘hat as it may, it iscertain our government: will decline | °! bopeless cecay. If the could not protect herself, she bineelf, and without tee ting it veaclaiien P. Feb. 6, 1856. raised by a ¢irect from one people since the be- | bocd, and attempted to disperse the crowd, w! wach a demand, if made; for no sound-headed and | W## not wortn protecting. Finally, it was a sin for Chris- to cept the ‘ustrian prepositions: poy mest veyoud, 4 ‘The French government has just orders pasaporte ginning cf the world. grown to the number of some 2,000 persons. right-minded men can bave ‘read the correepondenee be- | tine to fight against Christians f0r the sake of Turks and | So acrePy Coe wuts me Tevposiuones ritads sre byooum | to the two Rumian plenipotentiaries But now for the darker side of the picture, of which | cans defied the police, saying they were strong to neither tice is very bright. The national ‘‘defences”’ last | clear tke town, and would do so if interleres with. One ‘tween the two ts on this subject without sec- | infidele. What was the result of all this? That Mr. ? pa tage in the fireplace, that there was 'no complisity.oa | BUERt only seen his way to peace after a Geree but muo- | sels ol scme prudent persons. ‘The two Gortachakofis | Count Orloff must have already left St. Petersburg. | | Year'ccat us nearly fy millions, anda good deal ‘more, | man in the crowd swore be would rip the offer up. The the part of Mr. Crampton in those transactions; in the | Ceful war, cf which his then associate in» policy of posit Ruban et “Vienha Was aredke oa 7 ts eran and M. de Bourqueney leaves Vienna the same d " | probably, if the whole truth could now de known. ‘Of | Greeks, meanwhile, drew themselvet up in 8 compact bor next place, that any g-ound of complaint arose entirely | Peace-at-any-price, and cf national surrender, had been | ont Fustia ak Vienne was great, One ot torte : a ay this the army ccat us £14,545,059; the navy, £19,014,;08; | dy on the stairease of the house, each man his Wee as ecrars tothe part Ct agmste. ous or in | the chief and most powerful advocate. Tesco ce joa eeap civ ay Wee ee Bunty, Feb. 7, 1850. | the crdnance, £9,652,200; and there was also a vote of | long knife grasped firmly by the hilt, awaiiicg an . ‘Shei having acted beyond ahd against their fostructions; | _, We derire to eee peace maintained with the United | Fsrimmoe end Matix. im th iy sem Be ee | tt 4 sebtee Sat Heath Dae Rockered thee the parselo | cxedis tor additional expenses connected with the war of | The Greeks made no at‘empt to come into the street, and | and, im the last pltce, that whether errorshad been com: | States, Dut nct at s price which would entali upon us | Sot mortes ih col ee Lae hie master the | Lich cf Prusate in the Conferences in apecial austin, | £6,000.000, "Only seven years agoa distinguished stater. | the Americans at length rushed'in upon them with a sa- mitted or instructions exceeded, full Zod ample repars- ¥ England shall no f | rel ststeclatntipe. Ho Also shen mech weighs a tbe fares a reer ices tae De Aud ee eo man uted to say that if be returned to power be would | vage yell. A fearful conflict ensued. One or twoof the underti 6 to do the defences for ten millicns; and that | combatants were stabbed, and had to be carried off; ‘was the limit to which Mr. Cobden proposed to reducs it. | rel others received severe wounds from; kicks, b] ke. That much has gone for ordance slone—for gans | The police were unable to do more than protest the der and shot! What might we not have | Greeks to the best of their power, until, » rein- jeve with these fifty millions, had Nicholas and | {crcement arriving, they suceeded in arrest! g eeveral the eviigentus of Catherine allowed us a choice in the | the ringleaders, and finally in clearing the street. matter! The interest of the debt itself is paled by the lori light of this vastextravagance, Its only £21, 647,- ovt for inds of debt, permanent and termivable, funded and unfunded. The ‘hideous ‘waste bas just this | DEATH OF FIELD MARSHAL FRINGE PasuTEwIncH iain of ecarolation, that if we ean raise double the | prince Pasklewiteh, the mont dietingaished subject and interest of the debt for the purposes of war, we migh| Tince Pasklowitch, the most distinguished subject and i B ~ | possess an inch of territory on the Continent ot America. ten bagi oenlg rp de am aon ‘pogtish govern. Re arrive at that end, Frgiand must acopt a tone of dig- | Ewreror, and his arrival at St.Petersburg might be oon- | jater period, in the course of the Conferences. whieh conduct which’ after such a | Dified conefliation, but careful y avoid the hind of conoes- | Siitred as 6 fortunate event by these who desire peace. | Letiers from St. Petersburg state that the re-estab- ae cat ioc mses Bs ae piles sion implied by the arguments o” the Maachester gentle- | He was at once summoned to the Winter Palace, ard had | lishment of the episcopal sees, which had been promise; powerful neighbor. Happily, however, for us, the greet | Men. They rem to forge: that although the government | ® Jorg snd private audience with the Emperor. He | io the Pope by the Czar Nizholas, has not yet received Beejority of the American people are as much olive at we | of ‘be United Stater still proiexees to obverve the decen- | Yiiled the rasme day fhe Grand Dukes Michael and | the sanction ot the Emperor Alexender Il. fare 40 ine course wnich good. taate, good sense and pat. | cies orinternational interconrse, the citxzens of that eoan- | Nicholas ard the War Minister. Before quitting Otecsa Bunun, Feb. 7—Evening. wiotie prieiple dinate under such circumstances, and | !Y are runxing loore in pirstical enterprises, the object | [oT Morcow, and then St. Petersburg, he <elivered ov ‘The anxiety here is still lest Prussia should be thrown we have the best memns cf knowing that President Pie-ee | °f which is to neize and Keep possession of tae disputed | 10 Gen. Liders the powers he bad deen invested with. | over by ali parties. ie locked upon with as much displeasure by @ majority of | tettory. To this we csrnot.yubmit; snd if President | The active forces of Russia in the penineula are now es. Prurria is willing that the Frankfort Diet ehould adhere ‘American citizens as he is in this country. Indeed, | Pierce dces not know, or is powerless to fell bis duty, | timoated at about 60,000 men, inclucing the divisions of | to the Austrian propositions, if she is allowed to repre- it wouid appear as if every man in the United States who | ¥¢ thall find ourselves compelled to take thelaw intoour | in’aptry, cavalry artillery, grenadiers, drushines of the | sent that body at the conferences. 2 if we eo pleased, raise as much for the extinction of a a § Ow adie, a6 Guest tee sir thy itech wilitiaa ‘of Kalogo snd Kursk. The artillery ponsesses | “The seconcary States cesire to have neither Austria no: rervant of bie Mojesty the Empsror of Rosse. “A I St the porcrsecnt of the President for the. time belog, | Primary roles of right and'wreng- of the | 20 Held pieces. ‘Tho Corps of Obeervation of Eupatoris, | Prussia as a reprerentative, but one of themselves. | reOe ioc Actor ihe theres on the era tansy | succession of bulleting bed prepared tho puble for the and who kad a correrpondent in this country, had availed (Frem the Liverpcol Times, Feb. 9 ] Thecdoria and Kertch are not comprised in that amouat. | If Austria rhould consent to this, Prussia will be com | that we heer of go much, and which are the object of so | *¢juinaticn of the old Marshal's illness, bimselt of the saxt mail to tell us that we must regard all | The ebiet matiers of importence’ to the commercial | [.ascn the 16th that Gee. Lider assumed the com- | pletely put cn <ne side. much copstituticnal jealoury, that only this week the | ,,/7n¢e Ivan Fecorowitch Paskiewiteh was born at Pul- thas. vapotings the thunder of Mr. Fierce, unsupported | public, during the past werk, bave been the uncimiaish- | i7AF4.0f the ermy of the south. On the following day | he Britieh ogenta have received instructions toeon- } Home Secretery ‘was solemnly promising not | S7a0. Yo commauanay deed eee ta he 12th of May, ‘ u . Gen. Souhazonett—the tame whore name so often gave | tinue their enlistments for the Angi by the American people. “This are really ‘believe to be | ed prompects of peace, and the resent unsettled reutions | cegcaicn to the Laaperor Nicholas for laugbrer, who ceed | fattele oa cant mens for eiereee Lenn e the ease, and that, when the small clique wie for thelr | between our government and that of the United States. | (cnen ar Gt thucnt Gove honnbte ot fir ewan een . , ob tu peu” — 7 tof Hexse Cassel h o own relish ends would not hesitate to enbroil two great | The anticipations segarcing the former are that the war | pized as General in-Chief of the troops tassed ut Udeass. | accu len ogeinst nome oficers, ita subjects, or nid Vi82' he consequently died in his 44th year. : TeaPut, cB, this fund fhe, govermment, auren- | {cred ihe ccrpo of eget when. Very. scuNg, aed his ae- Deccme a mere bagatelle by the side of these monster | Iuittments as s student giving sudsequently great pro- items. They ocme to £1,724,705, comprising £398,570 ‘de snd aide- eed 9. & lieutevant of the g natione in a dispute, find thar alcedy a preliminary | with Rusia w virtually at @ termination; while many jen K treaty of peace is signed with Russia, an” an armtatice | persons, at the same time, hold the Rursian overtures im | Joey Unser ee OF this place, Gen. Krusenstern, | o¢mmande in the legion, for the eivil ist, on which there is ‘always tuch a fight at | On jmpertant ob Ra EW TB eriablished, they will quietly sequiesce In he more sensi- | great of-trust, delievirg that the armistice will give the efense SuitMbOES’ Mee Osieer ate tsotiridd’, HE the beginnizg of a reign; £340,001 for those words of | Triwe service im the eld: Roving tora ate rat Sa bie and patriotic views which the great bik of the peo | Czar time to recruit his strorgih, and that at the con- | ip gninteliisent men WhO lam oe, ile ee ole THE WAR, terror about which ro many ‘biack books” have been | Terar Alevander to the acinerotof the Be ene Ea ple in both countries entertain. ferences he will exhibit lees desire for peace than he now | chisting in the discussion ‘which is abut {0 9 “Sag haga heen cand 8 geen ilies ll Wiis agetast the frenchs "Heted at thet tees Statoed a eb. !. manifests. Btron; terta i 2 on “ ? [From the London Times, Feb. !.] m foper are, enterisined by the com- | Orloff is, no doubt, very punciilous and sutceptible when | ‘he Condition of Sebaatopol—The Cost of the | 2140, 244 for ciplawatic mlarios and persion ran attsn, | {he zaDk of captain. Tn 1806 he was with the arm At a.moment when an bonorable pesc? is likely tobe | ™Mercial cowmurity that, should a satisfactory peace be | the h Ce tate we have been sade to feel | coneluded, one result of !the resumption of intereource tBeae reer able noes whots enue feb sce iS Mar fo Hugiand—Wilk Hussia Pay the | the subject of tccncmical stricture their master. Of M. in W400, 089 for courts So and as long as the expedition lasted (éom 1807 pt Be with Russia will be the openirg of @ trace mont wi arta? ced aie tie cas courte cistingushed himself by bis military talents. In the momentous significance that may atiach to the | Toasts both countries. “The qusations st issue with te | (2 Det exalted by the decision, of f CONDITION OF THE CITY OF SERASTOPOL. Gee the “muppiy services” ‘there comes ihe fiom, fox | tHiS campsign he was wounded, and gained every De diel cnt’ tet of the Jmerisan quarrel, The Exec, | kovernment ot the United States remain unsettled, and | PraDc™ ft is not necessary to rey much. He is well From the Courrier de Marseiile, Jan. 10.) mircellancous civil rervices, 26,741,126. Henge it results | **¢P 0! bis promotion at the cost of hia blood. ee ee ilted States bao internal en weil asextecmal | 'he belief fs prevelent that this country cannot nor will | ;DOwS, and bis reputation among European diploma: All the docks have teen blown up, with a single ex | that tor ail the purpores of peace we spent last year £8,- | peur na biographers, J. Tolstoy, relates that he wae Aificulties to encounter, the former not 60 much of its { Det make any surther :oncessions. I: rewains to be seen “i cepticn, ard # few buildings. This event took place with- | 4¢6,811--abcut or h of what we spent for the | Sone om severai missions to Constantinople, especially in alticalties to encrontar, the former not so much of it | what wprit cor trateailantic{renda will manilen ontne | jing PePtze here bave been much more moderate, ‘The | out catvirg the mightest emotion in tbe campe. "The 1808, and relates the following event:—‘On his lest dip- The papers wurposes of war. ‘This is just as if ‘£600 Intact, appears taat ihe whole miuohing of the Legis. | Zeceipt of the rews that a treaty of peace with Russia is | 4 tow days Wack Siomdred op eeet Ae ae he nly | dirappointrent, however, was great. Terrific decons- Jear in purbi “hlseruble am aul, aDiv in order 9 fear in purhing on miserable law sult, and, in order to | “matic journey to that capital ke learned that the Tarks,. & tew days back thundered against Austria and he: pro. | +i ed, and it was believed h i who looked upon him as a spy, intended to lature has been bronght toa dead lock, and that a state | likely to be concluded. Ath " pe 5 tions were expected, and it was believed that the opera- | do that, confined the ment, drink, clothing, housing and PY, tn LA of things exit# ‘sufficiently alarming to a patriotic | PROCEEDINGS IN PARLIAMENT—SPEECHES OF MR. ta at Lom tyelo pobliened an ripe quite coul-ur de | tins would be preceded with a certain degree of solem- | education of a numerous family within the beggarly al- | 2. The canger was imminent: be immediately hired and the pene. nity. A programme cf the proceedings had been circu- 8 four cared boat, stepped into the frail veesel, and com- and senribie citiuen, yet cffeing « dedléed opportunity | |, |, ORDIN AND LOMD PALMERSTON, Ate of aguiculture, It beging thus:—(A rainbow ot | lated, when, to the dstonishinert of al, the destructim io ee feficensy!” wo oun fancy some ot | Held the tro mariners whe managed itt take him 10 satosay bewsknets of this sort ouget to be untied, | Mr. Coaten inquired whether it was the intention of the | Pricer Shree teat bis neriee gad Peso ae eee alte ‘ohenoerng secgehnor aren Of the fow idiers } our more knowing readers exclaiming, ‘‘and the debt, inthe Black Bean Gelecporene chatesie at whith te Whe 4 Pat overmment to upon the tab'e t! or od ast, present, and to comey’’ i, t i d SS a eo Pas hint Begyons Ge ens one tlis- | 8 yy upon the tab’e the corrospendence | sisters, Bye: Aine wete scarcely heard, ata most of the | kimakieg about it, for here Ti cae nae be ape well known. Several times they were all but iont a med more than once in the | relative to our prerent relations with the United States of In the choncrlicries the activity is still great. Couriers 1 tere ef the country | America. The oorrecpocdence with rogard to Central | are constantly despstchof’ rom our Gaptiel to this onpltnls | POneere Teche Come Ea ns apetaploy Of the can woktt miele a Stees om bad 80 = veto, oeercnae ond ct een prin.ed, but that in reference to enlist- Ee Tarope, = pee Yona ply of the proviness. | be the sigral of a brieker canncnsuc on the part of the ; been. vetea au > Racin , rt 2. When ; : d , tutions indeper dent of party, and trrorwe to lta em- | be thought that there would be no “jection ta Tay por: | QUEBN VICTORIA'S SPRECH TO PARLIAMENT—Irs EP- | this occasion the cannonade con\inued as usual, tut with en! mt generation— Hangee ofthe publis money,” professing to tate to a pen. this dreadful passage; but the ‘boat carried Pask lewite ure 10 speak out, ai [ bis fortunes, and he reached Varna in At ny Low the debtor and creditor account of the nation | th 2 : stood op J.nuary 1, But we shall not be a party to any hy wtare pry ‘there, that sone eae Seon pond such celurion. if there fs cne thing which no Chancellor | Giuacd, and ive hie prewnne' ct of the Fxebequer can know in time of war, even a little 4 Pe nee wars war agaient the Cares, for example—tt in the | “#fe tactt inevitable death.” i the end of the cam against Turkey—that is to cesses. It in tly far otherwise in America. A so- | tions of the correspondence before the House. FECT IN PARIS, 8 rarked diminution in ite intensity. The allied armies | mate of the public balance. Exactly one year and a Pn Senet ane as, Jets ericenty sas otberwiee in dmatice, | tse cor xeapeatenes verwre te Lomes, | (From the Paria Constituulonnel, Feb. 3,] were bard at work. The French wrocpe, after completing | "waster cicce we ventured te intimate, thet Parliament, bey wars binens oe wren 6 euaprel, = dais sice, and to act bis part, if he does nut always fsel it. | Friday, Feo. 8, wheo— There is manifested through the tone of proud dignity | te cestruction of the docks sesignea to them, were ao- | thon on the point of meeting, would speedily be callod on ay feherds thd eee ee ee So, when the sides are eiruck and the sectors told off, | Mr. Compan arked the government whether there was | ®"d calm haughtiness which is breathed in the speech of | tively engs; removing the hearsigunsyand all the war | to vanciicn a ioun: end wo tecetved an angry disclaimer | “*heic€ In"eemmand of the sei aivision of infan mh the len are struck nd the actors oid of, | ir. Comes ceed! the government whet Queen Vielor'a, an inward sentiment, which escapes in a | muterlel still remaining among the ruine of Eebactopol. | if any such intevtion, there being every prospect, it was | qiiisiz command of the 26ib a beer fires of the strife, scarce, indeed, a dizpassionate spoe- | relating to our present relations with Amer reserved and cold manner, but whish it is very imporiant “The city,” ssys one of our corresponrents, “ nd Geer of the coune From the tencur of the posed ¢ of Prion, repening ne question was, that he did = to point out and to analyse. The admirable aod dimieult Icnger exists. The pick-axe of the demolichers and the talligonce from the States, {¢ is plain that the Presl- | think the reacon tievooble Lord gsve whan he tat pot iy | Reseed 6k thy saad | arases ta noted with steeplialay) batteries of the northern forts have converied itizto a gent is se much sbserbed ic one of the parties now | viz: “That the correspondence was not com 1} | without emphasis, but sleo without great enthusiasm, | beap ofroins, which bave assumed a frightful aepect dividing the House of Reproventatives as the merest | wee tounced on tact, There were two questions of | The praise of the victors of Sebastopol, of France, of | since winter. The fatigue parties, scattered among the in our own House.cf Commons, and he has | cifference with America—one upon the Bogiiah and fag rere en rubbieh, show off the contrast more strongly. Visiters compelled to give his trisnds tuch desperate aid | American uarantee Convention for the construction of a | |B revenge the speech viia‘es, on the one side, on the | 5 Tare, for they felt how ridiewioux ae could be expected trom an act of ann>yance to this | canal across the Isthmne of Darien, which was signed in | ™litary preparations commenced with « view of giving | ‘t wasto expore themselves to the fhe of Fort Constan- country. Exery-day we expect to hear that our Minister | 1850, and had given rise to differences ever riues, and the | 8° {tional vigor to the Iand and rea operations; on the | Ue imorcer to enjoy the sight of broken r:ones and at Warhing!on received inik passporta andison his | other was upon the matter of enlistment, Now he haa | ther, it declares that thove prepsrations wili not cease | Plaster. Notbingcan be more melancholy than thore way home. Ihat, of conse, mill oonpe) » similar pro- | reason to beliere that the correspondence on the firat | 9 instant, notwithstanding the hope of an approaching | ‘wins ofa fermer) flourishing city, now destroyed to tte ve- orecing on our pert with 4 toche American Miais- | subject war concluded, as it bad besn made pub. | Paciseation It ie uncer this clause, under the shadow | 1y foundeticns. The temperature had undergone corsidera- ter, and Mr. Crampton and Mr. Buohewan, the two inof. | lic in Ameiica, and bed been published in » pam. | of tbis prudent recerve, that the Queen fapproaches the | bie variations. Durirg the | preceding week the cold had “4d, of the wor Ueirg pald for outof ineome, Sines that | Tite Bagration, Lecerel PuoaseeTeok wie issben ot ne beve borrowed and krent every farthing of £16,000,000, | Dattles of Dechkofka and Soultanotke, Smolentk, Mos- ard bave inereaced our Unfunded Debt from about xan, he commanced in ebief the blockading £16 (0,000 to more than £23,000,000. Thus we foree of nave increseed cur cebt, if we are not mistaken, TEsot he let toieed tak repanele es nes Dae £284 bogie sitogeiber since the beginning | menth of September he took part in the battle of Culm, ceed balane en fuch are the figures, the | und one menth atter in that of Dresden, where he com- exect balance at apy moment in the Exchequer manded the vanguard; and sfter this gems to ur 4 formality of very little oonsequence. The | the battle Leipmc, obtaining there his promotion to the Chencelior of the Exchequer is sure to have powers to | sank of a Lietenant-gener: |. Empl ‘subsequently at marke a balonce by issuing bills of one vart or another, | ite blockace of Mi burg. and later, at that of” sno when be bes run that rcuroe dry be aeke Parliament | Hamburg, Paskiewiteh was appointed, in 1814, to the fevrive gentlemen g their governments at | phlet in England. It had been stated in ‘Ubting | subject of negotiations. She clearly alludes to the in. | 1¢ached ite highert cegree of intensity, but trm the 11th | for kave to fund his cobtiand iamne wore bills, War tnd Landen, wil probebly arose each other | Btates Serate that tho correspoudence had bees contiat | tervention and to the pood offices of the Emperor of Aus. | 10 the 18th the rigor of winter, which had tried ont sol: | gist of the quretion ia Abe creas of expenditare over inz_| SCimand of, the eecond division of grenadiers, which at on the Atlantic. ded, and Lord Clarendon, ints nat note 10 Me Bashenan | *i@, 10 the ecurent which ehe bas given in concert with | ‘178 mere reverely than ever, bed begua to xubside. | Come, fir that must be wet ip cno way or another, and | {aya yw een ned coder hi neal Happily, the relations between the two countries do | on the +ubject, made & Hmlinr statement. Upon the | France to the-e overtures; and rheannounces wiith satis | (rder the iniiuenco of wontherly winds, toe atmoyphere ly to diminish as long aa tho war lasts, Last | “Gu bis return fo Russa, in 1815, he not wheliy depend on these two en; awd we know | subject of enlistment in America, Mr. Onbcen. after | faction the acceptance of certain concitions on which she | bed becom mic, end even warm. At tho laet dates, not | year it wer £23,141,153, and, 24 only £16,000,600 of that | be soft niey. of aati. rea eh married Mies Gri- py European experienco that it 1s possible for two States | commenting upon the fully of sending to a fine olimate, | hope may be based a reneral treaty of pence, With re- | ‘nly bad fires been extingvished interior ct the eamps, | tave tern wot bys loan, and the expondii Fee Runner nk at Moscow. Two years ‘itwre for the &ccompany prereni year, praceor no peace, is lxely to be quite as Greed Dake, Michael oo Nip tout tan ah Germany, Hor , to go on as well—indeed, it has been maliciously asserted, | bere men were earn ng four shillings a day, to enteawor | ect to there conditions the speech enters into no de- | but the doors and windows had ben thrown open to al much ar tbe last, we cannot help suspecting that we | jend ard Italy. Returning in 1820, the pares gave better—without diplomatic representatives. ‘Achannel | to get men to enter our service to do cuty in a bad cl | téils. Js this languages so measured, s0 distant from a | low the rays of the sun to enter the huts. This chai can aiwey® be found for any communication one ern- | ma\e for one shillin; lay, rewarked that it toundiess confidence, a concession to public optnion? Does | of weather, however, had been attended with all the ia- ‘ball bet loan of ai: c im.» went may wish to mate to sucther, It pomsoie, isen, | the covernment had admited ite error, and it wasab, | itexprese the trae’ sentiments of the Cabiner? 1 ali | conveniences of « thaw. The roads, inundated Wy ‘lors, betere the years outs er oven ‘wonky mil: | a division of the Imperial Guard, and created his his te only Tenult of this misunderstanding will be that for [ surd, ‘berefore, to countenanes the dispute. He any. | “78, i demands reflection. melied snow, were more muddy thao ev id the hel it _—= ‘War aeine tore t bets some ‘ime we chall only have one man the more | mit'ed ‘hat the question might be discussed in that Our contemporary next remarks the absence of any al- | J¢* favored than the roads, of the aspect ot an Affcirs In Russia. ez on! ‘ween Rusia and Persia, im 1826, the Fmperor Nicholas, in compliance with the re- ACTIVITY OF TRADF—FRORMOUS DEMAND FOR TAL | quest cf Gen. Yermoloff, who commanded in chief the LOW—CONTRACTS FOR IRON—OFFIOIAL CHANGES | army cf the Caucasus, rent him General Paskiewiteh for that a way might then be peaceably found to | /ueion in the speech to the difficulties with the United | mense fwarp. and one American the less among us. We would very | House, ax’ . t estion. He thought the question of our | Stater, with P Tin Neapolitan government, as | WILL RUSSIA PAY THE EXPENSES OF THR wan?— r it were otherwise; but, as England has real. | re'tle the ed enough to fy len Buropean empires, we | relations world be better in the hands of that House | Wro to the Jate visit of King Vietor Emmanuel to Kog- BENEFITS FOR RUROPEAN CAPITALISTS, Taxes je F PRINCE PASKIEWITSOR. 4 her for the etrangement. There | than in the government and the press. If = war broke | 1nd, and it thus conelades:—~ FOR THE PEOPLF. ve Cozrenpent tuce of tbe London Tones. bend of e mball ara Givaneed Cen ike Impossible to quarrel with, avd | ont with Ameries (und no worse calamity could befall | The speech of the Queen of England appears Pus (kxom the Paris Constitutionne', Feb. 4.) “ Bunux, Feb. 1, 1866, | the enemy, whom ke utterly routed aud spelled people with whom the impossibility is of the | this country and world, whatever party was victo. | strongly impregnated with @ greater reserve than usual. France has not to regret the inevitable sacrifices which ‘The expectations of peace, to which the late article in | to evacuate the provinces he had | aded. ‘The Bax ecntrary sort, and, if the United Btaios refuse to be paci- | rivus), the public o.* England would not enter upon it | It rosoenen a calm mojosty which ia not injured by this | the war with Russia have cost her. The grancear, we | the vovrnol de St. Peterviurg bas given rise, appear from | Nicholas on this occasion pree ted. hima with wed, fed with the ample satitfaction already rendered, we | willingly, and such State of things could only be | restrained Grmness, but it betrays, even im the invoca- | may even Fay the ono gatdentas of the political vdle | the Knrtian press to bave found @ ready and welcome | the hilt of which was adorned ch dla ds, and on. mut put them down in the latter of these classes.’ We | brought atout by secres diplomacy or by the incitation | ton to Providence, with which it terminates, an atti- | which she has been called upon to play since two years | ecto tn thore clerses more Jarly that bave suffered | which was the folloning inscription: "To th Conqueror can hovestly declare our entire belief that in al! Eegland | of the public pres. tude that cannot be depicted better than by the idea of | in the courcils of Europe, and the glory which has bean | (be mert fn their pockets from the effects of the war. | of the Persiana at Bitsabetpol” cr é there is not ome rearcmable man who would desire to see Lord Paisenstox, in refe."@nce to the first subject of | tbe poet: “+It is @ roaring Mon, which even in repose | a/ ded to her staudard, awply suffibe to compensate cho | ‘he Nerihern Bee wt under date of January 2, that In the year follcwing, General Paskiewiteh mnocosded ' be United States invulted or lowered in the eyer of the | difference with America, exp'sined the treaty of 1850, | roms and Js vigilant.’ expences of the war. But this is not all. We must take | be demend for tallow and ment had been, for sevei Yermoled in the Chie?’ commend He. ted, into world by being ecmpelled to any act of self abasement. | observing that ite words were Wite lear and distinst [From the Paris Siecle, Feb. 3.) note of the material advantegos wtich the future ro. | Caye past, encrmous, with s constant rise in prices, En- | the Versian territory, took several fortrerven, defeated. ¥ would be felt tha: the at ped compelled recoiled upon those who | At the same ti had compelled it there | jut » conrt the American overnment w; re The Queen of England snnounces that in pureuing the | serves for us, thanks to the activity lent to our commer- vom opon it as var.sage with negotiations which are sbout to open in Paris, spe will | cial sd toaritime relations with the Eart, Tg this point mgements had been entered into for 200,000 poods | Irince Abbas Mirza, took posession of Erivan ad Tau- (4,000 tone) of yellow tallow, for delivery next August, | ris, and forced by bie rapid meses the shah of Perdla tO

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